FeedPosted Oct 26th 2009 2:20PM by Connie Madon (RSS feed)
Filed under: Major movement, International markets, Indices, Market matters, Commodities, Oil, Headline news, Agriculture, S and P 500, DJIA
Wow! What a difference a few hours makes. At the beginning of trading today stocks and commodities were steady. Then as the morning wore on, the US dollar
strengthened and it all broke loose. Let's look at the numbers: (as of 1:29 EDT)
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December euro is at 1.4866, down .0134
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The December S & P contract is down 10.60 at 1066.30
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December crude oil is at $78.40 per barrel, down $2.10
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December 30 year bond is at 118.10, down 23.
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December wheat is at 530.6 down 17 cents (each penny equals $50.00)
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December gold is at $1043.40 per ounce, down $13.00 (each $1.00 equals $100.00)
Continue reading US dollar rallies; stocks and commodities fall sharply
Posted Oct 23rd 2009 7:30AM by David Schepp (RSS feed)
Filed under: Before the bell, International markets, Earnings reports, Microsoft (MSFT), Fortune Brands (FO), Economic data, Honeywell Intl (HON), Oil, S and P 500, DJIA, Recession, NASDAQ
Wall Street watchers can be excused for feeling a little whipsawed this week. After watching stocks lose ground early in the week, they roared back Thursday, riding high on a bevy of upbeat earnings reports. That enthusiasm remains partially on display this morning with two of the three major U.S. stock indexes showing a positive opening ahead of the morning bell.
At about 7 a.m. ET, the Nasdaq Composite Index and S&P 500 were slightly higher, while the Dow Jones industrial average was down by about 4 points. The Dow gained 1.3% Thursday to close the session at 10,081.31, led by the strong earnings reports from five of the benchmark index's 30 component stocks.
Continue reading Before the bell: Earnings enthusiasm shows signs of slipping
Posted Oct 22nd 2009 10:00AM by Jim Cramer (RSS feed)
Filed under: 3M Corporation (MMM), S and P 500, DJIA, Cramer on BloggingStocks, Travelers Companies Inc. (TRV)
TheStreet.com's Jim Cramer says that as long as we're trapped in a commoditized stock market, use the futures to go bargain-hunting.
What if individual stocks want to go up, but the market wants to go down? Don't laugh. In 1982, when The Kansas City Board of Trade started trading Value Line futures (before there were S&P futures), we used to kick around in securities classes what would happen if eventually stocks became so commoditized that individual companies couldn't be removed from the gravitational pull.
For example, we know today looks like a terrible day, with Europe down horribly and our futures real soggy. But then we look and see that J. Crew (NYSE: JCG) (Cramer's Take), one of the best retailers, is not just saying that the fall season is good; it is saying it is blowout beyond imagination. The big Dow stock 3M (NYSE: MMM) (Cramer's Take) is not just saying that things are getting better; it is showing that business is very strong. The monster insurer and fellow Dow stock Travelers (NYSE: TRV) (Cramer's Take) is boosting the dividend and showing you how a responsible financial can behave.
Continue reading Cramer on BloggingStocks: Great stocks at better prices
Posted Oct 13th 2009 5:45PM by Michael Fowlkes (RSS feed)
Filed under: Major movement, Cisco Systems (CSCO), eBay (EBAY), Market matters, Halliburton (HAL), Goldman Sachs Group (GS), Goldcorp Inc (GG), Commodities, S and P 500, DJIA, NASDAQ

We had a lot of big names trading up to new 52 week highs again today. The overall markets were pretty flat, with the DOW closing the day down 0.14%, the NASDAQ closing the day's trading up 0.04%, and the S&P ending the day a bit lower to finish today's trading down 0.28%.
Here are a few of the names that moved higher during the day to set new 52 week highs.
Continue reading Some big names setting new highs today: STAR, GG, PIR, EBAY
Posted Oct 12th 2009 6:00PM by Michael Fowlkes (RSS feed)
Filed under: Major movement, Earnings reports, Good news, Apple Inc (AAPL), Cisco Systems (CSCO), Intel (INTC), Market matters, Walt Disney (DIS), Target Corp. (TGT), S and P 500, DJIA, NASDAQ

The markets had a relatively flat day to start the week, but there were some big name stocks that traded up to new 52 week highs in today's session. The DOW was up 0.2%, NASDAQ was down 0.01%, while the S&P saw the most change, closing up 0.4%.
Here are a couple of the bigger names that traded up to new 52 week highs in today's trading.
- Intel Corporation (NASDAQ: INTC): Chipmaker Intel Corp. traded up to a new 52 week high today of $20.65. It set its 52 week low of $12.05 back on 2/23/09. The stock is trading higher today ahead of the company's third quarter earnings numbers, which are due out tomorrow following the market close. Analysts are expecting the company to show earnings of 27 cents per share. The company reported a loss of 7 cents per share for its second quarter. The stock closed the day up 1.1% at $20.40, up $0.23 on the day.
Continue reading Some big names setting new highs: INTC, STX, SGP
Posted Oct 11th 2009 12:00PM by Sam Collins (RSS feed)
Filed under: Technical Analysis, S and P 500, Stocks to Buy
Dollar Tree (NASDAQ: DLTR) has more than 3,500 stores that sell its inventory of toys, durable housewares, candy, seasonal goods, and so on for a $1. Its other stores, operating as Deal$, sell most of its inventory at $5 or less.
This deep-discount retailer is generally considered to be the leader of its class and is rated a "buy" (four stars) by S&P with a target of $59.
The stock executed a major long-term bullish breakout at around $45. Technically this breakout is major and targets the stock at over $65.
Continue reading Technical trade #6: Dollar Tree (DLTR)
Posted Oct 9th 2009 3:40PM by Sheldon Liber (RSS feed)
Filed under: Getting started, McDonald's (MCD), Diageo plc (DEO), Johnson and Johnson (JNJ), Altria Group (MO), Novartis AG ADS (NVS), Automatic Data Proc (ADP), Kellogg Co (K), Consolidated Edison (ED), General Mills (GIS), Procter and Gamble (PG), Merck and Co (MRK), Duke Energy (DUK), Personal finance, S and P 500, Stocks to Buy, Southern Company (SO), Annaly Capital Management (NLY)
One of my wonderful friends, Ms. P, asked me for some guidance on how she might allocate $50,000 currently earning peanuts in a money market account. Though she is decades from becoming a grandmother, after a brief discussion about her financial parameters, it became clear to me that she was looking for a "granny fund."
In reality, my recommendations would be suitable, and perhaps desirable, for many passive investors as well.
The $50,000 is a portion of money Ms. P has set aside to purchase a home, which might happen in six months, but could also be pushed out further, depending on the economy and her situation. Basically, she wants to cover all her bases because she might need the money at any time and does not want to be caught short, while at the same time she would like to generate some revenue without taking any big risks.
Continue reading Where should granny put $50,000?
Posted Oct 6th 2009 1:00PM by Connie Madon (RSS feed)
Filed under: International markets, Money and Finance Today, Commodities, Oil, Agriculture, S and P 500

The Australian move to raise interest rates sparked a
surge in commodity prices, led by agricultural futures.Why is this?
The interest rate hike signaled that "all is well" in world economies, at least for the time being. So, if deflation is on the run, inflation can take over and that is happening in spades in the futures markets. Let's look at some prices:
- December wheat is at $4.63 per bushel up 20.2 cents (each penny equals $50.00)
- December corn is $3.64 per bushel, up 23.2 cents
- November soybeans are at $9.07 per bushel up 22.4 cents
- November crude oil is at $71.73 per barrel up $1.32
- December S & P is at 1052.50 up 16.10
- December Dow is at 9673 up 127
- October cattle are at 82.40 down .275
- October hogs are at 49.97 cents per pound up .925
- December gold is at $1044 per ounce up $26.60 (each $1.00 equals $100 dollars)
- December silver is at $17.43 per ounce up 89 cents
Continue reading Commodities soar with agricultural futures and gold leading the way
Posted Oct 4th 2009 3:10PM by Connie Madon (RSS feed)
Filed under: Forecasts, Market matters, Economic data, Commodities, S and P 500, DJIA, Federal Reserve, Recession
Why would the government want a weak dollar? To get some perspective on the dilemma facing the Fed, let's go back to the Clinton years. During the 1990s, we had a booming economy. That booming economy fostered a strong dollar policy (i.e., strong economy equals a strong dollar).
Now the tables are turned and we are in the worst recession since the 1930s. We are mired in debt and our unemployment keeps rising. The housing market, while improving somewhat, is still in shambles. Banks are short of money to lend, keeping a lid on expansion, and on and on. So then we have the reverse of the 1990s.
Continue reading The case for a weaker dollar
Posted Oct 2nd 2009 4:00PM by Douglas McIntyre (RSS feed)
Filed under: After the bell, Major movement, Pfizer (PFE), S and P 500, DJIA, NASDAQ

The market opened sharply lower this morning anticipating, perhaps, unemployment data that was worse than the data turned out to be. The September unemployment rate rose to 9.8%, exactly what most observers had been expecting.
T
he markets tried to gain back more than all the early losses, with all three major indexes ending slightly down. Crude oil has fallen below $70/barrel again, and gold has broken through $1,000/oz again. It could just be the case that the nearly 60% run-up since March in the S&P 500 was just wishful thinking that the economy was turning around and that consumer spending would would tick up as things improved. That thinking has not been borne out yet, so markets are likely to wobble around until the consumer decides what to do -- save or spend. The holiday season could write the ending to the story.
Here are todays unofficial closing numbers:
Dow 9,487.37 -21.91 (-0.23%)
S&P 500 1,025.18 -4.67 (-0.45%)
Nasdaq 2,048.11 -9.37 (-0.46%)
Continue reading Closing Bell: Too much, too soon? (FSLR, YONG, ETRM, PFE & MGM)
Posted Oct 2nd 2009 10:30AM by Mark Fightmaster (RSS feed)
Filed under: Pfizer (PFE), Indices, S and P 500

Late Thursday, Standard & Poor's announced a few changes to its U.S. indices. The reason for the changes are that
Wyeth (NYSE:
WYE) is being acquired by
Pfizer (NYSE:
PFE), leaving an opening in both the S&P 100 and S&P 500 (SPX). I want to focus on the stock that will
replace WYE in the SPX,
First Solar (NASDAQ:
FSLR). In after-hours trading, FSLR jumped more than 6% in response to the announcement.
FSLR manufactures solar modules and is a major benefactor of what I like to call the "green rush" that took place during the past two years. FSLR capitalized nicely on the global environmental consciousness revolution last year, ascending as high as the $310 region. Yes, the stock has backed off quite a bit due to the economic crisis, but it could enjoy a bit of a recovery provided it can parlay this latest news into a breach of some overhead resistance.
Continue reading First Solar to join the S&P 500 Index
Posted Oct 1st 2009 4:00PM by Douglas McIntyre (RSS feed)
Filed under: Major movement, Ford Motor (F), S and P 500, DJIA, NASDAQ
The markets opened lower this morning and have continued to slide all day, mostly due to poor reports on manufacturing and unemployment. Still, for the third quarter both the DJIA and the S&P 500 indexes gained about 15%. Now, it appears that faith in an economic recovery is wobbling, primarily as a result of expected growth in unemployment and continuing low consumer spending. The federal stimulus program has pumped about $86 billion into the economy so far, but that hasn't been enough to shake loose tight-fisted lenders or cash-conserving consumers.
Here are the numbers::
Dow 9,509.28 -203.00 (-2.09%)
S&P 500 1,029.84 -27.24 (-2.58%)
Nasdaq 2,057.48 -64.94 (-3.06%)
Continue reading Just about everything weighs on markets today (F, PAG, ETP, ASTI, CHTP)
Posted Oct 1st 2009 12:30PM by Connie Madon (RSS feed)
Filed under: Forecasts, Indices, Economic data, S and P 500
Why are Americans hoarding $3.5 trillion in cash? An interesting question. Let's dig deeper and see if we can find out why.
Here are some interesting facts about the $3.5 trillion:
- After reducing money market accounts by 11% this year, investors hold cash equal to 73% of S&P 500 Index. At its peak in 2007, the buying power was at 62%.
- Estimates are for GDP to increase sixfold to 2.9% in the third quarter.
- In 2007 and 2008, investors placed $1.45 trillion in money market accounts. As of the week ending January 14, that number reached a record $3.92 trillion.
- Investors have added $15.8 billion to domestic equity funds since March.
Continue reading Why are Americans hoarding $3.5 trillion in cash?
Posted Sep 30th 2009 6:20PM by Michael Fowlkes (RSS feed)
Filed under: Major movement, Forecasts, Good news, Market matters, Money and Finance Today, S and P 500, DJIA, Housing, Recession

The market was able to stage a late day rally which erased some of its earlier losses, but still ended the day in the red, with all
3 major indexes closing down on the day.
September is typically not a good month for the market, but even with today's losses this September was positive, as more and more investors have started to believe the economy is coming out of its recession.
Continue reading Market ends the day lower, but up for the month
Posted Sep 30th 2009 4:00PM by Douglas McIntyre (RSS feed)
Filed under: Major movement, CIT Group (CIT), S and P 500, DJIA, NASDAQ
The Dow Jones Industrial average jumped about 125 points on Monday but has given back about two-thirds of that gain through trading so far today. The story with the S&P 500 index is similar, though not quite so severe: a giveback of about a quarter of Monday's gain. The NASDAQ Composite index is doing better, up about 3% so far today, to remain virtually even with Monday's gains. The indices are slowly gaining back some ground lost earlier this morning, so by the close of trading today, the markets could show a small gain.
Here are the numbers:
Dow 9,712.28 -29.92 (-0.31%)
S&P 500 1,057.07 -3.54 (-0.33%)
Nasdaq 2,122.42 -1.62 (-0.08%)
Continue reading Closing Bell: Market Indices retreat on manufacturing, employment, petroleum data (CIT, DSCO, MU, PZE & AMSC)
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