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Stock Market Today: Aug 6th - 10th

post #1 of 482
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Week Ahead: No News May Be Good News for Stocks

Published: Friday, 3 Aug 2012 | 8:01 PM ET
 
Stocks ride the tailwinds of central bank promises into the week ahead, and could continue to drift higher in the absence of any nasty surprises from Europe.

 

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There are a few economic reports, and a steady stream of earnings news, including retailers Macy’s [M  37.26  watchlist_up.gif  0.86  (+2.36%)   realtime_icon.gif] and JC Penney [JCP  20.90  watchlist_up.gif  0.44  (+2.15%)   realtime_icon.gif]. But after major meetings this past week where both the Federal Reserve and European Central Bank held out the idea of more quantitative easing, the markets could coast in anticipation of central bank action in the fall.

 

“It’s a very thin calendar,” said Art Cashin, director of floor operations at UBS. “This was all about Europe. They’ve got to keep their act together for the next couple of days … Technically, the market looks like it’s trying to break out to the upside.”

 

While Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke appears twice in speaking engagements in the coming week, his next major speech is not expected until he attends the Fed’s Jackson Hole symposium at the end of the month. It was at that event two years ago that he discussed quantitative easing, and traders are hoping for a repeat performance, anticipating that QE3, or that a third asset purchases could be announced when the Fed meets in September.

 

Stocks rallied to a three-month high in the past week, helped by more assertive language from the Fed Wednesday. But the market rose sharply Friday after the July employment report showed a surprise gain of 163,000 jobs to nonfarm payrolls, breaking a string of disappointments. Stocks and the euro were also lifted by optimism that ECB President Mario Draghi’s promises for ECB action would take shape in the next several weeks. The Dow, up for a fourth week, gained 217 points Friday, but was up just 0.2 percent for the week to 13,096. The S&P ended the week up 0.4 percent at 1390, and the Nasdaq was up 0.3 percent at 2967.

 

“There’s not a lot of things for the markets to be afraid of. This week was full of event risk,” said John Briggs, senior Treasury strategist at RBS. “We are through that, and the markets are coming out with some confidence when it comes to risk assets. With the markets not having a lot to be afraid of, and no blatant ‘risk off’ events on the calendar, we’re looking at auction supply.” The Treasury auctions $72 billion in 3- and 10-year notes, and 30-year bonds Tuesday through Thursday.

 

“The path of least resistance is higher yields,” Briggs said. “I think we could get the 10-year (yield) up to 1.70 through the auctions.” The 10-year yield was at 1.575 percent Friday.

 

The July employment report was strong enough to boost confidence slightly about the sluggish economy, but also keep alive the idea that the Fed will restart its asset purchase programs, which have been positive for equities. The unemployment rate rose to 8.3 percent, from 8.2 percent, reflecting the increase in individuals seeking work.

 

“It was the perfect elixir,” said Mark Luschini, chief investment strategist at Janney Montgomery Scott. “Good enough to say the economy has some inertia, but it wasn’t so good that the Fed puts its gun in its holster. QE3 is alive and well. We may get some foreshadowing of that out of Jackson Hole.”

 

Luschini said the idea of Fed and ECB easing could keep stocks aloft. “What could undermine that is some action out of the European community,” he said.

 

Many economists also expect the Fed to announce a new QE plan at its Sept. 12 meeting, and this time the estimated $500 billion program could involve mortgage securities. “You get the biggest bang for your dollar by stimulating a sector that’s already beginning to heal,” said Diane Swonk, chief economist at Mesirow Financial. Housing has been showing signs of a pickup over the past couple of months, as other data, such as manufacturing data in this past week’s ISM, shows signs of slowing.

 

Pull Back or QE Highs?

 

Deutsche Bank chief equity strategist David Bianco said while markets rallied this past week, there may be some more bumps ahead in the near future. He said investors could get impatient anticipating central bank easing and while promises were made, the lack of concrete plans and action from Europe is a risk for markets.

 

“We think the market is at risk of a dip — a five to 10 percent pullback — not a full-blown correction, but something that could get us back to the lows of early June,” said Bianco.

 

Bianco said while the July employment report was encouraging, the U.S. ISM manufacturing survey and PMI manufacturing data from around the world were disappointing. U.S. data showed contraction in the manufacturing sector, a source of strength during the recovery, for the second time since July 2009. The weak numbers are a negative sign for corporate profits, he said.

 

“We think the third-quarter earnings are likely to be down year over year … that doesn’t happen too much outside of recessions,” he said. Bianco said he does expect stocks to do better later in the year.

 

“I do think the risk is we break to the downside before we make a major move to the upside,” he said.

 

What Else to Watch

 

Investors will continue to watch the saga around Knight Capital, which reported a more than $400 million loss after a software program triggered a major trading snafu. The firm Friday was seeking capital, but the incident was another black eye for Wall Street, coming quickly on the heels of the Facebook IPO trading debacle.

 

“It’s just one more reminder to retail investors that something is amiss,” said Luschini. “After the flash crash and everything else they’ve gone through, this is just unsettling.”

 

Luschini said most of the action affecting markets in the coming week could come from Europe, but the discussion around the U.S. “fiscal cliff” is getting louder. The “cliff,” is a term coined for the double expiration of tax cuts Dec. 31 and beginning of automated spending cuts Jan. 1.

 

“It’s a story in which one has to stay tuned because we may not have any clarity on that between now and the end of November,” he said.

 

The Week Ahead

 

Monday

 

Earnings: Humana, Chesapeake Energy [CHK  17.89  watchlist_down.gif  -0.04  (-0.22%)   realtime_icon.gif], Vornado, Caesar Entertainment, Boston Properties

0900 am Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke speaks at Conference of International Association for Research and Wealth on economic measurement

 

Tuesday

 

Earnings: Disney [DIS  49.77  watchlist_up.gif  0.79  (+1.61%)   realtime_icon.gif], Cablevision, CVS Caremark, FirstEnergy, Marsh and McLennan, MGM Resorts, Fossil, Tenet Healthcare, Sirius XM Radio, Molson Coors, Priceline

1000 am JOLTs Job openings

0100 pm $32 billion 3-year auction

0230 pm Fed Chairman Bernanke at Teacher town hall on financial education

 

Wednesday

 

Earnings: News Corp, Liberty Media, Dean Foods, ING Group, Macy’s [M  37.26  watchlist_up.gif  0.86  (+2.36%)   realtime_icon.gif], Ralph Lauren, SodaStream, Rio Tinto, Computer Sciences, International Flavors and Fragrances

0700 am Mortgage applications

0830 am Productivity and costs

0100 pm $24 billion 10-year auction

 

Thursday

 

Earnings: AMC Networks, Advanced Auto Parts, Kohl’s, Tim Hortons, DeVry, Windstream, Randgold Resources, Scotts Miracle-Gro

0830 am Trade balance

0830 am Jobless claims

1000 am Wholesale trade

0100 pm $16 billion 30-year auction

 

Friday

 

Earnings: JC Penney [JCP  20.90  watchlist_up.gif  0.44  (+2.15%)   realtime_icon.gif], Brookfield Asset Management

0830 am Import prices 

 

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Will this week end up, down, or flat? vote in --> Poll: http://www.hotstockmarket.com/t/245273/marcos-weekly-sentiment-poll-8-6-8-10

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post #2 of 482

IWM looks to be within heavy support and resistance.. looks like a big move comin soon on Da breakbiggrin.gif

 

1000

post #3 of 482
Market still grinding it's way higher. SPX test of the 1400 area seems imminent.
post #4 of 482

im more in favor of a lite slide ways grind, resulting in a break down perhaps by the 13th.. due to uncertainty and massive resistance.

just throwing it out there..  unless some staggering news will break the dull enviroment we will see this week.

Its going to be interesting the next 2 weeks to see what the charts do.. i can see some limited upside but nothing to cause a blow off top. 

More inherit risk to the down than up at this point.

post #5 of 482
Same pattern since the dip below 1270 last June, just grinding our way higher, followed by a pullback each time! wink.gif
post #6 of 482
Quote:
Originally Posted by rst View Post

Market still grinding it's way higher. SPX test of the 1400 area seems imminent.


should start fading its way lower til late in the month when fed starts to become the anticipated pump again
post #7 of 482

Approaching the top of the SPY back in 2007 around 142. Going to be interesting how these markets play out from now until elections. 

 

Everything is saying bullish to me right now. We just need to break above this channel we've been rotating in for the past 2 months. A close above 139.5 should do it! :)

post #8 of 482

So far monday looking like a continuation of friday moving up, wouldn't expect another face rip though, hope not laughing.gif. 1400 is so close I'd expect it to get tested. One of those easy to remember magnetic big round numbers. Still delta short so would be nice if we pull back some this week. 

post #9 of 482
Quote:
Originally Posted by rmejia View Post

So far monday looking like a continuation of friday moving up, wouldn't expect another face rip though, hope not laughing.gif . 1400 is so close I'd expect it to get tested. One of those easy to remember magnetic big round numbers. Still delta short so would be nice if we pull back some this week

nice,,,and expected
post #10 of 482

Well Ben speaks now at 9am and tomorrow at 2:30pm. Let's see if he will continue with his "don't worry, I've got the tools to save the economy" bluff.

post #11 of 482

I'm thinking today will be a slow day with a pretty tight range. And tomorrow we'll get a pullback to 138.50.

post #12 of 482
Quote:
Originally Posted by kevin1612 View Post


should start fading its way lower til late in the month when fed starts to become the anticipated pump again

 

I don't think I've ever seen you post a comment in here about the market going up without some bear precursor about a pull back.  LOL

post #13 of 482
Quote:
Originally Posted by Rock Sexton View Post

I don't think I've ever seen you post a comment in here about the market going up without some bear precursor about a pull back.  LOL

its bound to happen im sure...maybe not this year but eventually i will have a bullish bias
post #14 of 482
Quote:
Originally Posted by rmejia View Post

Well Ben speaks now at 9am and tomorrow at 2:30pm. Let's see if he will continue with his "don't worry, I've got the tools to save the economy" bluff.

or maybe he will say "dont worry , qe happy" wink.gif
post #15 of 482

I'm seeing pretty big orders coming in into SPY at ask and even above and the price is barely moving up.

 

Though I can't say that there are too many bears.

post #16 of 482

BBY up 22% pre market...

 

Founder offers to buyout the company for $24 - $26 a share. 

post #17 of 482

More room down than up, news from Europe could send it either way.

post #18 of 482

DIMI , Level II looks great. Dr. Penny stocks expects this to go beyond 0.02 with over 100% gains from current levels.

post #19 of 482
Quote:
Originally Posted by o7media View Post

I'm thinking today will be a slow day with a pretty tight range. And tomorrow we'll get a pullback to 138.50.

 

SPY just broke 140. Top is in for today around 140 IMO.

post #20 of 482
Quote:
Originally Posted by o7media View Post

 

SPY just broke 140. Top is in for today around 140 IMO.

Pretty early to call a top for the day IMO, but we shall see!

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