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  • Squawk Box Europe – Bill McLaren

    LET’S LOOK AT THE S&P 500 INDEX DAILY CHART

    S&P500

    There is a chance, a probability for a high today or Monday. When the July “False Break” low was hit I indicated three probabilities. A new leg up running to a minimum 1247 in 90 to 99 calendar days, a secondary high or fast rally that exhausts before a new high usually 7/8 of the range down in 60 to 65 calendar days. Or a lower double top and this is where the index is now located. So as the index moves into these time window we need to look at the wave structure, volume, price level and the pattern of the trend to confirm the probability. The index is at the “OBVIOUS” resistance of the previous high and now within the time window at 180 days.

    There is a 5 wave structure up (5 or 3of 3), volume has been decreasing but not unusual if the trend were up at this stage, but the pattern of trend is not setting up well. Notice how small the daily ranges have become. High points and tops tend to have some volatility. Notice the expansion of ranges during the January top and the April top and in this case the ranges are narrowing. If there is a move down it is possible to see just one to three days down and resumption of the trend due to the resistance being “obvious.”

    Running out cycles from the July low has 45 days on the 15th and if a low could indicate a 90 day move up. If this is a counter trend rally in a down trending market the highest probability is to run out 60 to 65 days or out to the first week in September. If there is a high point now it should not exceed 1134. I don’t like the odds for a top due to the small range days and the probability the move down could be a small counter trend down. The small range days leaves a possibility of a large spike up. If today can not advance following yesterday’s reversal up and a daily low is broken I’ll consider a short term move down to trade but I doubt the trend reversal. I hate those small range days as it usually indicates support coming in at high levels and an exhaustion up might be necessary to eliminate the buyers.

    GOLD

    Gold

    The two weeks ago I said gold would go to 154 to 157 for a low at 50% of the last leg up. We are now looking for this rally to fail and confirm a downtrend into one of the major support. The move down to 50% of the last leg up to consolidated that leg up. I felt the entire trend since 2008 needed to be consolidated so we are looking for this rally to fail and run down to ¼ of the major range which is the minimum move down to correct or consolidate a major trend or 1122. Once gold establishes a downtrend there is a fast rally as occurred in this uptrend as noted with arrows and this occurs in almost all up trends. So we are looking for evidence this rally will fail at a price above 1212 and possibly on the 12th of August at 1220. If the index runs past 12 trading days there is no high in place and a new high is likely. The pattern of the downtrend was weak so we need solid evidence to conclude a lower high is in place. But that is what we are looking to occur.

    Source: McLaren Report

  • Guildford Coal Limited (GUF) – Listing Today

    Guildford Coal Limited (GUF) is due to list today (22-July) at 11:00am.

    Company Overview

    Guildford has established a portfolio of coal exploration tenement areas in Queensland, Australia. Guildford’s tenements cover an estimated area of in excess of 21,000 square kilometres and are defined within project areas as follows:

    • Hughenden Project (Galilee/Eromanga Basins);
    • Sierra Project (Bowen Basin);
    • Comet Project (Bowen Basin);
    • Sunrise Project (Surat/Bowen Basin);
    • Monto Project (Nagoorin Graben); and
    • Maryborough Project (Maryborough Basin).

    For more information, please visit http://www.guildfordcoal.com.au/

  • Doug Kass: Stocks Have Hit Bottom For the Year

    stocks  hit bottom lowNew York City is in the midst of a serious heat wave, but on Wall Street the stock market is on a major cold streak. Stocks are down 9 of the past 11 sessions. Even Tuesday’s higher close was still well off the highs of the day.

    Doug Kass of Seabreeze Partners, famous for calling the market bottom in March 2009, isn’t worried. In fact, he’s bullish. “I think we’ve seen the lows of the year,” he tells Tech Ticker guest host Jon Najarian of OptionMonster.com. “The market’s are traveling on a path of fear and share prices have significantly disconnected from fundamentals,” he says.

    Kass predicts stocks will rise 10%-12% by year’s end on the back of strong earnings and a better-than-expected economic recovery. He says positive trends in the ISM manufacturing and non-manufacturing index and improved labor market conditions point to “moderate domestic economic expansion, not a double dip.”

    Trading at around 11 times earnings, stocks are fairly inexpensive, says Kass. He notes stocks generally trade at around 15 times future earnings, and even higher in periods of tame inflation and low interest rates, as we’re currently experiencing.

    It may not be a V-shaped rally like that of 2009, but Kass says we’ve just started building a base, which could lead to a fundamentally stronger and longer-lasting rally in the future.

    Source: http://finance.yahoo.com/tech-ticker/doug-kass-stocks-have-hit-bottom-for-the-year-517083.html

  • Learn Basics of Elliott Wave Analysis — FREE

    Ralph Nelson Elliott discovered the Wave Principle in the 1930s. Over the decades, his discovery was kept alive by a handful of individuals. A few of those, such as Bolton, Prechter and Frost, educated investors on how to use pattern analysis in financial markets.

    To help out Elliott Wave International’s readers in learning the basics of the method, we put together a free 10-lesson online tutorial. Here’s an excerpt. To get it in full, look for details below.

    EWI’s Basic Elliott Wave Tutorial
    Lesson 1, excerpt

    At that time [of his discovery], with the Dow in the 100s, R. N. Elliott predicted a great bull market for the next several decades that would exceed all expectations at a time when most investors felt it impossible that the Dow could even better its 1929 peak. As we shall see, phenomenal stock market forecasts, some of pinpoint accuracy years in advance, have accompanied the history of the application of the Elliott Wave approach.

    Under the Wave Principle, every market decision is both produced by meaningful information and produces meaningful information. Each transaction, while at once an effect, enters the fabric of the market and, by communicating transactional data to investors, joins the chain of causes of others’ behavior. This feedback loop is governed by man’s social nature, and since he has such a nature, the process generates forms. As the forms are repetitive, they have predictive value.

    The market…is not propelled by the linear causality to which one becomes accustomed in the everyday experiences of life. Nor is the market the cyclically rhythmic machine that some declare it to be. Nevertheless, its movement reflects a structured formal progression. In markets, progress ultimately takes the form of five waves of a specific structure.

    Elliott Wave Idealized 5-Wave Move

    Three of these waves, which are labeled 1, 3 and 5, actually effect the directional movement. They are separated by two countertrend interruptions, which are labeled 2 and 4, as shown in Figure 1-1. The two interruptions are apparently a requisite for overall directional movement to occur.

    At any time, the market may be identified as being somewhere in the basic five wave pattern at the largest degree of trend.

    Read the rest of this 10-lesson Tutorial and see multiple charts now, free! All you need is to create a free Club EWI profile.

    Read the rest of this 10-lesson Basic Elliott Wave Tutorial online now, free! Here’s what you’ll learn:

    • What the basic Elliott wave progression looks like
    • Difference between impulsive and corrective waves
    • How to estimate the length of waves
    • How Fibonacci numbers fit into wave analysis
    • Practical application tips for the method
    • More

    Keep reading this free tutorial today.

    Source: http://www.safehaven.com/article/17423/learn-basics-of-elliott-wave-analysis-free

  • Types of Traders

    There are many different types of traders out there, before entering the market for yourself, you may want to consider what type of trading you would be comfortable with. The different types of traders are:

    1. Trend Traders

    These traders attempt to buy a stock that is going up and hold onto it until it starts going down. The best part about this strategy is that it takes a relatively short amount of time to manage it. Trend traders could be in a stock for days or years, depending on how well the stock is doing, the idea here is, why kill a good thing.

    2. Swing and Day Traders

    Both swing and day traders attempt to catch the short movements in the stock market. It involves being much more active in your account and having to pay closer attention to patterns and other short term indicators. The great thing about these strategies is that you make a profit or loss fast and it can add up over time.

    3. Option Trading

    Similar to swing trading option trading attempts to make money from the stock market in a short term time period. The only difference is that with options you have the potential to explode your profits. A relatively small move in the price of the stock could mean a huge move in the option.

    4. Option Seller

    Option sellers on the other hand attempt to sell options that they believe will become worthless over time. This way they collect the premium up front and when the option hopefully expires in the future they are in no obligation to do anything. Option sellers do not attempt to hit the huge home runs, but try to make a good return over time by compound interest. These are the most popular ways to trade stocks. All traders will have to find out which strategy fits them the best.

  • Stock Market Report 3-2-10

    Index/Security Close Chg %Chg
    Dow Jones (US) 10,297 +111.3 +1.1
    S&P 500 1,103 +14.1 +1.3
    NASDAQ 2,190 +18.9 +0.9

    US stocks rose on Tuesday after United Parcel Service (UPS) and DR Horton released encouraging earnings reports.

    Gains were broad based on Tuesday, with 28 of 30 Dow stocks rising.

    UPS reported a drop in fourth-quarter profit, but forecast a sharp increase in 2010 earnings. Its stock rose over 1%.

    The National Association of Realtors’ pending home sales index rose 1%, in line with expectations. The index fell 16.4% in the previous month. DR Horton, one of the top five US home builders, reported its first-quarterly profit in almost three years and its stock jumped 11%. Pulte Homes and Lennar Corp rose over 7%.

    Amazon.com slid for a second straight day, falling 2%, and limited the Nasdaq’s advance.

    The S&P 500 industrial sector rose over 1%. Cummins and Emerson Electric rose between 7% and 8%. Cummins is a US manufacturer of diesel engines and other power generation equipment. Emerson is an industrial conglomerate that produces technology used by the oil and natural gas industries.

    Major automakers, including Ford Motor, General Motors and Nissan all reported improved January sales. Toyota, however, saw a bigger-than-expected decline in January sales, impacted by a major recall.

    Credit card companies rose after analysts upgraded companies within the industry. American Express, Discover Financial Services and Capital One Financial rose between 2% and 3%.

    So far, 48% of the S&P 500 companies have reported results. Analysts expect earnings to have tripled from the prior year, although the improvement is mostly due to cost cutting and easy comparisons to the fourth quarter of 2008. The financial sector is expected to lead the advance.

    In other news, Moody’s Investors Service said the outlook for the US’ AAA credit rating remains stable even with the effects of the credit crisis and recession on government debt and fiscal flexibility.

    Commodities

    Base Metals Close Chg %Chg Units
    Aluminium 2,087 +34.0 +1.7 USD/t
    Lead 2,099 +74.0 +3.7 USD/t
    Copper 6,794 +25.8 +0.4 USD/t
    Nickel 18,225 +296.0 +1.7 USD/t
    Tin 16,394 +300.0 +1.9 USD/t
    Zinc 2,147 +12.3 +0.6 USD/t
    Precious Metals Close Chg %Chg Units
    Gold 1,115 +7.6 +0.7 USD/Oz
    Silver 16.7 +0.0 +0.0 USD/Oz
    Palladium 439 +10.5 +2.5 USD/Oz
    Platinum 1,580 +32.0 +2.1 USD/Oz
    Soft Commodities Close Chg %Chg Units
    Oil (West Texas) 77.2 +2.8 +3.8 USD/Bar
    Corn 365 +6.0 +1.7 USD/t
    Lumber 261 +2.5 +1.0 USD/t
    Sugar 29.4 +0.1 +0.4 USD/lb
    Wheat 4.87 +0.13 +2.6 USD/bu
    Wool 853 +0.0 +0.0 USD/t
  • Stock Market Report 21-1-10

    Wall Street suffered its worst slide of 2010 on Wednesday as investors worried that lending restrictions in China could hurt the global economic recovery.

    Market breadth was negative. On the NYSE, losers beat winners by more than three to one. On the NASDAQ, decliners topped advancers three to one.

    Commodity-related shares were hurt by concerns that China may curb its economic expansion. A stronger dollar also put pressure on commodity prices and commodity-related stocks.

    Technology shares were among the biggest decliners after IBM gave a conservative outlook, despite reporting better-than-forecast quarterly sales and earnings. IBM shares fell 3.8%.

    Healthcare stocks were down on Wednesday. An index of pharmaceuticals companies fell 1.1%. Healthcare stocks had risen the prior day on speculation that the healthcare system would face new obstacles following a surprise Republican election to the Massachusetts Senate seat.

    Several banks reported earnings. Wells Fargo & Co and US Bancorp reported better-than-expected quarterly earnings, helped by recent acquisitions. The Bank of America reported a wider-than-expected loss, but said its credit problems were beginning to stabilise. The Bank of America said losses widened to US$5.2B in the fourth quarter of last year, partly due to the bank paying back government bailout funds. The company said the repayments shaved off $US4B from its bottom line. US Bancorp shares added 2.3% while the Bank of America gained 0.6%. Morgan Stanley reported its second-straight quarterly profit, one year after posting a significant loss. The financial firm said it earned US$617M for the quarter versus a loss of $11B a year ago. The result missed expectations, and shares in the company fell around 1%.

    In economic news, building permits, a measure of builder confidence, rose to a 653,000 unit annual rate in December, from a 589,000 rate in November, the government reported. Permits were expected to rise to a 590,000 rate, according to a consensus of economists. However, housing starts fell to a 557,000 unit annual rate, from a 580,000 unit rate in November.

    The Producer Price Index (PPI), a measure of wholesale inflation, rose 0.2% after climbing 1.8% in the previous month. Economists expected it to hold steady. The so-called core PPI, which strips out volatile food and energy prices, was flat versus forecasts for a gain of 0.1%.

    Overseas Markets

    Dow down 137 pts to 10,588 (10,517 – 10,720)

    S&P 500 down 14 pts to 1,136 (1,129 – 1,148)

    Nasdaq down 33 pts to 2,287 (2,269 – 2,304)

    SPI 200 Futures down 31 pts to 4,806 (4,776 – 4,840)

    FTSE down 92 pts to 5,421 (5,404 – 5,513)

    Nikkei down 27 pts to 10,738 (10,725 – 10,861)

    Shanghai SE Comp down 95 pts to 3,152 (3,148 – 3,255)

    Commodities

    WTI Oil down 2.0% to US$77.43/bbl

    Gold down 2.4% to US$1,113/oz

    Sugar (NY) up 0.4% to USc29.11/lb

    Corn down 0.3% to US$3.32/bushel

    Wheat down 0.6% to US$4.67/bushel

    Natural Gas (Henry Hub) up 0.6% to US$5.54/MMbtu

    Silver down 4.5% to US$17.91/oz

    Platinum down 0.9% to US$1,630/oz

    Palladium up 0.6% to US$469.25/oz

    Copper (NY) down 2.6% to US$3.35/lb

    Currency

    A$ / US$ down 1.7USc to US$0.91 /A$

    EUR / US$ down 2.8USc to US$1.41 /EUR

    GBP / US$ down 0.6USc to US$1.63 /GBP

    US$ / Yen up 0.5 Yen to 91.24 Yen/US$

  • Stock Market Report 20-1-10

    US stocks rose in a broad-based rally as investors bought healthcare shares on bets that a potential Republican victory in Massachusetts’ Senate race could stall President Obama’s reforms and remove a threat to profits in the sector.

    The S&P Healthcare Index climbed nearly 2%. Drug maker Eli Lilly rose 5%. Health insurers Humana and Aetna gained 3.6% and 4%, respectively.

    All 10 S&P 500 industry groups traded in positive territory.

    The Dow also received a boost from McDonald’s, which gained 2.3% on an analyst upgrade. 3M was another notable mover, rising 2%.

    Kraft Foods was the biggest drag on the Dow, declining 1.1% after it agreed to a revised cash-and-stock deal to buy Cadbury for about US$19.6B.

    In other deal news, Tyco International agreed to buy Brink’s Home Security Holdings for US$1.9B. Brink’s shares surged almost 31.6%.

    Large-cap technology companies buoyed the NASDAQ. IBM is expected to report its quarterly earnings after market close. Apple was up 4.2% while IBM advanced 1%.

    Citigroup reported a fourth-quarter loss that met analysts’ expectations as the third-largest US bank took charges linked to repaying government bailout funds. On the upside, the company said consumer credit losses dropped in the quarter and that it also set aside less money for bad loans during the quarter. Shares gained 3%.

    The Bank of America and Morgan Stanley will report on Wednesday. Goldman Sachs and Google will report earnings on Thursday.

    S&P 500 earnings are expected to have almost tripled versus those a year ago and revenue is expected to have risen 7%. However, the jump is largely due to a spike in financial sector results versus an easy comparison to the fourth quarter of 2008 amid the height of the financial crisis. Without the financial sector, earnings are expected to be down 8% and revenue is expected to decline 1%.

    Overseas Markets

    Dow up 116 pts to 10,725 (10,592 – 10,730)

    S&P 500 up 14 pts to 1,150 (1,136 – 1,150)

    Nasdaq up 31 pts to 2,319 (2,291 – 2,320)

    FTSE up 19 pts to 5,513 (5,431 – 5,532)

    Nikkei down 90 pts to 10,765 (10,749 – 10,867)

    Shanghai SE Comp up 10 pts to 3,247 (3,237 – 3,269)

    Commodities

    WTI Oil up 0.8% to US$78.66/bbl

    Gold up 0.7% to US$1,138/oz

    Sugar (NY) up 4.9% to USc28.98/lb

    Corn down 2.6% to US$3.33/bushel

    Wheat down 1.7% to US$4.70/bushel

    Natural Gas (Henry Hub) down 2.7% to US$5.51/MMbtu

    Silver up 1.0% to US$18.82/oz

    Platinum up 1.7% to US$1,650/oz

    Currency

    A$ / US$ up 0.1USc to US$0.92 /A$

    EUR / US$ down 0.9USc to US$1.43 /EUR

    GBP / US$ up 1.1USc to US$1.64 /GBP

    US$ / Yen up 0.4 Yen to 91.14 Yen/US$

  • Stock Market Report 19-1-10

    US markets were closed for the Martin Luther King Day.

    Major US companies reporting later this week include the Bank of America, Citigroup, Morgan Stanley, Goldman Sachs, IBM, General Electric and Google.

    European shares rose, lifted by a rally in mining and oil shares on the back of firmer commodity prices.

    National benchmark indexes gained in all of the 18 western European markets, except Greece, Iceland and Luxembourg. Across Europe, Britain’s FTSE 100, Germany’s DAX and France’s CAC 40 rose between 0.7% and 0.8%.

    Trading was subdued, as US markets were closed for the Martin Luther King Day. Volumes on the European index were just 65% of its 90-day daily average volume.

    Miners topped the gainers’ list as commodity prices advanced. BHP, Anglo American, Antofagasta, Rio Tinto, Xstrata and Eurasian Natural Resources rose between 1% and 4%.

    Cadbury rose 1.8% on media reports that the Kraft Foods will increase its offer to at least 820 pence per share. Kraft Foods must make a revised bid for Cadbury by Tuesday. The Hershey Co., which is reportedly working on a possible bid as well, has until Saturday to make a bid under UK takeover rules.

    International Power dropped 3.4% after saying talks with GDF Suez on combining some assets are no longer continuing. The biggest UK-based electricity producer had earlier rallied on speculation that GDF Suez is considering a tie up with International Power that may lead to a partnership.

    Greece’s ASE Index slid 2.5%. Finance ministers from the 16 nations using the euro are meeting in Brussels as Greece struggles to cut a 2009 budget deficit that may reach almost 13% of GDP. Among notable movers, Titan Cement, Greece’s largest cement maker, sank 7.9%. Alpha Bank, the country’s third-largest bank, tumbled 7.7%.

    L’Oreal, Nokia and Zodiac Aerospace advanced on analyst upgrades. L’Oreal added 2.1%, Nokia was up 1.6% and Zodiac Aerospace gained 5.4%.

    Overseas Markets

    FTSE up 39 pts to 5,494 (5,454 – 5,504)

    Nikkei down 127 pts to 10,855 (10,781 – 10,895)

    Shanghai SE Comp up 13 pts to 3,237 (3,202 – 3,238)

    Rio Tinto plc up 0.89% to A$63.68 eq.; a 19% discount to prev Aust close A$78.32

    BHP plc up 1.47% to A$36.54 eq.; a 16% discount to prev Aust close A$43.44

    Commodities

    WTI Oil down 1.8% to US$78.00/bbl

    Gold up 0.3% to US$1,134/oz

    Silver up 1.2% to US$18.64/oz

    Platinum up 1.4% to US$1,622/oz

    Currency

    A$ / US$ down 0.5USc to US$0.93 /A$

    EUR / US$ down 1.1USc to US$1.44 /EUR

    GBP / US$ down 0.1USc to US$1.63 /GBP

    US$ / Yen down 0.5 Yen to 90.74 Yen/US$

  • Stock Market Report 15-1-10

    US stocks traded slightly higher on Thursday, led by the technology sector.

    Market breadth was positive. On the NYSE, winners beat losers by four to three. On the NASDAQ advancers topped decliners eight to five.

    The technology sector led gains on the back of positive brokerage comments on Oracle and ahead of an expected profit report from Intel. Shares of Oracle, the world’s second largest business software maker, gained 2.5% and led gains on the NASDAQ. Dow component Intel Corp, the world’s largest chipmaker, is expected to report a quarterly profit after market close. Its stock advanced 1.6%. Analysts expect the company to report earnings of 30cps, compared with 4cps in the previous year. IBM and Hewlett-Packard shares also advanced.

    The KBW bank index was up 1.4%, led mainly by regional and midsize banks. President Obama proposed a fee to make big banks repay taxpayers for bailouts. Bank shares had declined earlier in the week on concern about the fee, but on Thursday the sector was higher.

    On the downside, US economic data appeared to cast doubt on the strength of the economic recovery. Sales at US retailers unexpectedly fell in December and applications for jobless benefits rose last week. A government report showed that retail sales fell 0.3% in December. Economists were expecting sales to have risen 0.5%. Retail sales excluding autos fell 0.2% versus expectations of a 0.3% rise. Helping to soften the blow, the National Retail Federation said holiday sales for the November – December period rose 1.1%, which was better than the retail group’s expectations for a 1% decline.

    The number of American’s filing new claims for unemployment rose last week to 444,000 from 433,000 the previous week. Economists expected claims would rise to 437,000. Continuing claims, a measure of Americans who have been receiving benefits for a week ore more, fell to 4.596M from 4.897M in the previous week.

    On the positive side, business inventories rose slightly more than expected in November, up 0.4% as businesses re-stock.

    Overseas Markets

    Dow up 34 pts to 10,715 (10,667 – 10,724)

    S&P 500 up 3 pts to 1,149 (1,144 – 1,150)

    Nasdaq up 11 pts to 2,319 (2,303 – 2,323)

    Russell 2000 up 3 pts to 647 (642 – 648)

    SPI 200 Futures up 11 pts to 4,890 (4,874 – 4,899)

    FTSE up 25 pts to 5,498 (5,473 – 5,522)

    Nikkei up 173 pts to 10,908 (10,774 – 10,910)

    Shanghai SE Comp up 43 pts to 3,216 (3,166 – 3,219)

    Commodities

    WTI Oil down 0.3% to US$79.39/bbl

    Gold up 0.4% to US$1,141/oz

    Sugar (NY) down 1.0% to USc27.76/lb

    Corn down 0.9% to US$3.45/bushel

    Wheat down 1.8% to US$4.95/bushel

    Natural Gas (Henry Hub) up 2.8% to US$5.77/MMbtu

    Silver up 0.4% to US$18.71/oz

    Platinum up 2.1% to US$1,612/oz

    Palladium up 5.3% to US$447.13/oz

    Copper (NY) down 0.3% to US$3.38/lb

    Currency

    A$ / US$ up 1.1USc to US$0.93 /A$

    EUR / US$ up 0.1USc to US$1.45 /EUR

    GBP / US$ up 1.6USc to US$1.63 /GBP

    US$ / Yen up 0.1 Yen to 91.07 Yen/US$

  • Stock Market Report 13-1-10

    US stocks slid in a broad sell-off on Tuesday. Financials declined on concerns over a potential government levy on banks, and Alcoa delivered disappointing results that further dampened sentiment.

    Banks led the financials sector lower. The KBW bank index was down nearly 2%. Shares of the Bank of America, Citigroup and JPMorgan were off by between 3% and 4%. A senior US official confirmed that the government is considering a levy on financial services firms to recoup bailout losses as part of the fiscal 2011 budget. The banking sector faced another potential hit after the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp floated a proposal that banks whose compensation plans encourage risk-taking would have to pay more for deposit insurance.

    Shares of Alcoa fell 11% after the company reported weaker-than-expected results. The company reported a profit of 1cps versus a loss of 28cps a year ago. However, analysts expected earnings of 6cps.

    Chevron Corp said its fourth-quarter profit would be sharply lower than that in the previous quarter, sending its shares down nearly 1%. Margins have been under pressure, with the rising price of oil not in sync with the weaker demand globally. A variety of oil stocks fell, with the Amex Oil index losing 2.3%.

    Shares of big manufacturers retreated, with Caterpillar sliding nearly 3%.

    KB Home reported a quarterly profit for the first time in two years, thanks to a tax benefit. However, the homebuilder’s revenue dropped from that a year ago.

    Technology shares also fell, including Apple, which was off 1.6%. Electronics Arts cut its fiscal 2010 forecast, citing weak holiday sales in Europe. The video game publisher lost 8.3%.

    Intel and JPMorgan report results this week.

    The November trade deficit, released in the morning, widened to US$36.4B, from a revised $33.2B in October. The deficit was expected to widen to US$34.5B.

    Overseas markets

    Dow down 66 pts to 10,598 (10,569 – 10,663)

    S&P 500 down 14 pts to 1,133 (1,132 – 1,144)

    Nasdaq down 35 pts to 2,278 (2,273 – 2,299)

    Russell 2000 down 10 pts to 634 (634 – 644)

    SPI 200 Futures down 52 pts to 4,839 (4,828 – 4,906)

    FTSE down 39 pts to 5,499 (5,460 – 5,550)

    Nikkei up 81 pts to 10,879 (10,764 – 10,905)

    Shanghai SE Comp up 61 pts to 3,274 (3,180 – 3,275)

    Commodities

    WTI Oil down 2.4% to US$80.55/bbl

    Gold down 2.0% to US$1,129/oz

    Sugar (NY) up 2.3% to USc27.36/lb

    Corn down 0.3% to US$3.81/bushel

    Wheat down 6.7% to US$5.02/bushel

    Natural Gas (Henry Hub) down 3.5% to US$5.57/MMbtu

    Silver down 1.7% to US$18.24/oz

    Platinum down 1.4% to US$1,569/oz

    Palladium down 2.1% to US$425.25/oz

    Copper (NY) down 2.7% to US$3.34/lb

    Currency

    A$ / US$ down 0.5USc to US$0.92 /A$

    EUR / US$ up 0.8USc to US$1.45 /EUR

    GBP / US$ up 1.4USc to US$1.62 /GBP

    US$ / Yen down 1.7 Yen to 90.97 Yen/US$

  • Stock Market Report 11-1-10

    US stocks rose on Friday despite weak December jobs data. The S&P 500, Dow Jones and NASDAQ hit their highest level in at least 15 months. Friday ended a strong week, with the S&P 500 rising in all five sessions.

    Volume was light on the NYSE. Advancing stocks outnumbered declining ones on the NYSE by a ratio of about three to two, while advancing stocks beat decliners on the NASDAQ by about seven to four.

    Data from the Labour Department showed that 85,000 jobs were cut in December. Analysts expected no non-farm job losses in December from the previous month. However, analysts noted that monthly job losses have declined sharply since the height of the recession. In addition, November’s payrolls report was revised to show a gain of 4,000 jobs, versus the initially reported loss of 11,000. The unemployment rate, generated by a separate survey, held steady at 10%, in line with forecasts.

    UPS gave support to the market after it boosted its fourth-quarter outlook and said it will cut 1,800 jobs. Its shares rose nearly 5%. The news also sent shares of rival Fedex Corp higher by 2.5%. It also boosted investor optimism for the reporting season, which starts Monday with Alcoa reporting its results.

    On the NASDAQ, biotechnology companies were in favour. Teva Pharmaceutical Industries gained 4.4% after the drug maker set a revenue target of 2015 of US$31B, more than double its current annual amount.

    Among other biotechnology companies, Genzyme Corp advanced 5.2% on speculation that billionaire investor Carl Icahn was considering a proxy battle at the biotech company.

    The first week of the year got off to a positive start. For the week, the Dow rose 1.8% the S&P 500 added 2.7% and the NASDAQ rose 2%.

    In other economic news, wholesale inventories rose 1.5% in November after rising 0.6% in October. Economists expected inventories to fall 0.3%. Another report showed consumer borrowing fell by US$17.5B in November versus expectations of US$5B. Borrowing was down US$3.5B in the previous month.

    Since the start of the year, analysts have revised up their earnings estimates for all S&P sectors except healthcare, financials and consumer staples.

    Overseas markets

    Dow up 11 pts to 10,618 (10,554 – 10,619)

    S&P 500 up 3 pts to 1,145 (1,136 – 1,145)

    Nasdaq up 17 pts to 2,317 (2,291 – 2,318)

    Russell 2000 up 3 pts to 645 (640 – 645)

    SPI 200 Futures up 30 pts to 4,925 (4,887 – 4,925)

    FTSE up 8 pts to 5,534 (5,495 – 5,549)

    Nikkei up 117 pts to 10,798 (10,678 – 10,816)

    Shanghai SE Comp up 3 pts to 3,196 (3,149 – 3,199)

    Commodities

    S&P 500 Metals & Mining Index up 5.3pts (2.8%) to 192.4

    Sugar (NY) down 1.7% to USc27.53/lb

    Corn up 1.6% to US$3.82/bushel

    Wheat up 2.1% to US$5.29/bushel

    Natural Gas (Henry Hub) down 13.8% to US$6.47/MMbtu

    Silver up 1.3% to US$18.48/oz

    Platinum up 1.5% to US$1,579/oz

    Palladium up 0.4% to US$428.25/oz

    Copper (NY) down 0.7% to US$3.39/lb

    Currency

    A$ / US$ up 0.5USc to US$0.92 /A$

    EUR / US$ up 0.0USc to US$1.44 /EUR

    GBP / US$ up 0.0USc to US$1.60 /GBP

    US$ / Yen up 0.3 Yen to 92.66 Yen/US$

  • Byron Wien’s ten Stock Market surprises for 2010

    Dead on target at the beginning of the new year, 76-year-old Byron Wien again published his annual list of surprises to expect in 2010. Wien, Vice Chairman of Blackstone Advisory Services and one of Wall Street’s best known veterans, has been publishing his list of economic, market and political surprises since 1986.

    Reviewing Wien’s 2009 list, he was very accurate with the direction of most of his predictions.

    He foresaw a second-half recovery in the US economy, and the S&P 500 Index rising to 1,200 (up from 903 at the end of 2008 to 1,115 by December 31, 2009). He also predicted: “The ten-year US Treasury yield climbs to 4% [up from 2.24% to 3.84%]. Later in the year, as the economy shows signs of recovery, economists and investors shift their mood from concern about deflation to worries about inflation. A weak dollar, rapid growth in money supply and record-setting deficits (over $1 trillion) are behind the change.” Spot on.

    Wien also expected the gold and oil prices to climb to $1,200 and $80 respectively – a feat accomplised in December.

    He believes his ten surprises have at least a 50% chance of occurring at some point during the year. Although this is not a very high probability, his predictions nevertheless make for stimulating reading. His list for 2010 follows below.

    1. The United States economy grows at a stronger than expected 5% real rate during the year and the unemployment level drops below 9%. Exports, inventory building and technology spending lead the way. Standard and Poor’s 500 operating earnings come in above $80.

    2. The Federal Reserve decides the economy is strong enough for them to move away from zero interest rate policy. In a series of successive hikes beginning in the second quarter the Federal funds rate reaches 2% by year-end.

    3. Heavy borrowing by the US Treasury and some reluctance by foreign central banks to keep buying notes and bonds drives the yield on the 10-year Treasury above 5.5%. Banks loan more to corporations and individuals and pull away from the carry trade, thereby reducing demand for Treasuries. Obama says, “The suits are finally listening”.

    4. In a roller coaster year the Standard and Poor’s 500 rallies to 1,300 in the first half and then runs out of steam and declines to 1,000, ending where it started at 1115.10. Even though the economy is strong and earnings exceed expectations, rising interest rates and full valuations present a problem. Concern about longer term growth and obligations to reduce leverage at both the public and private level unsettle investors.

    5. Because it is significantly undervalued on a purchasing power parity basis, the dollar rallies against the yen and the euro. It exceeds 100 on the yen and the euro drops below $1.30 as the long slide of the greenback is interrupted. Longer term prospects remain uncertain.

    6. Japan stands out as the best performing major industrialized market in the world as its currency weakens and its exports improve. Investors focus on the attractive valuations of dozens of medium sized companies in a market selling at one quarter of its 1989 high. The Nikkei 225 rises above 12,000.

    7. Believing he must be a leader in climate control initiatives, President Obama endorses legislation favorable for nuclear power development. Arguing that going nuclear is essential for the environment, will create jobs and reduce costs, Congress passes bills providing loans and subsidies for new plants, the first since 1979. Coal accounts for about 50% of electrical power generation, and Obama wants to reduce that to 25% by 2020.

    8. The improvement in the US economy energizes the Obama administration. The White House undergoes some reorganization and regains its momentum. In the November Congressional election the Democrats only lose 20 seats, much less than expected.

    9. When it finally passes, financial service legislation, like the health care bill, proves to be softer on the industry than originally feared. There is greater consumer protection, more transparency, tighter restriction of leverage and increased scrutiny of derivatives, but the regulatory changes for investment bankers and hedge funds are not onerous. Trading volume and merger activity increases; financial service stocks become exceptional performers in the US market.

    10. Civil unrest in Iran reaches a crescendo. Ayatollah Khameini pushes out Mahmoud Ahmadinejad in favor of a more public relations adept leader. Economic improvement becomes the key issue and anti-Israel rhetoric subsides. Talks with the US and Europe begin but the country remains a nuclear threat. Pakistan becomes the hotspot in the region because of the weak government there, anti-American sentiment, active terrorist groups and concerns about the security of the country’s nuclear arsenal.

    Source: PR-inside.com

  • 2010 Stock Market S&P 500 Strategist Predictions

    Below is a list of the 2010 S&P 500 year-end price targets of major Wall Street strategists as surveyed by Bloomberg prior to the first trading day of the new year.  As a whole, strategists are looking for a year-end price of 1,225 for the S&P 500, which translates into a gain of 9.82%.  Deutsche Bank’s Binky Chadha has the highest target at 1,325, while Barclays’ Barry Knapp has the lowest at 1,120.  All strategists are forecasting a 2010 gain.

    Spx10

    Source: Bespoken Research

  • Top Three Mistakes New Traders Must Avoid

    1) Not Selling Fast When You Are Wrong.

    What I can lose on a given trade is always more important to me than what I can make. Most new traders will make a purchase or initiate a short position, but when the trade turns against them, they immediately forget why they bought or shorted the stock. As a result, they will let “hope” take over as their new strategy. Hope is not a strategy! Take your medicine and accept defeat when you are on the wrong side of a trade. Great traders have tough skin and move on.

    The solution for this problem is to use stops. I always use stops when I trade. The percentage you are willing to lose will be a direct by product of your own risk tolerance — but use them always. I use approximately a 2% stop on all my trades (sometimes less).

    2) Using Multiple Approaches or Strategies. Many new traders think they have a strategy … until they don’t. They feel they are comfortable with an approach, but at the first sign of failure they stray. Thus, they become aimless and reckless. Before they know it they are trading rumours, chasing stocks, and ultimately blowing up their account (before they have any real success at all).

    New traders will “over trade” or do what I call “revenge” trading right after a loser. Revenge doesn’t work in the market and the only person that benefits from over trading is your broker. I have one strategy I use. Is it the only strategy that works? Definitely not. As a matter of fact almost every trader I know uses their own approach. Some strategies are proprietary systems. Some are plain vanilla strategies that are very basic in nature. The point is have a plan and an approach! So, learn one thing and be the best at it. There is way too much “noise” out there in the new and old media. Everyone claims to be a bull or bear market genius. Put the media on mute so you can follow and perfect your plan.

    Being a voracious learner is absolutely key. Be a sponge and learn as much as you can. If you are a day trader, use the websites and read the books that will help you become the best. There are some phenomenal trading blogs out there. Most information is a click away.

    3) Trading Too Large. I ran a sizable hedge fund and thankfully always beat the indices in good or bad markets. Much of my initiation and experience was baptism by fire. But if a novice trader asked me the one thing he or she should do to get a feel for the market, I would tell them to paper trade or use very small dollar amounts. There is absolutely no substitute for “screen hours.” Tiger Woods hits five hundred to a thousand balls a day, and he is already the best in the world. If trading is truly your passion, then be in front of your trading screen all day. If I miss twenty minutes of trading because I am out of the office, I genuinely feel like I missed the whole day — my rhythm is gone and my edge becomes diminished. You may be able to get away with less screen time if you are a longer term investor. But if your passion is perfecting the short term trading game, you won’t stand a chance. Good luck out there and don’t listen to the pundits.

    Source: Joey Fundora

  • Will The Vix Crack 20 Soon?

    The VIX volatility index slipped below 21 earlier today and currently stands at 21.15.  This is the closest the VIX has gotten to 20 throughout the entire bull market, and marks a 75% decline from the closing high of 80.86 seen during the financial crisis.

    The VIX has now been above 20 for 287 consecutive trading days, which is the longest streak since 1990 when our daily VIX data begins.  In the bottom chart, we provide a historical look at the VIX along with all of its streaks of daily closings above 20.  We’ve only seen two other periods where the VIX was above 20 for 200 straight trading days or more, and those ended at 239 days in June 1999, and 236 days in May 2003.  In terms of market performance following these long periods of high volatility, the S&P 500 was on the verge of making a mutli-year peak when the VIX broke below 20 in 1999, but it did very well in the months and years following the drop below 20 in May 2003.

    Vix20

    Spxvoldays

    Source: Bespoken Research

  • Stock Market Update 19-10-09

    Index Close Chg %Chg
    All Ordinaries 4,802 -40.8 -0.8
    ASX 200 4,793 -43.6 -0.9
    ASX Small Ords 2,582 -20.1 -0.8
    Industrials 3,876 -16.0 -0.4
    Fin.-x-Prop Trusts 5,736 -118.8 -2.0
    Materials 11,760 -59.6 -0.5
    Cons. Staple 7,564 +78.0 +1.0
    Telecom Serv. 1,084 +3.5 +0.3
    10y Bond Yield 5.68 +0.00 +0.0

    The Australian market opened in the red and reached a floor for the day in the late morning, before recovering somewhat in the afternoon. The All Ordinaries finished Monday 41 points lower.

    The S&P/ASX 200 closed 44 points down. The Consumer Staples sector was buoyed by gains in Woolworths (+$0.77). The Financials sector fell, with selling in Commonwealth Bank (-$0.77), Westpac (-$0.66), National Australia Bank (-$0.70), ANZ (-$0.83), Macquarie Group (-$0.96) and AMP (-$0.20). In the Industrials sector, Toll (+$0.18) gained while Macquarie Airports (-$0.08) and Asciano (-$0.04) went backward. The Materials sector dipped, hurt by BHP Billiton (-$0.12), Orica (-$0.52) and Fortescue (-$0.15); Newcrest (+$0.47) and Lihir (+$0.05) fared better. Other notable losers included Aristocrat (-$0.22) and Santos (-$0.37).

    There was little company news on Monday. Oil Search entered a trading halt, regarding the termination of a proposed sale of an effective interest in PDL 2, including a ~3.5% interest in the PNG LNG Project to IPEC, as well as a share placement to institutional investors. Following completion of due diligence, Pacific Equity Partners has offered to acquire 100% of Energy Developments (+$0.10) for $2.65 cash per share. Meanwhile, Energy Developments has terminated discussions with the potential buyer of the UK and French landfill gas power generation assets.

  • Stock Market Wrap 14-10-09

    Index/Security Close Chg %Chg
    Dow Jones (US) 9,871 -14.7 -0.1
    S&P 500 1,073 -3.0 -0.3
    NASDAQ 2,140 +0.8 +0.0

    US stocks weakened on Tuesday after disappointing sales from Johnson & Johnson missed expectations.

    Market breadth was negative. On the NYSE, losers beat winners four to three. On the NASDAQ, advancers topped decliners seven to five.

    Financial shares were under pressure. Goldman Sachs fell 1.5% on an analyst downgrade. JPMorgan Chase, the Bank of America and Travelers Companies also declined. The Bank of America said it will waive attorney-client privilege and hand over legal documents related to its controversial merger with Merrill Lynch. The company has been under pressure from regulators for months to provide more information on the purchase.

    Among notable movers in the financial sector was CIT Group, which tumbled 14% after the lender’s CEO said he would resign by the end of the year.

    The NASDAQ stayed in positive territory after Cisco Systems agreed to buy Starent Networks Corp for US$2.9B. Cisco’s stock added 0.5%, whereas Starent, which makes telecommunications equipment, surged 16.8%.

    Healthcare stocks slid after a key Senate committee endorsed a sweeping healthcare overhaul as it gained the support of an influential Republican. The proposal will be merged with the Senate health panel’s version and moved to the full Senate for debate in the next few weeks.

    Johnson & Johnson posted weaker-than-expected quarterly revenue as sales of prescription drugs and cardiac stents disappointed. Third-quarter profit topped analyst forecasts, but that was largely because of cost cuts and lower taxes. Third-quarter revenue fell 5.3%. Earnings beat analyst estimates by 7cps, helped by lower research and marketing spending. Shares in Johnson & Johnson fell 2.4%.

    Intel reported its results after close. Third-quarter net income dropped to 33cps. Analysts had expected income of 27cps. Revenue fell 8.1%, but was above expectations. Gross margin was 58% in the third quarter, compared with Intel’s initial prediction of about 53%. The company gave a better-than-expected outlook for the fourth quarter. For the fourth quarter, Intel predicted sales would be US$9.7B to $10.5B, compared with analyst estimates for US$9.5B. Intel was halted in extended trading.

    Other major companies releasing results this week include JPMorgan Chase, Citigroup, Goldman Sachs, Google, Nokia and IBM.

    Crude oil rose to a seven-week high in New York on speculation world energy use will grow as the economy rebounds and as a weaker dollar spurs commodity demand. The Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) increased its 2010 global oil-consumption forecast on economic expansion in emerging economies. OPEC predicts that total crude consumption will increase by 700,000 barrels a day to 84.93M barrels a day next year, led by demand from emerging markets. This year, the group forecasts global demand will contract by 1.4M barrels a day to 84.24M barrels a day.

    Gold futures rose in New York on concern a weakening dollar and rising inflation will enhance the appeal of precious metals.

    Index Close Chg %Chg
    Eurotop 100 2,107 -21.5 -1.0
    FTSE 100 (UK) 5,154 -56.0 -1.1
    DAX 30 (Germany) 5,714 -68.9 -1.2
    CAC 40 (France) 3,801 -44.4 -1.2
    Nikkei (Japan) 10,077 +60.2 +0.6
    Hang Seng (Hong Kong) 21,299 -200.1 -0.9
  • Stock Market Wrap 8-10-09

    Index Close Chg %Chg
    All Ordinaries 4,696 +98.6 +2.1
    ASX 200 4,696 +104.1 +2.3
    ASX Small Ords 2,502 +39.0 +1.6
    Industrials 3,778 +33.5 +0.9
    Fin.-x-Prop Trusts 5,597 +144.0 +2.6
    Materials 11,384 +428.4 +3.9
    Cons. Staple 7,413 +41.6 +0.6
    Telecom Serv. 1,129 +3.2 +0.3
    10y Bond Yield 5.26 +0.06 +1.2

    The Australian market soared upon opening and reached a plateau for the rest of the morning, before lifting off again in the afternoon. The All Ordinaries finished Wednesday 99 points higher.

    The S&P/ASX 200 closed 104 points up. The Materials sector surged, with winners including BHP Billiton (+$1.16), Rio Tinto (+$3.02), Newcrest Mining (+$2.22), Fortescue Metals (+$0.31), Lihir (+$0.17), Amcor (+$0.15), BlueScope Steel (+$0.08), Incitec Pivot (+$0.21), Alumina (+$0.09) and OZ Minerals (+$0.08). The Financials sector benefited from gains in the four majors: Commonwealth Bank (+$1.80), Westpac (+$0.33), National Australia Bank (+$0.93) and ANZ (+$0.55), plus a strong showing from Westfield (+$0.27), Macquarie Group (+$3.05), Suncorp-Metway (+$0.58) and Stockland (+$0.16). The Energy sector saw Origin (+$0.20), Santos (+$0.18), Oil Search (+$0.08) and particularly WorleyParsons (+$1.61) rise. In the Industrials sector, Leighton Holdings (+$1.27) and Macquarie Airports (+$0.16) gained but Brambles (-$0.41) extended its decline. Another notable loser was Singtel (-$0.14).

    On Tuesday night, Rio Tinto took another step towards the development of a world class copper-gold resource in Mongolia with the signing of an investment agreement for the Oyu Tolgoi project with the Government of Mongolia. The government will address the conditions precedent and Rio Tinto and Ivanhoe Mines will commence the development phase. Production is expected to start in 2013.

    Index/Security Close Chg %Chg
    Dow Jones (US) 9,726 -5.7 -0.1
    S&P 500 1,058 +2.9 +0.3
    NASDAQ 2,110 +6.8 +0.3

    US stocks rose for a third day as banks climbed on an analyst upgrade, while Alcoa jumped before beginning the third-quarter earnings season.

    The S&P 500 fell for most of the day, as homebuilders declined on speculation Congress will not extend a tax credit. Pulte Homes, KB Home and DR Horton were down between 3% and 4%. AT&T led a slump in telephone shares after saying it will allow iPhone customers to use internet phone carriers.

    Boeing, United Technologies, 3M and Travelers Companies were among the biggest decliners on the blue-chip average. They were also among the biggest gainers in the early-week rally.

    Late in the session, a rally in a variety of financial stocks gave the market a boost. The Bank of America, the largest US lender by assets, and Wells Fargo each added 2.1%.

    The benchmark index was further buoyed in the final hour of trading as investors speculated Alcoa, the first Dow company to report earnings, would post better-than-estimated results.

    After market close, Alcoa reported its first quarterly profit in a year, as it benefited from improving metal prices and saved money by cutting jobs and reducing other costs. Profit, excluding one-time charges, was 4cps, exceeding analysts’ average estimate for a 9cps loss. Revenue was US$4.62B versus forecasts for US$4.55B. Results were weaker than those a year ago. Alcoa cut 18,000 jobs in the 12 months to June as the global recession depressed demand and prices for aluminium.

    In other earnings news, Costco, the largest US warehouse club, reported fourth-quarter profit that fell less than analysts estimated as gross margin improved. Shares gained 1.8% in NASDAQ trading. Net income dropped 6% in the quarter from a year ago. Shoppers join the members-only warehouse club for basics, along with designer goods and other luxuries. Costco has seen sales of non-essential items fall as consumers pull back to cope with job losses and the recession. Costco runs stores in North America, Asia, Mexico, the UK and Australia.

    Broad S&P 500 third-quarter earnings are expected to have fallen 25% from a year ago, extending the losing streak to nine quarters. Analysts expect the energy sector to report that profits fell 64% from a year ago. Industrials are expected to post a 45% drop in profits. Financials are expected to post the best results due to easy comparisons against an abysmal third quarter of 2008. The sector is expected to see earnings growth of 59%.

  • Stock Market Wrap 7-10-09

    Index Close Chg %Chg
    All Ordinaries 4,597 +17.9 +0.4
    ASX 200 4,592 +18.3 +0.4
    ASX Small Ords 2,463 +15.1 +0.6
    Industrials 3,744 +8.1 +0.2
    Fin.-x-Prop Trusts 5,453 +27.6 +0.5
    Materials 10,956 +90.3 +0.8
    Cons. Staple 7,371 +24.6 +0.3
    Telecom Serv. 1,126 -0.7 -0.1
    10y Bond Yield 5.26 +0.06 +1.2

    Buoyed by an encouraging lead from overseas, the Australian market started strongly but soon began to shed its gains, and lost more steam after the RBA’s rate hike. The All Ordinaries finished Tuesday 18 points higher.

    The S&P/ASX 200 also closed 18 points up. The Materials sector rose, with BHP Billiton (+$0.33), Rio Tinto (+$0.88) and Newcrest (+$0.76) climbing while Fortescue (-$0.19) fell. The Energy sector gained, with winners including Origin (+$0.28), Santos (+$0.13), Oil Search (+$0.10) and WorleyParsons (+$0.75); Woodside (-$0.43) bucked the trend and declined. The Financials sector saw gains in Westpac (+$0.51), ANZ (+$0.20), Westfield (+$0.24) and Macquarie Group (+$1.05); however, Commonwealth Bank (-$0.18) and National Australia Bank (-$0.11) dipped. The Industrials sector saw Brambles (-$0.20) fall while Leighton Holdings (+$0.83) and Macquarie Airports (+$0.08) rose. Losers in the Consumer Discretionary sector included Harvey Norman (-$0.11), Aristocrat (-$0.25), Fairfax (-$0.06) and David Jones (-$0.30). In the Healthcare sector, CSL (-$0.45) and ResMed (-$0.14) softened.

    The Reserve Bank raised the cash rate by 0.25% to 3.25%. Graincorp (in trading halt) is to acquire global malt manufacturer United Malt Holdings for an enterprise value of $757M. The acquisition is to be funded by a 9-10 entitlement offer at $5.65ps and institutional placement raising a total of $589M, and a US$200M debt facility. Graincorp also upgraded its FY09 NPAT guidance to a range of $60M-$63M and said it will pay a dividend equivalent to 15cps per existing share. Brambles’ CEO will retire from his role on 1 November 2009. Brambles’ strategic review of its North American CHEP operations endorsed the continued use of wooden pallets and an improvement in customer service.

    ScreenShot165

    US Stock Markets

    Index/Security Close Chg %Chg
    Dow Jones (US) 9,731 +131.5 +1.4
    S&P 500 1,055 +14.3 +1.4
    NASDAQ 2,104 +35.4 +1.7

    US stocks extended a worldwide rally, on speculation third-quarter earnings will top estimates and growing conviction the global economy is improving.

    Market breadth was positive. On the NYSE, winners topped losers by almost four to one. On the NASDAQ, advancers topped decliners two to one.

    The stock advance was broad-based, with 29 of 30 Dow stocks rising as investors piled into a variety of stocks battered in the recent sell-off. Investors welcomed reports that Australia became the first major economy to lift interest rates since the start of the financial crisis.

    Producers of energy and raw materials had the two biggest advances in the S&P 500 among 10 industries, rising around 2%. Alcoa and Newmont Mining climbed at least 3.5%, while Exxon Mobil gained 1.6% as crude advanced.

    The MSCI World Index of 23 developed countries added 1.9%, the most in two months.

    In company news, Boeing said it will take a US$1B charge in the third quarter because of higher costs to produce its 747-8 airplanes and tough market conditions. The stock was little changed and was the only Dow stock to not advance.

    Alcoa is scheduled to release third-quarter results on Wednesday, the first company in the Dow average to report earnings. General Electric and Intel are among the Dow and S&P 500 companies that will report in the next two weeks. Analysts expect companies will report a ninth straight quarter of declining profits before returning to growth in the final quarter.