3:45pm (EST)
Special Note: We are sending today’s Weekly Wrap early. I am away on travel and hope to be back in the office by Monday morning. In case I’m not, this is Monday Morning’s Update. There is a NEW TRADE for Monday morning, Pepsico (PEP, $60.90, up $2.44), that is profiled in the Members Area. Our latest trade, Abercrombie & Fitch (ANF, $30.62, down $1.08) is up 50% in less than a week and we are hoping for the same returns, if not more, for the Pepsico trade. To read the latest update on all of our trades you must be a premium member which gives you full access to our Members Area. Our last closing trade in Nike (NKE, $62.02, down $0.48) netted our subscribers profits of up to 200%….
Market Commentary
It was no bull and all bear last week as the market fell 2% on average. Friday was setting up to be an explosive day as the Dow futures were down over 100 BEFORE the opening bell rang. However, the drop was marginal and although the bulls lost the week, Friday’s battle was a huge victory. The fact that the Dow lost only 20 points is clear indication the bulls aren’t going anywhere.
For the week, the Dow lost 177 points, or 1.8%, and closed at 9,487. The Nasdaq finished the week at 2,048, down 43 points, or 2%. The S&P 500 dropped 19 points, or 1.8%, and settled at 1,025.
The market was hit with a bunch of disappointing economic news and Friday’s unemployment report was suppose to be a canon ball going through paper for the bears. The fact that the bulls held their ground gives further indication there are buyers on the sidelines. It doesn’t matter if the market is overvalued or undervalued, it never does.
The market doesn’t care about our personal wins and losses and although we may be overbought at these levels you can’t deny the action and aggressiveness of the bulls since the March lows. The thing Wall Street forgets to realize is that the market came down from a much higher level as the Dow was standing at 14,000 in 2007…
A 50% drop in the Dow which is where we were in March when the Dow was at 6,500 would mean over a 100% return to get back to the 14,000 level. We certainly know that isn’t going to happen this year but I think it is important for us to remember where we came from. So I don’t buy into that “we have come too far, too fast” spit that we have been hearing. Those same pundits were calling for a “bounce” BEFORE we bottomed at 6,500 because they couldn’t believe the sell-off. Now it’s the opposite.
Third-quarter earnings should give us a better sense of whether companies managed to grow their revenues to produce earnings growth or if we see continued cost-cutting. This helped with 2Q earnings but the same theme might not work this time around.
The bears got a “little taste” of the bulls last week so you know they aren’t going anywhere either. We are still in a volatile, nervous market which means we could get some really big moves in October.
As we head to press, the Dow futures are down 36, S&P 500 futures are off by 6 while the Nasdaq 100 futures are lower by 8. Of course, the overseas markets will affect those numbers and things could change by Monday morning but it appears we could start the week slightly lower.
Subscribers don’t forget to check the Members Area for the latest trade and updates. The update is posted under the Monday, October 5th link.
Earnings
Monday: Mosaic (MOS, $46.18, down $0.25), Robbins & Myers (RBN, $22.60, down $0.41), RPM International (RPM, $18.08, up $0.20) and Team (T, $16.77, down $0.03).
Tuesday: AngioDynamics (ANGO, $13.80, up $0.05), Chattem (CHTT, $64.59, down $0.31), Pepsi Bottling Group (PBG, $37.25, up $0.76) and Yum! Brands (YUM, $33.15, up $0.02).
Wednesday: Acuity Brands (AYI, $30.98, down $0.18), Alcoa (AA, $12.82, down $0.10), Costco Wholesale (COST, $56.47, up $0.78), Family Dollar (FDO, $26.63, down $0.21), Helen of Troy (HELE, $18.83, up $0.13), Monsanto (MON, $74.93, down $0.18), Ruby Tuesday (RT, $7.89, up $0.13) and Wolverine World Wide (WWW, $24.14, down $0.07).
Thursday: International Speedway (ISCA, $27.09, down $0.16), Marriott International (MAR, $25.61, down $0.75) and Pepsico (PEP, $60.90, up $2.44).
Friday: Cantel Medical (CMN, $15.29, up $0.15) and Infosys Technologies (INFY, $47.85, up $0.60).












Market Trying To Turn Positive
Thursday, October 15th, 2009
1:00pm (EST)
The bulls are hanging around today and seem determined to take the market higher. We have spent much of the day in the red as most of the Financial stocks are trading lower and Tech has been weak.
Currently, the Dow is down just 8 points to 10,007. The S&P 500 is off by 2 to 1,090 while the Nasdaq is trading lower, down 6, to 2,165.
Goldman Sachs (GS, $188.64, down $3.66) reported 3Q earnings of $5.25, versus Wall Street’s estimates of $4.24 a share. Revenue for the quarter came in at $12.4 billion, which easily beat estimates of $11 billion.
There were “whisper numbers” of Goldman earning $6 or $7 a share which is probably what it needed to report to get over $200 a share. Expectations were so high for Goldman which is why it is lower today. I mean, LOOK at their numbers! They crushed it but investors are “selling the news” today…
Friday is option expiration day for the October chain and it has usually meant a lower day for Wall Street over the past few years. I did some research and we have been lower 7 out of 10 days on expiration (or something like that) so we will see how the bulls act going into the close today. I still think the market trades higher from here unless we get some kind of nasty news.
We profiled a couple of trades this morning in the Members Area. Current subscribers, please check the updates for these trades as one got filled and one did not. I have updated them in the 1pm update today.
Tags: Goldman Sachs, momentum options, momentum stock picks, option picks, options blog, options track record, options trading
Posted in Company Commentary, Earnings, Hot Stocks, Market Analysis, Market Commentary | Comments Off