DJ MARKET TALK: Fed May Go 75 BP, But Do Nothing Early (doh) Edited by Thomas Granahan Of DOW JONES NEWSWIRES (Call Us: 201 938-5299; All Times Eastern) MARKET TALK can be found using code N/DJMT 1:43 (Dow Jones) There's no question Fed needs to do "at least 50 BP, possibly 75 BP" rate cut, but other economic data showing some signs of stabilization could sway Fed from doing inter-meeting move and instead do 75 BP at May meeting, says Banc One head of research, Dana Johnson. (SPC) 1:39 (Dow Jones) Volatility associated with Bank of America's (BAC) options escalated Friday, noted paul Foster, 1010WallStreet.com's option strategist. This indicates investors expect the stock to be volatile as many worry about its loan exposure to Pacific Gas & Electric, the troubled California utility and unit of PG&E Corp. (PCG) that filed for bankruptcy. With BankAmerica down $2.45 to $49.40, the implied volatility of the April 45 puts jumped from about 46% Thursday to about 75% most recently. (KXT) 1:27 (Dow Jones) Motorola (MOT) down 20% to new lows on heavy trading amid concerns about its FY01 outlook when it reports 1Q Tuesday. CSFB warns that because of "continued weakness in the company's key businesses" its expects the consensus FY EPS target to be sharply reduced. CSFB says "worst case" scenario is breakeven EPS for year on revenue of $34B-$34.5B. The current First Call estimates are EPS of 14c on revenue of $36.9B. (MLP) 1:22 (Dow Jones) Here's a study the Market Talk staff would have liked to be a part of. Deutsche Banc surveyed 130 bars and 1,300 beer taps in Manhattan to gauge which brewer dominates the lucrative tap business. The winner? The self-proclaimed "King Of Beers," Anheuser-Busch (BUD), concludes beverage analyst Marc Greenberg. A-B's Budweiser and Bud Light brands, the survey says, lead all other domestic brands with 50% tap penetration. Coors Light has 18% and Miller Lite has 7%. Why is all this important? More than one-fourth of total beer sales and 46% of retail profits come from such "on-premise" channels. (CEG) 1:17 (Dow Jones) Thursday's announcement of vendor financing valued at $25M to California competitive telecom carrier Pac-West (PACW) is "a validation of the company's business model," says UBS Warburg analyst Glenn Waldorf. But uncertainty surrounding the policy of reciprocal compensation to start-up carriers will pressure the stock, he adds. Waldorf rates Pac-West at hold. (CBN) 1:10 (Dow Jones) Implied volatility associated with Motorola (MOT) spiked Friday - a sign investors expect a big move. The company will report earnings next Tuesday and at least one analyst had said he expected Motorola to miss reduced estimates. Volatility associated with the at-the-money April 12.50 puts jumped to 100% from about 67% Thursday. (KXT) 1:07 (Dow Jones) June S&Ps continue to come off of lows. "We really recovered fast," one floor trader says. "You can see people wanted to bid it up." June S&Ps still sharply lower, but only a few points from where they were trading prior to the PG&E news. (DMC) 1:00 (Dow Jones) Greenspan, delivering a speech at a conference organized by the Fed, avoids any discussion of what steps the central bank might take in the next few months to keep the economy out of a recession. He confines his remarks to the need for better financial education in an increasingly high-tech economy. (FL) 12:57 (Dow Jones) Record outflows from U.S. stock funds are expected for March. After getting by February with a modest net inflow of $1.3 billion, such funds are likely to face hefty outflows, which TrimTabs.com estimates as $22.1 billion and Merrill Lynch sees as in "the low teens." "It appears that investors have started to finally give up on this battered market," Merrill analyst John Lloyd says. (YXH) 12:49 (Dow Jones) June S&Ps fell to limit down level of 1128.00, 27 points lower, putting a 10-minute trading curb in effect. Market moved to limit down as PG&E's Pacific Gas unit said it filed for bankruptcy. (DMC) 12:46 (Dow Jones) Stocks bouncing back slightly after setting new lows around the time that Pacific Gas & Electric's Chapter 11 news broke. Nonetheless, the mood is still quite different from Thursday. Every DJIA component but Johnson & Johnson, Philip Morris and Wal-Mart is in the red. DJIA losing 159 at 9758, and Nasdaq Composite off 53 at 1731. (GS) 12:40 (Dow Jones) PG&E's beleagured Pacific Gas unit files for Chapter 11 in California. The company said it is taking this action in light of its unreimbursed energy costs, which are now increasing by more than $300 million per month, "continuing CPUC decisions that economically disadvantage the company, and the now unmistakable fact that negotiations with Governor Gray Davis and his representatives are going nowhere." PG&E remains halted on the NYSE. (GS) 12:31 (Dow Jones) Stock futures are quiet at midday, waiting for comments out of Greenspan. "It seems that people are still afraid to get in the long side without any conviction, but they still want a bottom," one trader says. (DMC) 12:26 (Dow Jones) Bear Stearns senior economist Wayne Angell giving better than 50% odds the Fed will cut interest rates before its May 15 meeting. That's down from the 80% odds Angell gave for a cut before the Fed's last meeting - a prophecy that caused a stir, lifted stocks, but didn't pan out. Angell, a former Fed governor, feels the Fed should cut by 100 basis points, but would settle for 50. (KJT) 12:18 (Dow Jones) Shares of French software company Infovista (IVTA) are falling 36% Friday after it made cautious comments about the U.S. market. The company said the U.S. economic slowdown has resulted in a lengthening of the order cycle and the delayed signing of a few customer contracts. The company said it has experienced growth in its European revenue and newer international units, but it wasn't sufficient to offset delays in the U.S. market. (CAL) 12:05 (Dow Jones) Is technology the sore spot for the S&P 500 Index in 2000 and so far this year? The S&P 500 has fallen 13% as of April 5, but without technology and communications, it would be down 6%, according to Merrill Lynch's derivatives team. Tech stocks have lagged drastically this year - down 25% year to date - while communications stocks have held up, falling just 1%, according to a Merrill note. (KXT) 11:56 (Dow Jones) Henry Paulson Jr., the chairman and chief executive of Goldman Sachs Group (GS) weighed in on the SEC's Regulation Fair Disclosure at the firm's annual meeting in New York on Friday. When asked how he felt about the rule, which prohibits companies from sharing important information with only a select few, Paulson responded that it was "well-intended" but has had a negative effect by contributing to market volatility. "There is not the free flow of information," he said. (CWM) 11:49 (Dow Jones) As Silicon Valley Bancshares (SIVB) continues to bounce back (while other banks flag), an option investor opened a bullish position by selling just out-of-the-money May 20 puts. The bank had jumped 19% since Wednesday after it announced a share buyback and stood by 1Q estimates that would meet or beat consensus. With stock at $21.50, the investor sold May 20 puts for about $200 a contract, either not expecting the stock to fall below $20 by mid-May or willing to buy stock at that price. At the CBOE, 2,000 contracts traded, compared with open interest of 613. (KXT) 11:43 (Dow Jones) The Nasdaq Composite, now around 1736, failed to test short-term breakout resistance at 1776.11 earlier this morning, a sign that the index is likely to back down into 1600 handle. The 1675-1670 support band could be particularly active. If 1776.11 resistance is decisively taken out, it's reasonable to look for 1950 by next week. (SC) (END) DOW JONES NEWS 04-06-01 01:43 PM *** end of story *** |