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Strategies & Market Trends : 2026 TeoTwawKi ... 2032 Darkest Interregnum -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: 2MAR$ who wrote (74659)5/29/2011 2:24:04 PM
From: 2MAR$  Respond to of 217813
 
15 Reasons Markets Rallied But Ended Lower

Markets opened lower on Monday and were essentially flat until rallying Friday. Regardless, markets still closed lower week-over-week. Oil (NYSE:USO) added a buck. Gold (NYSE:GLD) and Silver (NYSE:SLV) continued to show relative strength as the US Dollar (NYSE:UDN) ended the week hitting fresh two-week lows.

Fresh Off the Press: Wall St. Cheat Sheet’s newest Feature Trades of the Month!

Now, for the 15 reasons markets moved this week:

Monday

1) Europe’s PIIGS are back at the trough . The general market patterns have been for investors to focus on companies or the sovereign debt crisis. When companies are in the spotlight (e.g., earnings season), stocks tend to ignore debt woes. When companies can’t keep the spotlight, the default worry is sovereign debt. Today, Italy (NYSE:EWI) took a credit outlook rating cut from Standard & Poor’s (NYSE:MHP). Investors were back chattering about whether this is the next domino to fall. Don’t Miss: Wall St. Cheat Sheet Assistant Editor Xander Schachtel Explain How the VIX is Reacting to the PIIGS.

2) Asia had its own woes to worry about . The most recent reading of the HSBC (NYSE:HBC) China Manufacturing Purchasing Managers Index, showed a 10-month low in manufacturing activity. The economic news sent Shanghai shares 3% lower and had hedge funds buzzing about a slowdown in China (NYSE:FXI). Also, goliath contract manufacturer Foxconn reported a tragic factory explosion. The news continues to create worry for Apple (NASDAQ:AAPL) investors who have been fretting over supply chain blunders.

3) US States are trying to take currencies into their own hands . States may want the Feds to pick up the tab for unemployment insurance, but they sure don’t want Uncle Sam’s worthless greenback (NYSE:UDN). Utah is ready to join the goldbug craze and accept gold (NYSE:GLD) and silver (NYSE:SLV) as legal tender. If you’re considering whether to join Utah’s movement and invest in gold, first check out Gold: The Major Pros and Cons for Investors.

Tuesday

1) Market police continue to blow whistles . Yesterday Italy (NYSE:EWI) took a credit outlook rating cut from Standard & Poor’s (NYSE:MHP), and today Moody’s (NYSE:MCO) the streak alive by threatening to take the downgrade sword to the UK banks. As if that wasn’t enough for bankers to skip dessert, New York Attorney General Eric Schneiderman got his investigation on by expanding his mortgage fraud probe to the bond insurers: Ambac Financial Group (PINK:ABKFQ), MBIA Inc. (NYSE:MBI), Syncora Holdings Ltd. (PINK:SYCRF), and Assured Guaranty Ltd. (NYSE:AGO).

2) Oil rallied on Goldman’s flip-flop . In April, Goldman Sachs (NYSE:GS) screamed “Sell Oil Now!” Today they went Chinatown on us and shouted “Buy Oil Now!” Regardless, on days when Oil (NYSE:USO) rises strongly, the econ bears take the stage warning of higher gas prices and weaker consumer sales — a good reason to sell stocks. But don’t tell them about airline woes because canceled flights from the volcano are sure to weigh on fuel demand in the near future.

3) IPOs were hot, the NASDAQ was not . Shorts got their faces melted off in LinkedIn (NYSE:LNKD) at 2PM, while white hot Russian search engine Yandex (NASDAQ:YNDX) popped 55% at its initial public offering and Glencore (LON:GLEN) gave underwriters a reason to cheer.

Wednesday

1) Commodities surged . Now that Goldman Sachs (NYSE:GS) is bullish on Oil (NYSE:USO) and GE (NYSE:GE) is madly in love with gas (NYSE:UGA), investors are rushing back to commodities (NYSE:RJI) despite tons of data regarding slower economic growth. Check Out “GE: Gas is Cheap and We’re Investing in the HUGE Bull Market.”

2) US Durable Goods orders sucked . Yup. They were not good. And transportation equipment led the way down with 9.5% drop. Add on this week’s news about slowing growth in China (NYSE:FXI) and the UK (NYSE:EWU), and it’s a surprise today’s trade was “risk on”.

3) A financial media legend passed. Unrelated to markets, CNBC anchor Mark Haines passed today. He was the founding anchor of “Squak Box”.

Thursday

1) Investors are betting Helicopter Ben flies to the rescue . A few weeks ago the Fed was playing Jedi mind games to manage expectations for tightening monetary policy. But investors think the game may be favoring more easing after today’s weak GDP number and waterfall of analysts cutting their GDP targets. You know what that means … Risk On!

2) Microsoft carried the Nasdaq higher . You know what happens when you try to buy the New York Mets AND try to get Steve Ballmer fired in the same 24 hours? People try to show you how much they don’t care about your perceived power. Today David Einhorn, president of Greenlight Capital (NASDAQ:GLRE) learned just that as Microsoft (NASDAQ:MSFT) shareholders gave him the middle finger after saying Steve Ballmer should get the boot.

3) Luxury jeweler Tiffany & Co. proved we’re not double-dipping. Well, at least someone forgot to tell high-end consumers if indeed the economy is set for a crash. Tiffany & Co. (NYSE:TIF) released earnings showing a 20% increase in revenues over last year. That’s a great indicator there’s still a significant number of people making money and not worrying about pink slips.

Friday

1) The more econ data sucks, the more traders await more Fed puts . Today we saw the Pending Home Sales Index plummet over 11%! “No worries. Bernanke.” Consumer Spending was weak. “Really? Have no fear, Bernanke’s here.” And finally we learned consumers have a rosier sentiment than last month. “RISK ON!”

2) The US Dollar got punched in the face. That’s right. A two-week low. Even with the EU facing headlines of a deepening sovereign debt crisis, no one wants a greenback (NYSE:UDN). The dollar’s demise helped Oil (NYSE:USO), Gold (NYSE:GLD), and commodities (NYSE:RJI) lock in winning days.

3) Tech continues to stay in focus. We started the morning with news Ebay (NASDAQ:EBAY) is suing Google (NASDAQ:GOOG) for stealing PayPal’s secrets and using them to create Google Wallet. Microsoft (NASDAQ:MSFT) attempted to promote some tablet PC hype, and Amazon (NASDAQ:AMZN) lost a ton of cash subsidizing the pop music goddess Lady GaGa’s new album.
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.http://finance.yahoo.com/news/15-Reasons-Markets-Rallied-wscheats-3994757737.html?x=0&.v=1



To: 2MAR$ who wrote (74659)5/29/2011 2:24:36 PM
From: 2MAR$  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 217813
 
Wall St Week Ahead: Investors demand bigger returns

(What , Tiffany bidding up to new highs isnt enough ??)

By Edward Krudy

NEW YORK May 27 (Reuters) - The world looks a lot more dangerous than it did only a few months ago and signs are that U.S. stock investors are starting to demand more for the added risk.

With important manufacturing and jobs data due next week, it could start to get even riskier.

That means nervous investors are likely to keep a lid on equity prices this year as they grapple with slowing global growth and a host of geopolitical risks from the Arab Spring to debt defaults in the euro zone.

The actions of some big Wall Street banks best show the shift in the risk-reward nexus. Over the last two weeks, UBS, Citigroup and Goldman Sachs have effectively lowered their view of what investors will be willing to pay for a dollar of corporate earnings this year.

Jonathan Golub, chief U.S. equity strategist at UBS in New York, made the decision to keep his S&P 500 Index target on hold, even though he increased his expectations of what S&P 500 companies would likely earn this year and next.

"Earnings are going to continue to surprise to the upside, but investors will continue to be reluctant to believe in the sustainability of earnings and, therefore, not give full credit to that," Golub said.

Golub raised his average S&P 500 earnings estimate to $101 from $96 for this year, but he left his year-end S&P 500 .SPXtarget at 1,425. By doing that, Golub has effectively lowered his price-to-earnings (P/E) ratio -- the amount investors are willing to pay for a dollar of earnings -- to 14.1 from 14.8.

That amounts to an increase in the expected equity yield -- a measure of the return investors want -- to 7.1 percent from 6.8 percent.

That is significant because the expected price-to-earnings ratio was already below what investors have historically been willing to pay for S&P 500 earnings. The average trailing P/E ratio is 15.6 over the last five years and 19.2 since 1988, according to Standard & Poor's.

Golub argues that a batch of weak economic data pointing to slowing manufacturing, a weak housing market and stubbornly high unemployment is weighing on investor sentiment. Weakness in commodity markets and rotation into defensive sectors of the stock market testify to that shift.

SOFT JOBS DATA MAY HIT S&P

With next week's ISM national manufacturing survey for May expected to show more weakness and payroll data tipped to show under 200,000 jobs added during the month, risk aversion -- driven by fear about the economy -- could get worse before it gets better.

Goldman Sachs economist Zach Pandl said his firm is predicting 150,000 jobs were added in May, compared with a Reuters consensus of 185,000.

An ISM reading below 60 next Wednesday would show "the strongest period of growth has passed and investors may need to adjust their expectations going forward," said Michael Sheldon, chief market strategist at RDM Financial in Westport, Connecticut.

Economists in a Reuters poll expect the ISM reading to fall to 58 in May from 60.4 in April.

Goldman Sachs has also been tweaking its stocks outlook. It cut its year-end S&P 500 target, one of the highest on the Street, to 1,450 from 1,500, and lowered its 2012 earnings outlook to $104 to $106, citing lower global growth, higher commodity prices and slightly higher inflation.

Goldman analyst David Kostin, who is responsible for the S&P 500 target, was unavailable for an interview.

However Goldman's analysts wrote: "As we transition into the late expansion phase of the cycle later this year, the risk-reward balance for the S&P 500 is likely to become slightly less attractive."

Citigroup also slightly increased its earnings estimates for S&P 500 companies, lifting its 2011 forecast to $98 from $96.50. Although admittedly only a small increase, it chose to leave its S&P 500 target at 1,400.

Tobias Levkovich, Citigroup's chief U.S. equity strategist, could not be reached for comment.

The targets for all three banks are still at the upper end of analysts' estimates and are 5 percent to 8 percent above current levels.

Even if the index does get up to those levels later this year, those gains are slight compared to the near 80 percent run the S&P 500 has experienced since hitting a bear market low in March 2009.

For people like Bill Strazzullo, partner and chief investment strategist at Bell Curve Trading in Boston, that means the risks are firmly on the downside.

"The good news is there's some upside. The bad news is that you've probably made about 80 (percent) to 90 percent of this rally," Strazullo said. "From a 'bigger picture' standpoint, the risk-reward really doesn't make sense."

Strazullo believes the S&P 500 will revert toward fair value, which he places at 1,100, based on where most of the money in the S&P 500 is invested. He is looking at some longer-term bearish options trades to capitalize on the end of the March 2009 rally.

"I'm not saying we'll go all the way back there, but the point is, you could drop a lot further than most people anticipate." (Wall St Week Ahead appears every Friday. Questions or comments on this column can be e-mailed to: edward.krudy(at)thomsonreuters.com) (Reporting by Edward Krudy; Additional reporting by Rodrigo Campos; Editing by Jan Paschal)
reuters.com



To: 2MAR$ who wrote (74659)5/29/2011 4:14:22 PM
From: Haim R. Branisteanu4 Recommendations  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 217813
 
Foxconn Chengdu is a very sad story - exploitation to the maximum possible under the law of the unaware and uneducated, let aside the cutting of corners where ever possible on workers rights and pensions.

I think a movement should start and avoid the purchasing of Apple Products and then may be Steve Jobs will get the message and start assembly lines in Arkansas, Kansas or Louisiana or even Nevada with high unemployment.

Somewhere it should be clear to US corporate chieftains that enough is enough and free trade does not mean enslaving other nations people to lower productions cost and increase US corporate profits.

Long term it damages the social fabric both at home and abroad and grows resentment against the US as a nation.

Sticking the proverbial head in the sand and claim it is night and I do not see any wrongdoing is not an excuse.