Consolidation, A Pause, Call It What You Want...
After six straight days of gains for the NASDAQ and six straight days of higher closes for the Dow, many investors were expecting a pull back. Regarding the Dow, that's exactly what they got, as the DJIA gave back 80 points to 11,257. However, if you were hoping for a little breather in the COMPX, you'll have to keep waiting. The ultra-resilient COMPX eked yet out another gain, though small, of 8 points to 2314. Is this market resilient or what? Apparently, traders and investors have expanded their horizons, woken up, whatever you want to call it, but they have shifted away from worrying about current numbers, focusing on what Wall Street will be like six to nine months from now, like they should be.
Let's take a step back, remembering what has happened. Since January 3, the Fed has lowered short-term interest rates by 250 basis points. Going back a tad further, say thirty years or so, every time the Fed has "blessed" us with five straight rate cuts, that little-known index called the S&P 500 has risen by double- digits a year later, on average. Since 1971, every time the Fed has cut 5 times in a row, stocks, overall, have increased an average of 28% after one year. Let history be your guide. In my humble opinion, the path of least resistance is higher, not lower, at least until Greenspan starts raising rates again.
Checking out the Dow today, the old-school index finally took a break, though only slightly, giving back 0.7%, ending at 11,257. Only eleven of the Dow-30 finished the session to the upside. Make no mistake, however, the trend is still up. Since flirting with the 9500-level in late-March/early-April, the Dow has risen some 1700 points (18%). With the index now sitting at 11,257, the next step for the industrials is resistance at 11,425 and of course the all time high at 11,750 (intra-day). Support is of course at 11k.
In the news, Bill Gates' tiny software outfit put smiles on the faces of security software firm McAfee.com (NASDAQ:MCAF +4.40), announcing a strategic alliance with the company, in which MCAF will integrate its software, including anti-virus, privacy, and firewall products, with Microsoft's .Net Internet servers. The two will also integrate McAfee's software with MSFT's Passport and Hailstorm Web-based software services. MCAF shares soared 54% on the news, closing at $12.50.
Just when it looked like things couldn't any worse for Ford Motor and its relationship with tire maker Firestone, we give you Tuesday's latest. Today, Ford said is it recalling some 13 million tires, taking a $2.1 billion charge in the process. CEO Jack Nasser said, "We feel it's our responsibility to act immediately." The announcement comes a day after Bridgestone-Firestone announced it was breaking off its 95-year relationship with Ford, after Ford demanded that the tire maker recall additional Wilderness AT tires after presenting an analysis of the tires.
The battle for Wachovia Bank (NYSE:WB +0.55) intensified today, as First Union (NYSE:FTU +0.70) sweetened its offer, saying that it will guarantee WB's dividend of 60 cents per quarter. FTU's bid is $13.1 billion, while rival bidder SunTrust (STI) has a $13.8 billion deal on the table. While FTU has said it would NOT trump STI's higher bid, it has taken out full-page ads in the WSJ, NYT and other papers, saying that STI "hostile" takeover would lead to the "gutting of Wachovia." Bravo, FTU, bravo! Let the games begin. Whatever the market will bear, as the saying goes.
Other NYSE-stocks making headlines included shares of media giant AOL Time Warner (NYSE:AOL AOL +0.64), which added 1.1% to $57.24. The New York-based company said it would raise the monthly price for its unlimited use plan by $1.95 to $23.90 beginning in the July billing cycle. AOL has more than 29 million subscribers. That translates to roughly an additional $56.5 million per month, or 1.1 billion per year! How's that for cash flow, baby.
Breadth on the NYSE was nothing spectacular, logging 1.25 billion shares by day's end. Decliners did edge out advancers 16-15, but when it comes to new highs/lows, the tide has turned. New highs crushed new lows 238-18.
Over at the NASDAQ, the word of the day was IMPRESSIVE. Resilient might be another appropriate expression. The COMPX has now completed six straight days to the plus side, which of course prompts the question: have we come too far too fast? On one hand, one could argue that three of the past four days' gains (not including Friday's 106 gallop on Friday, have only amounted to just 40 points. On the flip side, since hitting an intra-day low of 1620 on April 4, the COMPX is up a staggering 42 percent. The other major argument for a higher NASDAQ is the fact that the index is still 45 percent from its record high of 5048, logged in March of last year.
Anyway, as far as Tuesday's numbers go, the COMPX eked out yet another positive close, closing up 8 points at 2314. With the 100- dma (2245) now support, many technicians say that there's no real reason why the NASDAQ couldn't run to natural resistance at 2500, ideally to the next big batch of congestion around 2900. The question is will this recent complacency with the NAZ translates to investor frustration, i.e. selling;, or will they view these recent moves as consolidation before the next leg up?
The biggest news, aside from the MCAF's deal with MSFT, had to be AT&T's (NYSE:T -0.76) order for optical networking equipment from CIENA (NASDAQ: CIEN +3.51). While no financial details were given, the order from AT&T was seen as a huge positive for CIEN, as T has historically purchased from larger players such as LU or NT. CIEN closed up 5.7% at $64.30, while T shares fell 3.4% to 21.15.
Breadth was nothing impressive, as 2.3 billion shares crossed the wires. We're starting to see evidence that sellers are no longer having their way, suggesting that the odds of a NASDAQ 2500 are a better bet than a retest of 2000. The ratio of new highs to new lows, which had been dominated by those on the down side, has certainly changed. Some 201 stocks close at new 52-week highs, while just 40 reached new lows.
As far as the broader indices were concerned, they ended in mostly quiescent fashion. The large-cap S&P 500 Index (SPX) ended Tuesday's session down 0.2% to 1309, the small-cap weighted Russell 2000 (RUT) finished up 0.26% to 517 and the Wilshire Total Market Index (TMW) closed south by 16 points to 12,125.
Those looking for some "excitement in the bond market" (definitely an oxymoron), offsetting the lack of enthusiasm in equities, had to keep looking. The 10-year note closed down 9/32 at 96-30/32, sending the yield up to 5.41%. The price of the 30-year Treasury also eased, giving back 18/32 to 94-10/32, kicking the yield up to 5.78%.
Sector winners today included Networking (NWX:1.9%), Airlines (XAL:+1.7%) and Banking (BKX:+1.9%). On the losing side were Gold stocks (XAU:-4.5%), Insurance (IUX:-1.1%), Healthcare (HCX (HCX): -1.1%), Chemicals (CEX:-0.9%) and Cyclicals (CYC:-0.6%).
Personally, I like these kinds of days. Sure, they may not be the most conducive for trading, but we need days like these just so the market doesn't "get ahead of itself", if I may use the hackneyed premise. Call it consolidation, call it a pause, call it a lack of a catalyst now that we've reached the end of first quarter earnings season, but, overall, things are changing, and seemingly for the better. The companies driving this recovering market are also changing. Today, a COAL company (yes a COAL company) called Peabody Energy (BTU) went public at $28 and finished up $7.15, 32% higher to be exact. COAL? Yes, coal. A year ago, you would have had to attach 5 warrants of the latest dot-com to shovel this one into investors' pockets, but today, with the energy crisis we face, the company's 15 million-share offering was actually OVERSUBSCRIBED. Boy, I guess if you live long enough, you get to see it all.
When trading, be like Jack...nimble and quick. |