Today's prudentbear! -->
Market Summary July 10, 2001 Posted Daily Between 5 and 6:30 PM EST
by Lance Lewis
Refreshed, Market Resumes Its Plunge
Asia was a little higher last night, although Japan faded from its highs. Europe ended down a percent after opening higher, and the US futures were up a little in the pre-market. We opened up and tried to throw a party, but somebody forgot the kegs. After a brief flutter to the upside, we dove lower and spent the rest of the day moving lower down the stairs like a slinky. The last hour saw a further plunge to new lows for the day to send us out right on the low of the day. Volume picked up (1.2 bil on the NYSE and 1.6 bil on the NASDAQ.) Breadth was slightly negative on both exchanges. The big sector winner was the golds as the HUI rose 3 percent. The big sector loser was PC hardware as the HWI fell 8 percent.
GLW was the big warning last night. Not only were they warning for Q2, but they also threw in the towel on the second half completely, saying “With the dramatic reduction of infrastructure spending across the telecommunications industry, and our expectation that this market downturn could last 12 to 18 months.” They also announced that they were laying-off another 3 percent of their workforce and discontinuing their dividend. GLW ended down 6 percent on the news. Also last night, ALA announced some more layoffs, and XRX discontinued their dividend for the first time in 53 years. With all that good news out, people actually tried to buy the bad news at the open. When that didn’t work, things got ugly as the reality of the fabled second half recovery not happening began to sink in I guess. Anything remotely having to do with optical-land was whacked off of GLW’s news. Semis and semi equips were hit again as the SOX lost 4 percent. Basically, it was another rout in tech. Financials were mostly lower as well. The BKX and XBD both fell 3 percent. GE slipped 2 percent. Credit cards were off a couple percent.
Oil fell 10 cents. The XOI and OSX both fell a percent, with the OSX hitting a new low for the move. Gold fell 30 cents ahead of the BOE auction tomorrow. Lease rates were quiet. The HUI rose 3 percent. If gold can manage to not collapse after the BOE auction, we may actually set up a nice rally. I tend to think gold will trade higher from here, but we’ll see. The US dollar index slipped again to end back below 120, with 18 being the next important technical level. The euro climbed above 85 cents. Treasuries were a little higher.
MER announced today that their analysts could no longer own the stocks that they cover. It’s too bad they didn’t do this several years ago when it might have mattered. Most analysts now are likely breathing a sigh of relief that they have an excuse not to own most of the garbage they cover. My friend Bill Fleckenstein suggested that MER should require their analysts to own the stocks they put buy recommendations on at this point in the cycle. That would certainly prevent a lot of hype and likely force analysts to actually do some work and not just hope or look at the charts since it’s their money on the line. It continues to look like we may be building towards something nasty as well as large to the downside. While a bounce such as Monday’s can occur at any time, I’d buckle up if I were you... |