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Ford’s Sales Miss Expectations
Posted by Eddy Elfenbein on January 5th, 2016 at 9:20 pmToday was a rough day for shares of Ford Motor (F). The automaker got as low as $13.51 today before closing at $13.72. The catalyst for the selling was a December sales report that missed expectations.
Ford Motor Co.’s U.S. sales rose 8.4% in December, compared to a year earlier, and 5.3% for the year.
In what’s likely to be a record year U.S. auto sales, the automaker sold 2.61 million vehicles, marking its best performance in nine years.
But December’s increase trailed Edmunds.com analyst expectations of 11% growth.
The Ford brand rose 8.2% in December and 5.3% for the year, and the Lincoln luxury brand rose 12.1% in December and 7.1% for the year.
Like the rest of the industry, Ford reported a sharp shift from cars into crossovers, sport-utility vehicles and pickup trucks.
Sales of the company’s crossovers and SUVs rose 13.6% in December and 7.8% for the year, while truck sales rose 13% in December and 8.7% for the year.
But car sales slumped 4.2% in December and 0.9% for the year.
Ford will report Q4 earnings later this month. Wall Street expects earnings of 47 cents per share which is compared with 26 cents per share in Q4 of 2014.
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The High Quality ETF
Posted by Eddy Elfenbein on January 5th, 2016 at 3:19 pmI often talk about the importance of investing in high quality stocks. There actually is an S&P 500 High Quality ETF (SPHQ). The ETF has done very well the last few years.
Here’s something interesting about high quality stocks as an asset class. Check out the relative strength of SPHQ (meaning, dividing its price by the S&P 500) during the last year.
Notice how it spiked last August when the market got scared and there were all those ETF issues. In other words, the SPHQ is also a fear trade. When people get scared, they run all at once towards quality.
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Jim Cramer Talks with CEO of ADS
Posted by Eddy Elfenbein on January 5th, 2016 at 10:41 amThis is from May but it tells you a lot about Alliance Data Systems.
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Morning News: January 5, 2016
Posted by Eddy Elfenbein on January 5th, 2016 at 6:48 amEuro-Area Inflation Stuck Close to Zero May Pressure ECB
China Battles to Shore Up World’s Priciest Stock Market
Stocks Hold Steady After Starting Year With a Sell-Off
Puerto Rico Defaults on Debt Payments
The $289 Billion Wipeout That Blindsided U.S. Bulls
Dalian Wanda of China May Buy Majority Stake in Legendary Entertainment
Gene-Editing Drugmaker Backed by Google, Gates Files for IPO
Ex-Soros’s Bessent Raises $4.5 Billion for New Hedge Fund Firm
G.M. Chief Mary Barra Is Named Chairwoman, Affirming Her Leadership
GM Invests $500 Million in Lyft, Sets Out Self-Driving Car Partnership
Ford Will Expand Self-Driving Test Car Fleet to 30
Volkswagen Faces Billions in Fines as U.S. Sues For Environmental Violations
2016 Outlook: Can Berkshire Snap Its Losing Streak?
Jeff Carter: Tax Exempt Investing
Roger Nusbaum: A Wild Ride to Nowhere
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Worst Start of the Year in 84 Years
Posted by Eddy Elfenbein on January 4th, 2016 at 2:02 pmToday was a terrible start for the market. The S&P 500 dropped below 2,000 and at its low was down 2.65% on the day. The Dow was down more than 460 points although both indexes have recovered some lost ground.
This could be the largest opening day decline since 1932. Markets all over the world have been rattled by the decline in China. Trading in China was shut down after the market fell by 7%. Some economic indicators there continued to be lousy.
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Poor ISM for December
Posted by Eddy Elfenbein on January 4th, 2016 at 10:58 amThe December ISM report came out today and it wasn’t a good one. The Index fell to 48.2 for December. That’s the lowest reading since June 2009.
This was also the second-straight month in which manufacturing fell. Any ISM below 50 indicates that the manufacturing sector is getting smaller.
While today’s report is bad news, it’s not dire just yet. For one, the report only covers the manufacturing sector of the economy. Also, recessions have generally correlated with ISMs below 46 or so. During the stretch from 1995 to 1998, there were several weak ISMs even though the broader economy was doing well.
Since 1948, the ISM has been between 45.0 and 49.9 a total of 137 times. Only 25 have been during recessions. That’s 18.2%.
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Morning News: January 4, 2016
Posted by Eddy Elfenbein on January 4th, 2016 at 6:44 amBiggest Economies Face $7 Trillion Debt Refinancing Tab in 2016
China’s Two-Speed Economy Stays Intact as Factories Slump, Services Gain
Singapore’s Economy Expands More Than Estimated
Stocks Slump Across Europe and Asia Following Shanghai’s 7% Crash
Fed’s Fischer Supports Higher Rates If Markets Overheat
Solar Energy Is The Future. You Can’t Stop It.
Nokia, Alcatel-Lucent Set to Put Merger to Work
Ferrari Makes Stand-Alone Debut on Milan Stock Exchange
Uber’s No-Holds-Barred Expansion Strategy Fizzles in Germany
Samsung Warns of a Challenging 2016 as Competition Escalates
Takata Emails Show Brash Exchanges About Data Tampering
The Ghosts of Baha Mar: How a $3.5 Billion Paradise Went Bust
Cullen Roche: Shorting The Big Short
Jeff Miller: Will There Be A January Effect?
Howard Lindzon: My Mission Continues in 2016
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Amazing Stat
Posted by Eddy Elfenbein on January 2nd, 2016 at 6:10 pmWith the end of the year, I was updating some of my data files, and I came across this stat. Over the last 20 years, the Dow gained 253.49% on Monday and Tuesday combined. But it lost 3.67% on Wednesday, Thursday and Friday.
That’s extraordinary.
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Every Buy List Stock
Posted by Eddy Elfenbein on January 1st, 2016 at 5:04 pmHere are all 68 Buy List stocks and when they’ve made the cut.



Eddy Elfenbein is a Washington, DC-based speaker, portfolio manager and editor of the blog Crossing Wall Street. His