News Focus
News Focus
Followers 71
Posts 12229
Boards Moderated 1
Alias Born 04/01/2000

Re: ReturntoSender post# 6755

Monday, 09/07/2009 8:52:00 PM

Monday, September 07, 2009 8:52:00 PM

Post# of 12809
From Briefing.com: Weekly Recap - Week ending 04-Sep-09

Just a few weeks ago, with U.S. equity markets in the middle of their most recent upturn, market sentiment was so high that investors ignored poor economic data, only focusing on positive numbers. That trend seemed to go out the window Tuesday as the major indices sold off sharply following a batch of better-than-expected data, but then rebounded ahead of and following poor employment data Friday.

In the end, the major indices closed the week with declines ranging from -0.5% to -1.6%. Nine of the ten sectors that make up the S&P 500 fell, led by Financials (-3.59%). Consumer Staples was the only sector in the black (+0.56%).

Following modest declines on Monday, presaged by a 6.7% plunge in China's Shanghai Composite on continued liquidity concerns, the major indices began the month of September, historically the worst for stocks, slightly higher. At 10:00ET economic data showed that ISM Manufacturing returned to the expansion stage -- which Chicago PMI had done the day before -- with a better-than-expected reading of 52.9 in August (consensus 50.5). Pending Home Sales also came in positive for a sixth consecutive month, rising 3.2% in July (consensus 1.5%).

The market, however, failed to react strongly (unlike prior weeks), and that led to selling pressure as the non-response was interpreted as a confirmation that the good news was already priced into the market and was viewed as another sign of the rally being exhausted. The S&P dropped 20 points between 10:30ET and 11:30ET, closing with a decline of 2.2%.

The Financial sector saw the most severe declines Tuesday, causing some to make the point that the selling was the byproduct of rumors that a negative development in the banking sector was about to be announced. Heavy put buying in Wells Fargo (WFC) on rumors of a dilutive secondary offering made the rounds, but they proved untrue as the company came out just before the close to announce it intended to repay the TARP funds it borrowed without raising equity.

After some consolidative trade over most of the next two sessions -- which included investors shrugging off Initial Claims and ADP data ahead of Friday's employment report -- the major indices staged a late recovery on Thursday as investors covered their short positions in front of the August employment report.

The data in the employment report was les than desirable, as a weaker-than-expected unemployment rate of 9.7% (consensus 9.5%) and downward revisions for nonfarm payrolls in June and July more than offset a slightly better-than-expected number in August nonfarm payrolls (-216,000 vs. the -230,000 consensus).

Despite the otherwise bad news, the market trended higher Friday and logged a gain of 1.3%. Perhaps investors have already reverted back to focusing on only the positive aspects of economic data, namely the upward trend in nonfarm payrolls (August brought the smallest job loss since August 2008), but it's difficult to say when taking into account that trading volume was remarkably light Friday ahead of the Labor Day weekend.

Things may clear up during the coming week's holiday-shortened activity, although there is very little on the economic calendar other than the Federal Reserve's Beige Book on Wednesday, Sept. 9, and the weekly Initial Claims data on Thursday, Sept. 10.

Treasury auctions may return to the forefront. After $38 billion in 3-year Notes on Tuesday, Sept. 8, there is a $20 billion 10-year Note offering reopening on Wednesday and a $12 billion 30-year Bond offering reopening on Thursday.
 
Index Started Week Ended Week Change % Change YTD
DJIA 9544.22 9441.27 -102.95 -1.1 % 7.6 %
Nasdaq 2028.77 2018.78 -9.99 -0.5 % 28.0 %
S&P 500 1028.93 1016.40 -12.53 -1.2 % 12.5 %
Russell 2000 579.86 570.50 -9.36 -1.6 % 14.2 %

Rambus INC: RMBS (17.13 +1.22) is trading up almost $1.25 on takover chatter. it is rallying sharply off of the sloped support line it tested earlier this week, made up of the lows from July and August.

Rambus (RMBS 17.28 +1.35) is trading up 8.5% after a rumor that Samsung could be interested in the co made the rounds...

Research In Motion: RIMM (76.93 +0.95) is testing a major sloped resistance line around $77 as it attempts to break out of a multi-month triangle. A triangle pattern is usually followed by a period of increased volatility. There is no real news driving this move, it's primarily a technical move

Shares of LED producer Cree (CREE 37.89 +1.36) are trading up 4% after a rumor circulated suggesting IBM could be interested in the co. CREE September 40 calls are very active following the rumor, with 8190 contracts trading vs. open interest of 1680, although the increased options volume in no way confirms the validity of the rumor...

TriQuint Semiconductor (TQNT) announces its acquisition of TriAccess Technologies, a leading provider of Cable TV and Fiber-to-the-Premise integrated circuits for the amplification of high-quality multimedia content. Terms of the acquisition were not disclosed. TriAccess' results are not expected to materially impact TriQuint's net income.

08:30 am Novellus (NVLS)

Shares of Novellus (NVLS 19.08) are moving nearly 4% higher in Friday's premarket action after the company raised the bottom end of its third quarter earnings guidance and said that it expects to report fourth quarter earnings well above current Wall Street estimates.

Novellus said that it expects third quarter earnings to range from a loss of $0.06 per share to breakeven. The company's earlier guidance projected a loss of $0.15 per share to breakeven. The First Call consensus expects Novellus to report a loss of $0.06 per share for the third quarter.

Novellus also narrowed its Q3 revenue guidance to between $160 million and $180 million, from prior guidance of $150 million to $180 million. The consensus estimate currently stands at $167.8 million.

The San Jose, Calif.-based company issued upside guidance for the fourth quarter, saying it expects earnings of $0.10 to $0.20 per share, well ahead of the First Call consensus of $0.01. Revenue expectations from the company are also substantially higher than Street estimates, as Novellus expects fourth quarter revenues of $220 million to $230 million while the consensus stands at $181.3 million.

Shares of NVLS are 54% higher year-to-date.

Discover What Traders Are Watching

Explore small cap ideas before they hit the headlines.

Join Today