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Re: ReturntoSender post# 6755

Saturday, 02/21/2009 9:56:43 PM

Saturday, February 21, 2009 9:56:43 PM

Post# of 12809
From Briefing.com: Weekly Recap - Week ending 20-Feb-09Banks were under pressure this holiday-shortened week, first in Europe on Tuesday after rating agency Moody's said the recession in emerging European economies will be more severe than elsewhere, which is likely to pressure the Western European parent companies, then in the U.S. Friday on nationalization fears.

Despite a late-session rebound today, the major averages closed sharply lower on the week -- Dow -6.2%, S&P -6.9%, Nasdaq -6.1%, Russell -8.3%. Notably, the Dow declined to a new five year low of 7249.47, stopping just shy of a six year low at 7197.49, last hit in March 2002. All ten of the S&P economic sectors closed in the red for the week, ranging from a 1.5% decline in Consumer Staples to a 15.9% plunge in Financials.

The week began with a sharply lower open on Tuesday, with domestic banks following European banks lower after the Moody's report. There was also additional pressure on the market from the Empire Manufacturing Survey, which showed a steep drop to -34.7 in February from -22.2 in the prior month, well below the -23.8 consensus estimate. However, the initial move proved to be it for the major averages that day, as the S&P, which at its lows lost 4.6%, traded sideways through the majority of the session.

The market followed that up with two more consolidative sessions on Wednesday and Thursday. That action came despite President Obama announcing the details of his mortgage relief plan Wednesday morning.

The Homeowner Affordability and Stability Plan has three main components: 1) Refinancing for up to 4 to 5 million "responsible" homeowners to make their mortgages more affordable; 2) A $75 billion homeowner stability initiative to reach up to 3 to 4 million at-risk homeowners; and 3) Supporting low mortgage rates by strengthening confidence in Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac.

What wasn't discussed is that the plan stops at conforming loans. If a homeowner has a jumbo loan, as many do, he is not covered. The plan itself appears rooted in a trickle-up principle, as it is believed that fortifying home values for 7 to 9 million families will be the pricing elixir for all homeowners.

President Obama's announcement ironically followed the lowest Housing Starts reading since records began in 1959. Starts fell to an annualized rate of 466K units in January, below the 529K consensus estimate. That marked a 16.8% decline from the revised December reading of 560K and is 56.2% below the year-ago level.

The consolidative trade ended Friday, however, as the major averages opened lower and sharply extended those declines on bank nationalization fears, particularly for Bank of America and Citigroup. Shares of BAC and C fell as much 35.6% and 35.9% to multi-decade lows. They only rebounded, along with the overall market, after a White House spokesman reiterated the government's support of the privately-held banking system and Rochdale analyst Richard Bove appeared on CNBC, saying Bank of America is one of the best buys he's ever seen on the NYSE. Shares of BAC and C closed 3.6% and 22.3% lower on the session.

Notably, the major averages showed little effect from hotter than expected inflation data. On Thursday, core PPI showed a 0.4% month/month increase in January, well above the 0.1% consensus estimate; on Friday, core CPI showed a 0.2% month/month increase, above the 0.1% consensus estimate.

The Economic Calendar is on the light side next week, but it features the Existing Home Sales report on Wednesday, the Durable Goods Orders report on Thursday, and the revised Q4 GDP report on Friday. The big event of the week is Fed Chairman Bernanke's semi-annual monetary policy report on Tuesday.

--Dave Campione, CFA, Briefing.com
 
Index Started Week Ended Week Change % Change YTD %
DJIA 7850.41 7365.67 -484.74 -6.2 -16.1
Nasdaq 1534.36 1441.23 -93.13 -6.1 -8.6
S&P 500 826.84 770.05 -56.79 -6.9 -14.7
Russell 2000 448.36 410.96 -37.40 -8.3 -17.7


8:22AM SEMI reports North American Semiconductor Equipment Industry posts January 2009 book-to-bill ratio of 0.48 : North America-based manufacturers of semiconductor equipment posted $285.6 million in orders in January 2009 (three-month average basis) and a book-to-bill ratio of 0.48 according to the January 2009 Book-to-Bill Report published today by SEMI. A book-to-bill of 0.48 means that $48 worth of orders were received for every $100 of product billed for the month. The three-month average of worldwide bookings in January 2009 was $285.6 million. The bookings figure is about 51% less than the final December 2008 level of $579.1 million, and about 75% less than the $1.14 billion in orders posted in January 2008. The three-month average of worldwide billings in January 2009 was $592.2 million. The billings figure is about 12% less than the final December 2008 level of $672.4 million, and about 54% less than the January 2008 billings level of $1.28 billion. "Sales of semiconductor manufacturing equipment continue to decline, exacerbated by the diminished demand for consumer electronics, and the global economic turmoil," said Stanley Myers, president and CEO of SEMI. "As a result, bookings are at the lowest levels since 1991."

8:17AM TrimTabs estimates all equity mutual funds post outflow of $10.7 billion in week ended Wednesday, February 18th : TrimTabs Investment Research estimates that all equity mutual funds posted an outflow of $10.7 billion in the week ended Wednesday, February 18th, versus a revised outflow of $2.4 billion in the previous week. Equity funds that invest primarily in U.S. stocks posted an outflow of $6.3 billion, versus a revised outflow of $460 million in the previous week. Equity funds that invest primarily in non-U.S. stocks had an outflow of $4.3 billion, versus a revised outflow of $2.0 billion in the previous week. In addition, bond funds had an outflow of $4.8 billion, versus a revised inflow of $5.8 billion in the previous week, and hybrid funds had an outflow of $1.5 billion, versus a revised outflow of $186 million in the previous week. Separately, TrimTabs reports that exchange-traded funds that invest in U.S. stocks posted an outflow of $6.9 billion, versus an outflow of $6.3 billion, in the previous week. ETFs that invest in non-U.S. stocks had an outflow of $203 million, versus an inflow of $419 million in the previous week.

09:35 am LDK Solar downgraded to Sell at ThinkEquity; tgt lowered to $4.50: . ThinkEquity downgrades LDK to Sell from Buy and lowers their tgt to $4.50 from $45 noting in October 2007, Charley Situ, LDK's former controller, alleged discrepancies in the company's accounting for possibly unusable inventory. In December 2007, after conducting an audit, LDK announced that the investigating committee found no material errors. The firm says were it not for the overhang of this whistleblowing incident, LDK's $210 to $220 mln inventory write-down on Wednesday would likely have been accepted as "normal" in today's market where solar PV wafers are facing rapid price declines. However the firm says, investors were quick to notice that the write-down amount matched closely the "two-thirds" estimate (of the $350 mln inventory balance as of December 31, 2007) that Mr. Situ claimed could be unsuitable

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