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主题:04/01/2009 Market View -- 宁子

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  • 家园 04/01/2009 Market View

    SUMMARY:

    - Market shows resilience, rallies from a slow start, overcomes last hour selling attempt.

    - National ISM tops expectations, turns up from lows for past two months.

    - Status of the recession: making the mistakes of the past in the present.

    - Showing some toughness at a key level, and if techs and chips can re-engage the rally can put in a second phase.

    SP500 rallies right back over resistance, showing more strength than expected.

    There was not a lot of early news but what was out there didn't sit well with the pre-market trade. The ADP monthly jobs survey reported 742K job losses versus the -663K expected and the revised -706K prior. No improvement, but these jobs numbers are lagging. They are really bad, but they are lagging. Futures took a hit on that number and it was clear SP500 was going to head even lower below 800 at the open. The bell rang and it did just that. Cause and effect as they said in 'The Matrix Reloaded.'

    A half hour into the selling some more data hit. I say selling, but it was more of a choppy lateral move after the initial open lower. Clearly the buyers were not racing in to the rescue but the sellers, after opening things lower, were impotent to push things lower. The economic data at the top of the first hour of trade didn't provide any Viagra for the softening selling attempt. Pending home sales rose 2.1%, topping expectations and January's -7.7% bomb. The ISM rose for the second month, racing to 36.3 versus 35.8 in February. The market took heart and recovered. SP500 rallied back to 800, paused, but then broke on through. It tested midday and rallied on up again. The rest of the market moved higher as well, riding DJ30's new found strength and SP500's ability to top resistance. NASDAQ and SOX lagged, but they were not out of the picture.

    The indices broke to new highs and SP500 topped the Tuesday high with a couple of hours left. Then the sellers made their second run of the day. At the stroke of the last hour sell programs hit and took SP500 back to 802 in a quick 12 minute drop. Didn't look positive. Then the SP500 surprised us and showed some more stickiness at that support. It turned and rallied back, closing at 811. NASDAQ and SOX lagged all session but they caught a bid in that rally off the selling attempt. Seems buyers were waiting for another opportunity and that selloff gave them a wedge and the drove it home. Some really good moves emerged as the indices posted 1.25% to 2% gains. Not bad given the weak start and the reversal that was needed.

    It was a solid though not a huge session, but it did show character. First, the market fought off a weak open to start the new quarter as no new money came in, bouncing back and moving back over 800 and 805 resistance. Second, SP500 was pushed back down with some stout selling in the last hour, but it came right back and held the gains, closing at the session high. When faced with adversity the market kept coming back.

    TECHNOLOGY. Intraday the action was solid as noted. Weak open, recovery and more, moving over resistance. A serious selling attempt late, but then another move by the buyers overran the sellers. Quite a change from the action seen from July through February.

    INTERNALS. Decent but unspectacular breadth at 3:1 on NYSE and 2:1 on NASDAQ. It was a reversal session and there was some late chop so the breadth was lagging a bit. Volume was mixed again, but this time NASDAQ trade was on top while NYSE volume lagged well below average. NASDAQ trade managed to crack through average, moving up in the late rally. NASDAQ sure has the look of building strength for a new breakout, SOX as well.

    CHARTS. As noted, SP500 is showing a lot more intestinal fortitude at the 805 level than we thought it had. Closed well below that level Tuesday and added to the downside early Wednesday before running right back up. NASDAQ is using 1500 as support as it trades in the top half of its range from December to February and looks to be building strength for a new breakout. SOX is similar, retaking the February high and trading in the top half or better of its range and looking ready for a new break higher as well. Quite a change from Tuesday as SP500 shows strength in the league of NASDAQ and SOX. As we said, if the financials can get on their game along with NASDAQ, the upside strength would be rather exciting.

    LEADERSHIP. NYSE stocks led with financials such as banks, insurance, broker dealers scored solid gains. Techs and chips lagged as noted, but at the end of the day started to flex a bit of muscle with some key stocks running higher, e.g. AAPL, BRCM, QCOM, GOOG, TSM. Retail was again solid. A prior leader found some strength as commodities enjoyed an upside day after some pretty harsh sessions the past week.

    • 家园 THE ECONOMY

      The National ISM and the State of the Recession

      Tuesday the Chicago PMI fell below expectations and the prior month, upsetting the attempt for the important Midwest region to string together some back to back improvement in manufacturing. On Wednesday the ISM was a better than expected 36.3 (36.0 expected), and up over February's 35.8. That marked the second straight improvement in the number and led to the question of whether the economy was trying to turn.

      As chronicled here for the past couple of months, there is a broad firming of economic data spanning many reports. Manufacturing, factory orders, durable orders, home sales, retail sales, same store sales. All are showing improvement. Nothing positive, no shooting back into the black, just a slowing of the nasty declines. Of course, the turn has to start somewhere, so you never look at a slowing of the decline as meaningless.

      Thus there is some improvement already taking place in the economy even as the new Administration took the reins to the economic crisis it, as we all know by the constant repetition, inherited.

      What concerns us, indeed what really scares us, is how the policies adopted and yet to be enacted by the new Administration are the very kinds of policies that historically, in our own past, have led to further economic malaise. In other words, these policies don't solve the economic problems but in reality prolong them beyond the time they would have wound down on their own. Again, we are seeing signs of a slowing in the downside trajectory, but the plans yet to be enacted have in our own past prolonged economic downturns.

      A Long Recession Already by any Standard.

      This recession from peak (November 2007) to present is roughly 16 months, putting it in the category of the longest lasting recessions in US history. Of course we need to make clear that the current Administration inherited this recession in the event there was any confusion on that subject. I have heard that for three months now and frankly, it doesn't make it any better or worse for any businesses or individuals we talk with. The implication is that the prior Administration caused it, but every person willing to own up to the truth knows it was a combination of lack of oversight by the prior Administration, policies promulgated by the Administration before that, Congressional policies and bald-faced denial of the problems when presented, Fed monetary policy, and as always, a handful of unscrupulous individuals in industry determined to squeeze out every nickel of personal gain they could get. When you are talking the amounts of easy money that was out there for the unscrupulous people (in industry, Congress, and the several Administrations overseeing the creation of this mess), you get these kind of excesses and this kind of crushing recession.

      The problem we are having now is not the deep recession. It is bad no doubt, but as history shows, even bad recession will turn around. No the problem is how we are handling it. The Bush Administration was too hands off, so much so that it did not require the oversight agencies to actually perform oversight. The rules were in place, they were just not enforced and the Executive branch was not requiring enforcement. Ironic, isn't it as enforcement is the Executive's primary role. The Bush administration parroted the free market mantra, but it didn't really know what it was saying. It was not the Reagan free markets that worked so well. Bush initiated steel tariffs, pursued a weaker dollar, initiated massive new spending entitlements (e.g. Medicare prescription coverage). His 'compassionate conservatism' mixed and matched policies that created massive spending without the massive power of the supply side initiatives under Reagan. He did get some of it right but he hamstrung the benefits with his social policies. Thus a mess.

      The new Administration looks only at the supply side aspects of the Bush administration and labels that as the reason for failure. That is wrong as history shows. Kennedy, Reagan, Clinton (capital gains tax cuts, welfare reform/entitlement reduction), and even Bush II with his second tax incentive package again showed that supply side incentives really do rev up economic activity AND bring in increased tax revenues despite lower tax rates. It is the SPENDING that kills the budget because Congress and the Administration see all those dollars and go on spending sprees that create huge burdens we then struggle under when the economy, as now, goes belly up.

      Anyway, Obama carefully points out the 'failed ways of the past' with each speech as he pushes his massive spending and social engineering budget and 'stimulus' package. The irony is, HIS package is the worst part of the Bush package, i.e. the massive, massive government spending. Indeed his is far worse as his debt creation is greater than the total of all prior presidents combined.

      This is precisely the kind of spending and programs used before in our past. It was done in the 1960's and that threw us into the horrible malaise of the 1970's, the other really, really bad economic period in the US outside of the current one and . . . the Great Depression. That spending in the 1960's on the Great Society and the 1970's on the regulation (and not all of it was bad, as we had to clean up the water and air) put us in a long period of economic malaise where the free market could not work due to price and wage controls (Nixon), mandated mileage standards that produced an auto industry that could not compete globally (Carter), and a multitude of big government, centralized planning attitude that our country was not founded upon. We struggled until the yoke was thrown off in the 1980's.

      Government Spending did not End the Great Depression.

      That brings us to the other period of massive spending and central government growth, the Great Depression. The stock market crashed in the late 1920's as the Fed tried to quash growth and the specter of inflation that it thought had to arise given the roaring US economy. It hiked and hiked rates, the final hike an unreal 1% jump until it succeeded in slowing the US economy. It slowed it alright. The stock market crashed and with the trade and tariff wars the US helped spur, the US economy along with the world collapsed. Over a third of all US banks closed, unemployment at similar levels, soup lines, you name it.

      Roosevelt thought the answer was government spending, the old 'pump priming' plan. The government spends some money and that gets others to do the same. Keynes said you could pay a fellow to dig and fill holes in the ground and that would provide the stimulus because he would go out and spend the money. The government basically did that and the fellow did spend the money, but it never went past that. Government spends to pay the guy to paint the Golden Gate bridge, dig a ditch, fill a ditch, build a bridge, etc. Once the painting was done, the hold dug, the bridge built, the feds stopped spending, the worker spent his wages, nothing happened. More stagnation. So, more government borrowing to spend on more holes, painting, bridges, etc. and the cycle repeats.

      Current scholars of the Great Depression say that this very act of diverting economic capital into these 'garbage in, garbage out' make work programs bleeds the economy of money it needs and thus actually PROLONGED the Great Depression many years. The economy did not get the money as the federal government cornered the market on industry and sucked up all the funds to do so. Indeed we did not breakout from the Depression until WWII.

      • 家园 THE ECONOMY (cont)

        And you know what? We were WAY, WAY behind the Germans and the Japanese in technology because our industry had basically done nothing during the big government spending Depression years. We had to play catch up, and the GREATEST DISPLAY OF THE POWER OF CAPITALISM ever resulted as we bridged the technology gap between us and the Axis powers in a matter of a few short years. We not only conceived and then produced the best war machines the world had seen in a short period, but we also conceived the MANUFACTURING PROCESSES that allowed us to produce them quickly and cheaply. When the US entrepreneurs and workers were unleashed the results were nothing short of astounding. Germany did not think we could do it. Some in Japan feared awaking the 'sleeping giant.'

        The Current Plans are a Throwback to the Old.

        We awoke, but now we are being put back to sleep by the 'Europeanization' of our economy as we move toward massive government spending, nationalizing healthcare, the Executive acting as the 'Super CEO' for US businesses, replacing CEO's and making decisions for the companies.

        First, where in the Constitution does it authorize this executive authority? Hint: NOWHERE. That begs the next question: why are we not rioting in the streets similar to the Europeans protesting the G20? Our rights are being taken in front of us without a whisper of protest. There are some getting involved in the 'Tea Parties,' but where are the advocates filing lawsuits to stop this action so that the Supreme Court can get into this power grab and put a stop to it?

        Second, we have a President with no business experience and that has not, to our knowledge, held a post-graduate job for a for profit entity that did not receive large portions of its funding from the federal government. Not really the savvy business type you want to run a company and get it out of financial trouble. Yes, but what about his advisors? Larry Summers never ran a business; he is an ivory tower type spending most of his life lecturing or getting paid by the government. He was Energy Secretary under Clinton and did a fairly terrible job. There is another irony with Summers as well. A scholar that denies the leading scholars on the Great Depression and the historical, empirical evidence of the lack of impact of government spending, at least as far as improving the economy and our standard of living.

        The Current Recession. Why not just spend our way out?

        As noted above, this has already been a long recession by US and indeed global standards (throwing out Japan's 12 year depression starting in the 1980's), and now we are promulgating policies that duplicate those of the other long recession periods and indeed the Great Depression itself, namely massive government growth and massive growth in government spending.

        But even if history shows that 'pump priming' doesn't work, it still appeals to people: get the money out in the system and let them spend it, thereby generating economic activity. Problem is, and sadly so, if you give it to the low end workers they spend it on basics needed to live, e.g. gasoline, food, rent/mortgage. Those areas DO NOT create more economic activity. You have to get money in the hands and provide incentives to those that will create new companies and technologies and thus new jobs. That is how you get out of these economic depressions.

        Think about it, if more government spending worked, why would we only spend a measly 5 to 7 trillion dollars? The Obama administration says that for every dollar spent it will produce $1.50 in economic activity. If that is the case spend $10T or more and get $15T back. What a deal. Spend $1 to make $1.50. No businessman would turn that down.

        Sounds great, but it doesn't work. As we have discussed, history is replete with attempts to spend our way to prosperity and each time it failed and failed miserably. And what of that $1.50 you get back for the $1 spent? EVEN IF THAT WERE TRUE, and history shows it is not, that $1.50 would be worth less than $1.50 was before the spending. Why? Because this kind of spending sends your currency down as if a rock was tied around its neck. Massive spending debases your currency. Just look at the recent bond sales needed to fund the stimulus. The US is the gold standard for bonds, but we had to pay a lot more interest last week to sell our bonds than normally required all because the trillions of dollars we are spending on these programs that many around the world don't think will work. So, a $1 spent today, even if it could return $1.50 down the road, would not really return $1.50. Indeed if we continue spending such massive amounts it will return less than the inflation adjusted value of the dollar initially spent. That is no deal. That is a recipe for prolonged economic malaise as we have seen in our past.

        • 家园 THE MARKET

          MARKET SENTIMENT

          VIX: 42.28; -1.86

          VXN: 42.48; -1.72

          VXO: 43; -1.4

          Put/Call Ratio (CBOE): 0.91; +0.1

          Bulls versus Bears:

          This is a reading of the number of bullish investment advisors versus bearish advisors. The reason you look at this is that it gives you an idea of how bullish investors are. If they are too bullish then everyone is in the market and it is heading for a top: if everyone wants to be in the market then all the money is in and there is no more new cash to drive it higher. On the other side of the spectrum if there are a lot of bears then there is a lot of cash on the sideline, and as the market rallies it drags that cash in as the bears give in. That cash provides the market the fuel to move higher. If bears are low it is the same as a lot of bulls: everyone is in and the market doesn't have the cash to drive it higher.

          This is a historical milestone in the making. Bulls are impressively low considering we are in general a very optimistic country. The few bulls is a positive indication because it means most everyone that is getting out is out and there is money on the sidelines. In other words the ammunition boxes are full and as the market recovers investors will start opening up the boxes and firing. Little by little they will be forced to put more money into the market and there will be some rushes higher in fear they are missing the train. You relish times when sentiment is so negative because it means some tremendous buys are setting up. This could indeed be the opportunity of a lifetime, and you take advantage of it by buying quality stocks and letting them work for you as long as they will. If we can hold them for years, great.

          Bulls: 28.9%. A fraction more bulls (28.4% last week) but not really commensurate with the market gains. Not a lot of belief in it just yet. 29.7% three weeks back, down from that 'optimism' Well down from 43.0%, the current top of the recovery as the market rallied off the November low. A rise from 25.3% in December and quickly starting to fall once the market encountered the January selling. Bullishness bottomed on this leg lower at 21.3% in November 2008. This last leg down showed us the largest single week drop we have ever seen, falling from 33.7% to 25.3%. Hit 40.7% on the high during the rally off the July 2008 lows. 30.9% was the March low. In March the indicator did its job with the dive below 35% and the crossover with the bears. A move into the lower 40's is a decline of significance. A move to 35% is a bullish indicator. This is smashing that. For reference it bottomed in the summer 2006, the last major round of selling ahead of this 2007 top, near 36%, and 35% is considered bullish.

          Bears: 43.3% versus 44.3% the prior week. Slowing the decline from 47.2% as here as well there were not many believers in the run higher. Still showing plenty of worry. 47.2% is the peak for the run this year but is still below the December and October peaks. Hit the 34's on the lows, falling from 38.5% and 46.2% in mid-December. Still above the 35% level considered bullish for stocks, but as with bulls, still well below the level considered bearish for stocks. Bearishness hit a 5 year high at 54.4% the last week of October. The move over 50 took bearish sentiment to its highest level since 1995. Extreme negative sentiment on this move. 35% is the level that historically indicates excessive pessimism. As with the bulls the jump in bears did its job after hitting 44.7% in the third week of March. Bearishness peaked at 37.4% in September 2007. It topped the June 2006 peak (36%) on that run. That June peak eclipsed the March 2006 high (33%) and well above the 2005 highs that spawned new rallies (30% in May 2005, 29.2% in October 2005). This is a huge turn, unlike any seen in recent history.

          NASDAQ

          Stats: +23.01 points (+1.51%) to close at 1551.6

          Volume: 2.2B (+5.71%)

          Up Volume: 1.634B (+37.783M)

          Down Volume: 541.143M (+7.901M)

          A/D and Hi/Lo: Advancers led 1.9 to 1

          Previous Session: Advancers led 2.15 to 1

          New Highs: 13 (0)

          New Lows: 20 (+5)

          NASDAQ CHART: http://investmenthouse.com/ihmedia/NASDAQ.jpeg

          Gapped lower but held the support line running through the October low just over the 50 day EMA (482) and then rebounded for a decent gain. Gee, 1.5% is just decent; the times we live in. Why back in my day, a 1.5% move would be good for half a years gain . . . You know the story. Just look at Europe's average annual GDP growth and you get the picture. Nothing near a breakout but a nice hold over support and a solid move higher as NASDAQ

          Trades in the top half of its range, making higher lows and looking at a breakout.

          SOX (+1.28%) bounced off the 18 day EMA (225) and moved back through the February high on the close. SOX lagged on the session, had a lackluster day, and yet it is making a higher low at the top of its trading range, ready for a new run higher toward 250 and the November peak. BRCM, TSM, MCHP many chips are in position for nice moves.

          NASDAQ 100 CHART: http://investmenthouse.com/ihmedia/NASDAQ100.jpeg

          SOX CHART: http://investmenthouse.com/ihmedia/SOX.jpeg

          SP500/NYSE

          Stats: +13.21 points (+1.66%) to close at 811.08

          NYSE Volume: 1.503B (-8.29%)

          Up Volume: 1.24B (-16.392M)

          Down Volume: 254.485M (-109.83M)

          A/D and Hi/Lo: Advancers led 2.96 to 1

          Previous Session: Advancers led 3.09 to 1

          New Highs: 8 (+1)

          New Lows: 54 (+2)

          SP500 CHART: http://investmenthouse.com/ihmedia/SP500.jpeg

          Held the 18 day EMA (788) again as it did on Monday and bounced up through the 50 day EMA and 805. Nice action as SP500 shows more resilience than expected, but unlike NASDAQ and SOX, it is not near the peaks of the December to February range. Indeed, it has a tough fight ahead of it on through 850 to 900, but again, it is showing more strength than we gave it credit for as we looked to play the SPY and some financials lower. We are not giving up on those plays, however, though the fact that SP500 continues to hold up and attempts to break higher shows the buyers are not really able to take control just yet.

          SP600 (+1.56%) is very similar to SP500, i.e. over the 50 day EMA but still in the bottom half of its consolidation range. It is trying to stretch out laterally and build a shelf to rally up through the January and February lows, something it could not pull off on its last run upside.

          DJ30

          DJ30 is still trying to assume the or at least part of the leadership mantle. It is making a higher low at the November low, trying to put in a floor to rally up and through 8000 so it can take on the late December and January peaks. One step at a time and this is a very nice test of the initial run off the March (and bear market) low, giving it the launch pad it needs to take it on up through next resistance and another consolidation level. Not bad at all.

          Stats: +152.68 points (+2.01%) to close at 7761.6

          Volume: 361M shares Wednesday versus 399M shares Tuesday.

          DJ30 CHART: http://www.investmenthouse.com/ihmedia/DJ30.jpeg

          • 家园 THURSDAY

            Initial jobless claims and Factory orders. Jobless claims may not be as bad or at least we may see some softening of those numbers over the next few weeks as the Challenger/Gray survey is showing signs that layoff announcements are slowing. Factory orders are showing signs of life. They are expected to turn in a positive report. A positive positive so to speak.

            That is about all the economic news for the day though we are in earnings warning season and anything is possible. And we cannot and are not forgetting about earnings season. It is expected to stink and thus we are still being careful with current positions with the idea that more rallying will be used to bank some more gain. We are picking up positions in good stocks here and there but there is no boat loading. If the market continues higher we have great stocks already to make us some great money and we will add incrementally to those as the opportunity arises. We still anticipate using any upside strength to get a bit lighter overall but focus on some areas as well such as techs and chips.

            The indices, particularly NASDAQ and SOX are setting up for nice breakouts. Financials are showing more strength and more prolonged strength than anticipated. If the leading NASDAQ and SOX start leading again after these consolidations and tests, with the financials still in the game this market rally could put up an impressive second leg off the March low.

            To that end we continue to look for those good plays to do that incremental adding to our upside to give us good additional bang for our buck on a further run higher. We are not going to give up on the downside; we are simply going to keep looking at possible plays and have them at the ready in the event the earnings warnings/results suddenly pull the rug from under this attempt to get a serious second upside leg off the March low under steam.

            Support and Resistance

            NASDAQ: Closed at 1551.60

            Resistance:

            1569 is the late January 2009 peak

            1587 is the March 2009 high

            1598 is the February 2009 peak, the last peak NASDAQ made

            1603 is the December peak

            1620 from the early 2001 low

            1644 from August 2003

            The January closing low at 1653

            1666 is the intraday January 2009 peak

            1780 is the November 2008 peak

            Support:

            1542 is the early October 2008 low

            1536 is the late November 2008 peak

            1521 is the late 2002 peak following the bounce off the bear market low

            1505 is the late October 2008 closing low.

            1493 is the October 2008 low & late December 2008 consolidation low

            The 18 day EMA at 1491

            The 50 day EMA at 1482

            The 50 day SMA at 1465

            1440 is the January 2009 closing low

            1434 is the January intraday low

            1428 is the mid-November 2008 low

            1398 is the early December 2008 low

            1387 is the 2001 low

            1316 is the November 2008 closing low

            1295 is the November 2008 low

            1271 from is the March 2003 low, 1253 intraday

            1262 from July 2002

            1192 is the July 2002 intraday low

            1114 is the October 2002 low, the bear market low

            S&P 500: Closed at 811.08

            Resistance:

            815 is the early December 2008 low

            818 is the early November 2008 low

            The 90 day SMA at 827

            833 is the March 2009 peak

            839 is the early October 2008 low

            848 is the October 2008 closing low

            853 is the July 2002 low

            857 is the December consolidation low

            866 is the second October 2008 low

            878 is the late January 2009 peak

            889 is an interim 2002 peak

            896 is the late November 2008 peak

            899 is the early October closing low

            919 is the early December peak

            944 is the January 2009 high

            Support:

            805 is the low on the January 2009 selloff. KEY Level

            800 is the March 2003 post bottom low

            The 50 day EMA at 797

            The 18 day EMA at 787

            768 is the 2002 bear market low

            752 is the November 2008 closing low but it is not broken and done away with

            741 is the November 2008 intraday low

            722 is a December 1996 low

            681 is the June 1996 intraday peak, 673-71 closing

            665 from August 1996

            656-654 from January, April 1996

            607-05 from November 1995

            Dow: Closed at 7761.60

            Resistance:

            7867 is the early February low

            7882 is the early October 2008 intraday low. Key level to watch.

            7909 is the early January low

            7932 is the March 2009 peak

            7965 is the mid-November 2008 interim intraday low.

            The 90 day SMA at 8002

            8141 is the early December low

            8175 is the October 2008 closing low. Key level to watch.

            8197 was the second October 2008 low

            8419 is the late December closing low in that consolidation

            8451 is the early October closing low

            8521 is an interim high in March 2003 after the March 2003 low

            8626 from December 2002

            8829 is the late November 2008 peak

            8934 is the December closing high

            8985 is the closing low in the mid-2003 consolidation

            9088 is the January 2009 peak

            Support:

            7702 is the July 2002 low

            7694 is the February intraday low

            The 50 day EMA at 7638

            7552 is the November closing low. KEY Level.

            7524 is the March 2002 low to test the move off the October 2002 low

            The 18 day EMA at 7511

            7449 is the November 2008 intraday low

            7282 is the October 2002 closing low in the prior bear market.

            7197 is the intraday low from October 2002 bear market

            7115 is the February 2009 closing low

            7008 from February 1997 closing peak

            6528 is the November 1996 peak

            6489 from December 1996 closing peak

            6356 is the April 1997 intraday low

            Economic Calendar

            These are consensus expectations. Our expectations will vary and are discussed in the 'Economy' section.

            March 31 - Tuesday

            March Consumer Confidence (9:00): 26.0 actual versus 28.0 expected, 25.3 prior (revised from 25.0)

            S&P/Case-Schiller Home Price Index, January (9:00): -18.97% actual versus - 18.6% expected, 18.55% prior

            Chicago PMI, March (9:45): 31.4 actual versus 34.4 expected, 34.2 prior

            April 01 - Wednesday

            March ADP Employment Change (8:15): -742K actual versus -663K expected, -697K prior

            ISM Index, March (10:00): 36.3 actual versus 36.0 expected, 35.8 prior

            Construction Spending, February (10:00): -0.9% actual versus -1.9% expected, -3.5% prior (revised from -3.3%)

            Pending Home Sales, February (10:00): 2.1% actual versus 0.0% expected, -7.7% prior

            Crude Oil Inventories, 3/27 (10:00): +22.8M, +3.3M prior

            April 02 - Thursday

            3/28 Initial Jobless Claims (8:30): 650K expected, NA prior

            Factor Orders, February (10:00): 1.5% expected, -1.9% prior

            April 03 - Friday

            Nonfarm Payrolls, March (8:30): -658K expected, -651K prior

            Unemployment Rate, March (8:30): 8.5% expected, 8.1% prior

            March Average Workweek (8:30): 33.3 expected, 33.3 prior

            Hourly Earnings, March (8:30): 0.2% expected, 0.2% prior

            ISM Services, March (10:00): 42.0 expected, 41.6 prior

            • 家园 THE PLAYS:

              Upside:

              New buy point on BIDU as it sets up for another run.

              Play Date: 04/01/2009

              BIDU (Baidu.com--$174.77; -1.83; optionable): Chinese internet search

              http://biz.yahoo.com/p/b/bidu.html

              After Hours: $174.47

              EARNINGS: 02/18/2009

              STATUS: Test 18 day EMA. BIDU gave us a great run through late March and is now testing, gapping lower Monday to the 18 day EMA (172.42), holding at that level the past three days. Showing a doji on the candlestick chart at the 18 day Wednesday on low volume. Great run, nice test, ready to make the next run higher.

              Volume: 1.365M Avg Volume: 2.444M

              BUY POINT: $177.28 Volume=3.2M Target=$207.94 Stop=$170.77

              POSITION: BDU EP - May $180c (48 delta) &/or Stock

              http://www.investmenthouse.com/ci/bidu.html

              Play Date: 04/01/2009

              CAB (Cabelas--$9.60; +0.49; optionable): Sporting goods stores

              http://biz.yahoo.com/p/c/cab.html

              After Hours: $9.60

              EARNINGS: 02/19/2009

              STATUS: Test breakout. Retail baby. Consumer in the toilet, economy likewise, yet retail stocks are rising. CAB gapped over the 200 day SMA (8.91) last week, clearing a 7 week consolidation. It tested back to the 200 day through Tuesday and then started back up Wednesday, moving on a new shot of above average volume. Great action and ready to move in as CAB continues the run. Earnings are out of the way so it's a go.

              Volume: 744.885K Avg Volume: 594.44K

              BUY POINT: $9.82 Volume=800K Target=$11.97 Stop=$9.13

              POSITION: CAB FU - June $7.50c (81 delta, wide spread) &/or Stock

              http://www.investmenthouse.com/ci/cab.html

              Play Date: 04/01/2009

              EJ (E-House China Holdings--$8.44; +0.67; optionable): Chinese housing

              http://biz.yahoo.com/p/e/ej.html

              EARNINGS: 03/12/2009

              STATUS: Double bottom w/handle. First base off the November low, a nice 12 week base, forming the handle at the 200 day SMA (7.69) over the past two weeks. Broke through the 200 day just over a week back, tested, and Wednesday jumped back up on a solid shot of rising, above average volume. Looks ready for the next break higher and has some room to run up toward the September peak just over 10.

              Volume: 438.646K Avg Volume: 341.911K

              BUY POINT: $8.61 Volume=500K Target=$10.28 Stop=$7.91

              POSITION: EJ EU - May $7.50c (71 delta) &/or Stock

              http://www.investmenthouse.com/cd/ej.html

              Play Date: 04/01/2009

              PVH (Phillips-Van Heusen--$22.63; -0.05; optionable): Apparel maker

              http://biz.yahoo.com/p/p/pvh.html

              After Hours: $22.54

              EARNINGS: 05/19/2009

              STATUS: Flag. PVH surged out of an 11 week base just over a week back, rallying straight up, forming the flag pole. It has tested this week in a very orderly, tight range. May come back a bit more toward the 10 day EMA (21.55) but it could pop from here just as easily. Plenty of room to move up to the 200 day SMA (26.80) to give us a nice gain.

              Volume: 1.149M Avg Volume: 1.041M

              BUY POINT: $23.11 Volume=1.4M Target=$26.65 Stop=$21.49

              POSITION: PVH FX - June $22.50c (54 delta) &/or Stock

              http://www.investmenthouse.com/ci/pvh.html

              Play Date: 04/01/2009

              SHLD (Sears Holding Corp.--$48.09; +2.38; optionable): Retail box stores

              http://biz.yahoo.com/p/s/shld.html

              After Hours: $48.50

              EARNINGS: 02/26/2009

              STATUS: Cup w/handle. Less than exciting but set up well and can rip off some big yardage when it gets going. Formed a 10 week cup with handle base, testing back to the 10 day EMA (45.10) this week, throwing a hammer doji Tuesday and then bouncing higher Wednesday on stronger, above average volume. Great money flow is leading higher and SHLD has room to run to the 200 day SMA at 60.20.

              Volume: 1.508M Avg Volume: 1.444M

              BUY POINT: $49.37 Volume=2M Target=$59.45 Stop=$46.38

              POSITION: KTQ FJ - June $50c (51 delta) &/or Stock

              http://www.investmenthouse.com/ci/shld.html

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