Translate this page from English into :

Tuesday, November 4, 2008

Dollar Libor Drops 17th Consecutive Day

From MISH'S Global Economic Trend Analysis
November 04, 2008

The credit freeze is thawing somewhat as Dollar Libor Drops 17th Consecutive Day. It is important to keep that move in LIBOR in proper context. Comparing LIBOR to November 2004 is not really a valid comparison. 1-Month Libor should be 10+- basis points to the Fed Funds rate, instead it is sitting 118 basis points above the Fed Funds rate.

Inquiring minds are also noting that the TED Spread, while recovering rapidly is still not back to normal.

Click the chart to enlarge
Chart courtesy of Bloomberg

Even though conditions are nowhere close to normal, the decline in LIBOR will take a tremendous amount of stress off existing LIBOR based ARMS. Here is a chart of 1-Month LIBOR courtesy of the Money Cafe.


That drop in LIBOR from 4.0% to 2.2% (assuming it holds) will reduce interest on many Pay option ARMs and interest only (LIBOR-based) ARMS by a whopping 1.8% compared to that recent spike. And with massive numbers of ARMs resetting now, that explains why the Fed and Central Bankers in general were scared half to death about that latest upward move in LIBOR.

Should LIBOR continue to drop to historic spreads there is still more relief coming for those in ARMs based loans.

Related Posts :
Sources :Please Note!

This is generally never true. Before buying or selling any stock you should do your own research and reach your own conclusion. See my Disclaimer on the bottom for more information.

You are welcome to republish this article, or any portion thereof.
Please, cite the actual/original source. I would be grateful if you could link back.


Stumble Upon Toolbar Add to Technorati Favorites Bookmark and Share

11/04/08 - The Dow 30 Price Targets

From Bespoke Investment Group
November 4, 2008

Below we highlight consensus analyst price targets for the 30 stocks that make up the Dow Jones Industrial Average. As shown, Alcoa's price target is currently the highest above its actual price at 52%. AA is trailed by HPQ and INTC with price targets 40% above current levels. General Motors is the only stock in the index with a price target that is lower than its actual price. With the record of analysts these days, price targets should be taken with a grain of salt, but we thought readers might be interested in seeing where analysts currently stand.

Dowpricetargets1104
Click the image to enlarge


Related Posts :
Sources :Please Note!

This is generally never true. Before buying or selling any stock you should do your own research and reach your own conclusion. See my Disclaimer on the bottom for more information.

You are welcome to republish this article, or any portion thereof.
Please, cite the actual/original source. I would be grateful if you could link back.


Stumble Upon Toolbar Add to Technorati Favorites Bookmark and Share

Why I’m selectively bullish

From Money Morning of iStockAnalyst
November 04, 2008 2:24 PM

There clearly are countries - such as the United States and much of the European Union - that are going to collapse into recession, even if only unofficially. But this doesn’t necessarily have to evolve into a global recession - a position that most of the traditional Wall Street establishment disagrees with, by the way.

Let’s take a look at several of Wall Street’s current misconceptions - and see why I’m selectively bullish:

  • The Red Dragon (China) is ready to hibernate:

    Wall Street is worried that a U.S.-induced recession will slay the Red Dragon.
    There’s no way. If a country can fall into a recession when its economy (as measured by gross domestic product, or GDP) is advancing at a 9.6% clip - at a time when its U.S. counterpart will be lucky to eke out a 1.0% growth rate - well, I’ll eat my hat. The Armani Army, in its infinite wisdom, is worried about a recession in China even though its $1.9 trillion in foreign reserves are more than 32.10% of GDP and external debt is a miniscule 7.6% of GDP (external debt is defined as the amount of debt that China owes external creditors, including consumers, central governments and commercial institutions, according to the CIA Fact Book). By contrast, the U.S. reserves are 4.84% of GDP, while external debt is 84%. The United Kingdom and Switzerland are in even worse shape, with external debt of 382.2% and 279.1%, respectively.

  • China won’t be able to survive a drop-off in exports to the
    United States
    :

    Then there’s the myth of China’s export economy. The last time China took a header and export business dropped by 35%, its GDP dropped by less than 1%. I’m betting it will be an even smaller bump this time around, especially since China’s middle class now is increasingly responsible for internal growth - independent of what China exports to the rest of the world.

  • The Asian economies are an economic train wreck just waiting to
    happen
    :

    This was true a decade ago, when the United States and Western Europe held all the cash. But no longer. Today, nations such as Singapore, Thailand and Malaysia are running trade surpluses. So is Canada. That suggests that the currencies of these countries are significantly undervalued at a time when their economies are increasingly tied to that of China.

  • What does that tell us? Today, China is the growth engine of Asia; tomorrow, it will be the growth engine of the world.

  • The U.S. economy remains the financial center of the
    world
    :

    Today, an estimated 78% of global economic activity takes place outside U.S. borders, which means that even in a recession, an increasing amount of capital circulates beyond the U.S. shores. Indeed, the U.S. stock market now represents less than 30% of total world market capitalization, down from roughly 45% as recently as 2004. Don’t be surprised to see the United States continue to decline in economic relevance. One day, the lion’s share of the financial trades will take place beyond U.S. borders.

  • Because it’s a developed market, the United States remains the
    world’s safest and most promising place to profit
    :

    In the 1980s, the United States accounted for one-third of the global economy; by 2030, that ratio will be cut in half. The reality is that U.S. investors who want to be
    successful in the years to come will have to learn all they can about markets whose names they can’t yet pronounce.


For some insight into which countries have the biggest reserves as a percentage of GDP, take a close look at the accompanying chart:



ETFs/Stocks :
    iShares MSCI Emerging Markets Indx (EEM) $26.69 +1.49 (5.91%)
    UltraShort MSCI Emerging Markets ProShares (EEV) $80.09 -9.26 (-10.36%)
Related Posts :
Sources :Please Note!

This is generally never true. Before buying or selling any stock you should do your own research and reach your own conclusion. See my Disclaimer on the bottom for more information.

You are welcome to republish this article, or any portion thereof.
Please, cite the actual/original source. I would be grateful if you could link back.


Stumble Upon Toolbar Add to Technorati Favorites Bookmark and Share

Making a Bottom is a Process Which Takes Time

The following chart is from Chris Ciovacco's article, Transitions From Bear Markets To Bull Markets:
    The chart below shows the S&P 500 Index from 1999-Present. It compares the bottoming process after the 2000-2002 bear market to the current bear market.

    Click the image to enlarge


ETFs/Stocks :
    UltraShort S&P 500 ProShares (SDS) $79.13 -5.87 (-6.91%)
    Ultra S&P 500 ProShares (SSO) $34.25 +1.77 (5.45%)
Related Posts :
Sources :Please Note!

This is generally never true. Before buying or selling any stock you should do your own research and reach your own conclusion. See my Disclaimer on the bottom for more information.

You are welcome to republish this article, or any portion thereof.
Please, cite the actual/original source. I would be grateful if you could link back.


Stumble Upon Toolbar Add to Technorati Favorites Bookmark and Share

The outlook for the yen and Japanese exporters after the rate cut

From Bloomberg Video
November 4, 2008

Stefan Worrall, vice president of Japan equity sales at Credit Suisse Group, talks with Bloomberg's Bernard Lo from Tokyo about the Bank of Japan's interest rate cut and its impact on the nation's banks and real estate market, the outlook for the yen and Japanese exporters. Governor Masaaki Shirakawa and his board last Friday cut the key overnight lending rate by 20 basis points to 0.3 percent, abandoning a two-year struggle to raise the lowest borrowing costs among major economies.



ETFs/Stocks :
    CurrencyShares Japanese Yen Trust (FXY) $99.05 -1.37 (-1.36%)
Related Posts :
  1. The relationship chart between the yen and the S&P
  2. Bank of Japan cut interest rate by 20 basis points
  3. Japan announced a 27 trillion yen ($275 billion) stimulus package
Sources :Please Note!

This is generally never true. Before buying or selling any stock you should do your own research and reach your own conclusion. See my Disclaimer on the bottom for more information.

You are welcome to republish this article, or any portion thereof.
Please, cite the actual/original source. I would be grateful if you could link back.


Stumble Upon Toolbar Add to Technorati Favorites Bookmark and Share

General Motors Bankruptcy? An Economic Nightmare

From Global Research
By Andrew Hughes
November 4, 2008

"A GM default would be absolutely huge," said Jonathan Loredo, of credit manager Cairn Capital. "It would be the biggest thing to hit the market in terms of losses and operational stress."

That was in March 2006.

"Overall, General Motors sold 168,719 vehicles in October, down from 307,408 in the same month last year, while Ford, including its Volvo brand, sold 132,278 light vehicles last month down from 189,515 in the corresponding month last year.Mike DiGiovanni, GM's executive director of global market and industry analysis, called the situation "frightening" and "dire"."

That was yesterday from Forbes.

Has the Treasury just decided to defer a politically unpalatable decision until after the election or are they throwing in the towel ?

If GM is allowed to go bankrupt, the derivative nightmare will unravel in full daylight and bring down any institution that is not anchored with solid gold. It has been obvious from the start that the bailouts and financial "stimulus" packages have been delivered for one purpose and one purpose only: Helping the Banking community to triage the self inflicted wound of over- leveraged speculation.

Theoretically, the amount that GM is looking for to retool its plants, moribund as they are, is small change to what has been doled out so far. But, even if they were to retool and start producing more fuel efficient vehicles, who is going to buy them ?:
    "Today, Honda and Nissan in Japan have announced reduced earnings forecasts and lack of demand in Europe and the US for their products. Honda lowered its global car sales forecast for this year by 65,000 units to 4.015 million units, while Toyota is also reporting a severe contraction to Europe, India, and the US. Meanwhile in the US General Motors Corp, Chrysler LLC and Ford Motor Co are struggling to stay alive and are burning up their cash reserves at breakneck speed as they try and retool to manufacture more fuel efficient vehicles. They are in for $30 Billion of taxpayer money to help them along with this. However, one problem remains.

    The US Consumer is strapped for cash and access to credit to buy a new car is almost gone. It is cheaper to keep what you already have and repair it if necessary. This works out to be the only way that the US can stay mobile. Extremely few consumers buy new cars for cash. The glut in SUV's was financed by easy credit and not by people who dipped in to their savings to treat themselves. Even if a Toyota Yaris gives twice the mileage compared to a Chrysler or a Ford, who has the money to swap cars ? It's impossible to sell secondhand gas guzzlers so that avenue of finance is closed. It is impossible to get a loan so that avenue is closed as well. So maybe you buy a second hand Honda down at the local car lot. Is this going to boost new car sales ? Nope. So even if GM / Chrysler / Cerberus Capital survive until they have retooled their shiny new factory, will what comes off the production line go straight to the US Consumer ? Nope. . So here we have another good example of throwing good money after bad to prop up industry without propping up the very thing it depends on. The Consumer. One last thing to note. The amount of derivatives connected to GM are astronomical ; that's why there is such an effort to keep it alive on the Oxygen machine to delay the impact it will have on all the counterparties involved. $4.72 trillion owed by Bankrupt countries in the emerging / moribund markets to the rest of Europe; This will be small change when GM unwinds. " (See http://meltdown101.livejournal.com/11100.html)
Instead of putting the cash into GM, the Treasury would prefer to invest it in Fuel Efficient Vehicle research, the fruits of which would be available to all US Auto companies, if any are still standing. But it still comes down to the simple arithmetic that is consistently ignored in mainstream discourse: If the population is broke, jobless and homeless, there is no point in wasting money putting products behind showroom glass while the intended consumers can only press their noses against it and dream.

Even if they are leaving the crying baby for Obama to deal with in January, (and he has said that he is in favour of helping GM financially), the situation will be gravely worse by then anyway and GM will probably be way down the list as he finds himself with a situation that even FDR could not begin to comprehend.

Related Posts :

Sources :Global Research: Please Note!

This is generally never true. Before buying or selling any stock you should do your own research and reach your own conclusion. See my Disclaimer on the bottom for more information.

You are welcome to republish this article, or any portion thereof.
Please, cite the actual/original source. I would be grateful if you could link back.


Stumble Upon Toolbar Add to Technorati Favorites Bookmark and Share

The relationship chart between the yen and the S&P

From Jesse's Café Américain
November 4, 2008 09:44 am

We show the relationship of the SP 500 in our Yen chart every night.
But we like this format from our friends at The ContraryInvestor.com
who are true masters of the pictorial display.


ETFs/Stocks :
    CurrencyShares Japanese Yen Trust (FXY) $99.05 -1.37 (-1.36%)
    UltraShort S&P 500 ProShares (SDS) $79.13 -5.87 (-6.91%)
    Ultra S&P 500 ProShares (SSO) $34.25 +1.77 (5.45%)
Related Posts :
Sources :Please Note!

This is generally never true. Before buying or selling any stock you should do your own research and reach your own conclusion. See my Disclaimer on the bottom for more information.

You are welcome to republish this article, or any portion thereof.
Please, cite the actual/original source. I would be grateful if you could link back.


Stumble Upon Toolbar Add to Technorati Favorites Bookmark and Share

11/04/08 - Upgrade & Downgrade (Update 2)

From BloggingStocks
By TheFlyOnTheWall
November 4, 2008 11:43 am

Analyst upgrades:

  • S&P maintains strong buy opinion on class B shares of Viacom (VIAB):

    Before $0.07 tax benefit and on 7% less shares, third quarter EPS of $0.55, vs. $0.65, misses our estimate by $0.05 but was in line with Street. As pre-announced, U.S. ads fell 3%, with likely more weakness ahead. third quarter showed tough film comps vs. '07's Transformers, partly offset by strong international ads, worldwide affiliate fees, Rock Band games (over 7M units to date). We see strong Q4 DVDs (Iron Man, Indiana Jones 4, Panda). Chairman Redstone again said he plans no more sale of shares, amid talks between lender and Redstone's National Amusements. We keep PEG-based target price of $25. /T. Amobi - CPA, CFA

  • S&P reiterates buy opinion on shares Yahoo (YHOO):

    In an unconfirmed report, the WSJ indicates that YHOO and Google (GOOG; 352.21, Strong Buy) sent the Justice Dept. a revised search-advertising agreement. The new pact would add a 25% limit on the percentage of YHOO's search revenues generated from the deal, reduce its length to two from 10 years, and enable GOOG advertisers to choose not have their ads displayed on YHOO properties. We think these alterations increase the chance of passing DoJ muster, but also reduce the possible benefits. Without a DoJ okay, we think YHOO would look to partner with Microsoft (MSFT; 23.11). -S. Kessler

  • Philip Morris (PM) was upgraded to Outperform from Neutral at Credit Suisse.

  • Friedman Billings upgraded shares of Principal Financial (PFG) to Market Perform from Underperform as they believe the company's capital buffer could keep outrunning credit losses.

  • Friedman Billings also upgraded Office Max (OMX) to Outperform from Market Perform. The firm believes the risk of recourse to Office Max from the Timber Notes formerly backed by Lehman is low and that any litigation by noteholders will have a low level of success.

  • Citigroup upgraded CF Industries (CF) to Buy from Hold on valuation following the recent weakness but lowered their target to $113 from $128.

  • Analog Devices (ADI) was upgraded to Buy from Neutral at Merrill Lynch.

  • Granite Construction (GVA) was upgraded to Neutral from Sell at Goldman.

Analyst downgrades:

  • S&P downgrades shares of PPL Corp to hold from buy (PPL):

    PPL shares down 11% this morning on sharply reduced outlook. The company reports third quarter operating EPS of $0.45 vs. $0.72, $0.16 below our estimate, hurt by a drop in wholesale energy margins and outages at two coal plants. We are reducing our 2008 EPS estimate $0.25 to $2.05, and based on expected rise in operation and financing costs, 2009's by $0.50 to $1.75. We still expect EPS to double in 2010, as expired energy contracts have already been largely hedged at much higher prices. We are reducing our 12-month target price by $5 to $32, a premium-to-peers p-e of 18.3 times our 2009 estimate. -J. McCann

  • UBS downgraded shares of Banco Santander (STD) to Sell from Neutral on valuation and the economic deterioration in Spain.

  • Royal Bank of Scotland (RBS) was cut to Hold from Buy at Collins Stewart to reflect the company's outlook and capital levels.

  • Diageo (DEO) was lowered to Neutral from Buy at Merrill.

  • T. Rowe Price (TROW) and TreeHouse Foods (THS) were downgraded at Wachovia to Market Perform from Outperform.

  • Fulton Financial (FULT) was downgraded to Neutral from Buy at B. Riley.

  • Jefferies downgraded Kenexa (KNXA) to Hold from Buy following the Q3 results as they believe falling margins could lead to more downward revisions. The firm lowered their target to $8 from $13.

Analyst Hold/Neutral:

  • S&P maintains hold opinion on shares of Mastercard (MA):

    Before a $515 million antitrust litigation settlement, MA posts third quarter operating EPS of $2.47, vs. $2.31, $0.17 above our estimate. Revenue rose 24%, reflecting a 12% growth in purchase volume and a 13% increase in transactions. We expect revenue growth to decline going forward due to economic difficulties. MA's results reflect the strong operating leverage of its business model; expenses rose only 8.3%. We expect the company to report 2008 EPS of $8.90, We are increasing our 12-month target price to $175, a below-historical 19.7 times our 2008 EPS estimate. -S. Plesser

  • S&P maintains hold recommendation hold recommendation on shares of Marvel Entertaintment (MVL):

    Third quarter EPS of $0.64, vs. $0.45, is well above our $0.42 estimate, reflecting substantial box office for Iron Man and DVD revenues that were not expected before 2009. Licensing revenues were down 29% on dramatically lower Spider-Man licensing. We think toy sales and associated licensing will be impacted by the weaker economy, and with no movie releases coming before 2010, we see few near-term catalysts for MVL, although we believe its long-term plan is sound. We are raising our 2008 EPS estimate to $2.51 from $1.88, but cutting 2009's to $1.20 from $1.92. Our target price remains $37. -E. Kolb

Analyst initiations:

  • Jesup & Lamont also assumed coverage of Delta Air Lines (DAL) with a Buy rating and $15.50 target and believes Delta continues to reduce capacity to address the decline in forward bookings.

  • Banc of America believes Kroger (KR) is well positioned following gross margin investments. The firm started shares with a Buy rating and $31 target.

  • Morgan Stanley initiated Liz Clairborne (LIZ) and Jones Apparel (JNY) with Underweight ratings and Polo Ralph Lauren (RL) with an Equal Weight rating.

  • Royal Bank of Scotland (RBS) was initiated with a Sell rating at ING Group.

  • Jesup & Lamont believes Allegiant (ALGT) is a way to gain exposure to the airline industry without actually buying an airline stock. Shares were initiated with a Buy rating and $45 target.

Related Posts :
Sources :
  1. BloggingStocks: Analyst calls: PM, PFG, OMX, STD, RBS, DEO, DAL, KR, LIZ, JNY, RL ..., November 4, 2008 11:43 am
  2. Business Week: S&P Picks and Pans: Mastercard, Viacom, Yahoo, PPL, Marvel Entertainment, November 4, 2008, 11:23AM EST
Please Note!

This is generally never true. Before buying or selling any stock you should do your own research and reach your own conclusion. See my Disclaimer on the bottom for more information.

You are welcome to republish this article, or any portion thereof.
Please, cite the actual/original source. I would be grateful if you could link back.


Stumble Upon Toolbar Add to Technorati Favorites Bookmark and Share

Morgan Joseph: Banks Need to De-Lever More

From Bloomberg Video
November 4, 2008

Banking Industry Recovery - Analysis and Discussion with Morgan Joseph Founder/Co-Head Frederick Joseph: Banks Need to De-Lever More



ETFs / Stocks :
    UltraShort Financials ProShares (SKF): $113.28 -10.72 (-8.65%)
    Financial Select Sector SPDR (XLF) 16.32 +0.70 (4.48%)
Related Posts :
Sources :Please Note!

This is generally never true. Before buying or selling any stock you should do your own research and reach your own conclusion. See my Disclaimer on the bottom for more information.

You are welcome to republish this article, or any portion thereof.
Please, cite the actual/original source. I would be grateful if you could link back.


Stumble Upon Toolbar Add to Technorati Favorites Bookmark and Share

Carl Icahn dumps stake in Lear (LEA)

From BloggingStocks
November 4, 2008

Billionaire activist investor Carl Icahn has dumped 8.5 million shares -- two thirds of his total stake -- in struggling auto supplier Lear (NYSE: LEA). Icahn Partners' senior managing director Vincent Intrieri resigned from the board, and explained that the sale was done to allow the firm to realize a tax loss. He also claims to be confident in the company's ability to remain viable in spite of the troubles facing the industry.

Yeah, okay. Icahn and Intrieri are probably just saying that to avoid leaving the company with a slap to the face (or a kick in the groin, as the case may be), given that the company's precarious capital position makes it extremely dependent on market confidence.

Here's why I don't buy it: Icahn still has a significant stake in the company -- a little less than 5% compared to 16% prior to the sale -- so, if he really believed in the company's prospects, why would he give up the board seat?

Icahn's taking a huge hit on Lear, but he should thank the company's other shareholders for preventing something that could have been a lot worse. Last year they rejected his offer to take the company private for $2.9 billion. The market cap now sits below $160 million.

ETFs / Stocks :
    Lear (LEA)
Related Posts :
Sources :Please Note!

This is generally never true. Before buying or selling any stock you should do your own research and reach your own conclusion. See my Disclaimer on the bottom for more information.

You are welcome to republish this article, or any portion thereof.
Please, cite the actual/original source. I would be grateful if you could link back.


Stumble Upon Toolbar Add to Technorati Favorites Bookmark and Share

Four reasons why solar will boom

From Kelvin Schulle
November 04, 2008
About stocks: CSIQ, CSUN, FSLR, LDK, SOL, SOLF, SPWRA, STP, YGE

Four reasons why solar will boom:
  1. The solar sector is among the best in terms of earnings compared to other sectors.

    Solar companies have reported astonishing earnings in previous quarters, yet the stock price has been beaten down in the same magnitude of other sectors, trading at historical lows. Suntech Power reported 1st quarter 2008 earnings of USD .33 per share on 5/22/08, beat the consensus of USD 0.276 by USD 0.054, and reported 2nd quarter 2008 earnings of USD .38 per share on 8/20/08. This beat the consensus of USD 0.316 by USD 0.064, and is a consistent 19% earning surprise on the upside.

    First Solar reported 3rd quarter 2008 earnings of USD 1.20 per share on 10/29/08, and beat the consensus of USD 1.01 by USD 0.188, which is also 19% upside surprise. For some other small players, LDK Solar and Renesola recently raised their earnings of Q3 and year 2008. This will send a signal to investors that solar companies are going strong despite the credit crunch. The hedge fund redemptions in October provide great opportunity for investors to get in at historically low prices for STP and FSLR.

  2. The credit crunch has little impact on solar companies’ funding in 2009 and beyond.

    Companies like First Solar and Suntech Power are self-funded companies that have been making money all the time, and these two companies have sufficient funds to expand their businesses. However, some small companies such as Yingli Green and Renesola announced they have acquired additional credit lines from Chinese banks, which are not affected by the US financial crisis. LDK solar also said it has no need to raise capital in the next 2 years. It seems to me the solar sector has no difficulty attracting more investment even in this environment.

  3. Polysilicon prices will continue to slide, further boosting PV module margins.

    According to a Collins Stewart report on Monday, polysilicon prices have declined about 20%-30% over the past three weeks. In a research note, Dan Ries says that prices for high purity polysilicon are down about $100/kg to about $300/kg. This decline is a welcome relief for module makers as it will help to offset the sharp reduction in ASPs expected in the quarters ahead due to the Euro. Among the companies who will benefit from the low price are Suntech Power, Canadian Solar and Sunpower, to name a few.

  4. Both US presidential candidates vowed to boost solar power.

    This is a monumental event for the solar industry as this may reform the world’s largest economy into the largest solar energy market. The US has created a base for the solar industry by passing an 8 year solar tax credit last month. With leadership from Obama or McCain, solar is set to grow in the coming decade.

    In summary, we are facing a once in a lifetime opportunity to invest in the solar sector. Among the top companies are Suntech Power, First Solar, and Sunpower Corp. If Obama takes office in January 2009, solar and other renewable energy sectors will start a serious run. The next 10 years are well braced for a solar boom.

Disclosure: Author long FSLR, STP.

Related Posts :
  1. More Downside Ahead for Solar
  2. Energy Funds and Stocks Will Move in the Opposite Direction Against Swinging Oil Prices
Sources :Please Note!

This is generally never true. Before buying or selling any stock you should do your own research and reach your own conclusion. See my Disclaimer on the bottom for more information.

You are welcome to republish this article, or any portion thereof.
Please, cite the actual/original source. I would be grateful if you could link back.


Stumble Upon Toolbar Add to Technorati Favorites Bookmark and Share

The Hottest Online Game Retail Products per October'08

From Compete Analyst
October 30, 2008


Highlights for the Week of October 19-25:
  • Led by the Nintendo Wii console, video games made up the majority of the most coveted items online last week. Nearly a quarter million people shopped online for a Wii last month. The three leading consoles and their related games made up 6 of the top 10 as well as half of the top 20.
  • Aside from the traditional gaming systems, the Leapster, an educational handheld gaming system continues to be popular. Other electronic devices, notably iPods and GPS devices, fared quite well too.
  • Online interest in the High School Musical 3 soundtrack jumped 256% from the prior week in the lead-up to the film’s theatrical release last weekend.
  • Interestingly enough, the top DVD last week doesn’t even come out for another month.

Related Posts :
Sources :Please Note!

This is generally never true. Before buying or selling any stock you should do your own research and reach your own conclusion. See my Disclaimer on the bottom for more information.

You are welcome to republish this article, or any portion thereof.
Please, cite the actual/original source. I would be grateful if you could link back.


Stumble Upon Toolbar Add to Technorati Favorites Bookmark and Share

Smaller banks like Fifth Third and KeyCorp are the sector's bargains

From The Wall Street Journal Video
November 1, 2008

Andrew Bary tells you the best bet for banking stocks. Smaller banks like Fifth Third and KeyCorp are the sector's bargains.



Related Posts :
Sources :Please Note!

This is generally never true. Before buying or selling any stock you should do your own research and reach your own conclusion. See my Disclaimer on the bottom for more information.

You are welcome to republish this article, or any portion thereof.
Please, cite the actual/original source. I would be grateful if you could link back.


Stumble Upon Toolbar Add to Technorati Favorites Bookmark and Share

11/04/08 - Citigroup & Goldman Sach on SNDK

From Bloomberg Video
November 4, 2008

Citigroup Raises Semiconductors to "Overweight"; SanDisk Added to Goldman Sachs' American Buy List on Attractive Valuation; Apple Recovering After Early Morning Lows from FBR Note Saying iPhone Output Will Be Cut by 40%



Related Posts :
Sources :Please Note!

This is generally never true. Before buying or selling any stock you should do your own research and reach your own conclusion. See my Disclaimer on the bottom for more information.

You are welcome to republish this article, or any portion thereof.
Please, cite the actual/original source. I would be grateful if you could link back.


Stumble Upon Toolbar Add to Technorati Favorites Bookmark and Share

Friedman Billings Ramsey: Apple May Cut iPhone Production by 40%

From Bloomberg Video
October 4, 2008

According to Friedman Billings Ramsey (FBR), Apple May Cut iPhone Production by 40%.



Related Posts :

Sources :Please Note!

This is generally never true. Before buying or selling any stock you should do your own research and reach your own conclusion. See my Disclaimer on the bottom for more information.

You are welcome to republish this article, or any portion thereof.
Please, cite the actual/original source. I would be grateful if you could link back.


Stumble Upon Toolbar Add to Technorati Favorites Bookmark and Share

Nouriel Roubini: The Rising Risk of a Hard Landing in China

From Nouriel Roubini's Global EconoMonitor
By Nouriel Roubini
November 4, 2008

For the last few years the global economy has been running on two engines, the U.S. on the consumption side and China on the production side, both lifting the entire global economy. The U.S. has been the consumer of first and last resort spending more than its income and running large current account deficits while China (and other emerging market economies) has been the producer of first and last resort, spending less than its income and running ever larger current account surpluses.

For the last few months the first engine of global growth has effectively shut down as the latest batch of macro news from the U.S. are worse than awful: collapsing consumption and consumer confidence, plunging housing, collapsing auto sales, plunging durable goods spending (while supply side indicators such as production, ISM and employment are also free falling). The U.S. is entering its worst consumer recession in decades both supply and demand data look worse than in the severe recessions of 1974-75 and 1980-82. And in due time this tsunami of awful macro news, together with ugly downside surprises to earnings will take another toll on equity valuations that are now temporarily lifted by another bear market sucker’s rally.

More worrisome there are now increasing signs that the other main engine of the global economy – China - is also stalling. Let us consider now in detail the evidence that China may be on its way to a hard landing…

ETF Picks :
    FXP: ProShares ETFs – UltraShort FTSE/Xinhua China 25
Related Posts :
  1. Nouriel Roubini Sees `Significant Downside Risk' for Equities
  2. Nouriel Roubini: U.S. Needs $400 Billion Stimulus Packages
Sources :Please Note!

This is generally never true. Before buying or selling any stock you should do your own research and reach your own conclusion. See my Disclaimer on the bottom for more information.

You are welcome to republish this article, or any portion thereof.
Please, cite the actual/original source. I would be grateful if you could link back.


Stumble Upon Toolbar Add to Technorati Favorites Bookmark and Share

Deflation: A new threat

From Accrued Interest
Monday, November 03, 2008

Does the rate cut matter? We know that 1% fed funds isn't making mortgage rates lower, or spurring banks to lend. So what's the point? Is the Fed pushing on a string? Are they out of bullets?

I think too much of the commentary has been focused on the impact of fed funds on the stock market and/or the lending markets near term. There has also been way too much debate on whether the Fed's actions will "work" or "not work" in terms of averting a recession. The Fed isn't trying to revive the stock market nor is it trying to avert a recession. Those that continue to think in these terms will continue to misunderstand the market for the next two years.

The Fed is currently focused on deflation. They may not have made direct mention of this in their recent post-meeting press release, but deflation is the Fed's ultimate concern. Right now we have a weak economy which is headed for a recession. Nothing can stop that now. The tail risk here is another Great Depression. And what would bring about another Depression?

Here's what Milton Friedman has to say. "I think there is universal agreement within the economics profession that the decline - the sharp decline in the quantity of money played a very major role in producing the Great Depression."

Friedman believed very strongly that a proper reaction by the Fed in 1930 would have prevented the Depression. The deleveraging of our economy will result in a contraction in the money supply, all else being equal. In the recent past, the rapid expansion of credit has created huge amounts of spending power. This spending power is now being removed much faster than it was created. On top of that, the massive loss of consumer wealth, both from housing and from equity markets, will force individuals to increase their savings rate to fund large ticket purchases and long-term financial needs. A contraction in the money supply will result in deflation.

So what does Ben Bernanke think of the Fed's culpability in causing the Depression? At Milton Friedman's 90th birthday, Bernanke said, "Regarding the Great Depression. You're right, we [the Fed] did it. We're very sorry. But thanks to you, we won't do it again." That's all you need to know when thinking about the Fed's playbook for the next year or two. Bernanke will fight deflation with everything he's got. The only lower bound on fed funds will be zero. Here is a quote from Bernanke in 2002. "As I have mentioned, some observers have concluded that when the central bank's policy rate falls to zero--its practical minimum--monetary policy loses its ability to further stimulate aggregate demand and the economy. At a broad conceptual level, and in my view in practice as well, this conclusion is clearly mistaken."

He goes on to say that currency only has value because it has a limited supply. If the problem is that the currency is overvalued (i.e., the currency buys too many goods), the solution is simple: increase the supply. From the same speech: "But the U.S. government has a technology, called a printing press (or, today, its electronic equivalent), that allows it to produce as many U.S. dollars as it wishes at essentially no cost."

We may have a long way to go before we are literally printing money. But the fact that Bernanke would even mention such a thing shos the kind of resolve the Fed has in fighting deflation.

So what's the trade? First, you need to revise your thinking about the impact of ballooning government debt on the economy. Normally deficit spending results is both inflationary and negative for the dollar. In this case, the government debt is mostly going to offset a rapid decline in private leverage. Thus the increase in debt will not necessarily cause inflation or a devaluation of the dollar, but rather alleviate the deflationary impact of deleveraging.

Second, forget the idea that there is some natural lower bound on interest rates. It is easy to look at 2-year Treasury notes at 1.5% and scoff that rates simply can't go lower. But depending on how effective the Fed is in fighting deflation, rates could keep falling from here.

Finally, the odds are good that the Fed will succeed in preventing sustained deflation, simply because they have such powerful tools at their disposal. But the more unconventional means they employ to fight deflation, the more difficult it will be to control the outcome. In other words, an aggressive fight against deflation may eventually result in more volatile prices in the future.

Related Posts :

Sources :Please Note!

This is generally never true. Before buying or selling any stock you should do your own research and reach your own conclusion. See my Disclaimer on the bottom for more information.

You are welcome to republish this article, or any portion thereof.
Please, cite the actual/original source. I would be grateful if you could link back.


Stumble Upon Toolbar Add to Technorati Favorites Bookmark and Share

Australia unexpectedly cuts key interest rate by 75 bps

Reserve Bank of Australia (RBA) Governor Glenn Stevens speaks
at a luncheon in Melbourne June 13, 2008. The Australian dollar recovered
from four-week lows against the U.S. currency on Friday,
finding some lift after Stevens reiterated a tightening monetary policy bias.
REUTERS/Mick Tsikas (AUSTRALIA)

Australia's central bank cut its benchmark interest rate by a larger-than-expected three quarters of a percentage point, the third reduction in as many months, amid evidence global financial turmoil is buffeting the economy.


Australia cuts key interest rate by 75 basis points;
Report and analysis by Susan Li of Bloomberg News

Governor Glenn Stevens lowered the overnight cash rate target to a 3 1/2-year low 5.25 percent in Sydney today, adding to last month's 1 percentage point reduction. Fifteen of 16 economists surveyed by Bloomberg News forecast a half-point cut and one tipped a quarter-point drop.

Falling house prices and retail sales plus October's 14 percent slump in the All Ordinaries stock index, the biggest drop since 1987, have prompted Stevens to undertake the most aggressive round of rate cuts since the economy was last in a recession in 1991. The U.S., China, India, Japan and South Korea all lowered borrowing costs in the past week.

Related Posts :
Sources :Please Note!

This is generally never true. Before buying or selling any stock you should do your own research and reach your own conclusion. See my Disclaimer on the bottom for more information.

You are welcome to republish this article, or any portion thereof.
Please, cite the actual/original source. I would be grateful if you could link back.


Stumble Upon Toolbar Add to Technorati Favorites Bookmark and Share