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Morning News: July 27, 2011
Posted by Eddy Elfenbein on July 27th, 2011 at 7:55 amBoehner Fights Internal Party Strife on Debt Plan
On All Levels of the Economy, Concern About the Impasse
Home Sales, Prices Reflect Malaise
As US Debt Impasse Continues, Risks Loom In Repo Market
Treasuries Gain as Debt-Accord Speculation Boosts Demand at Two-Year Sale
WellPoint Tops Estimates as Expenses Fall
Nissan 1Q Net Profit Drops 20% As Yen, Quake Offset Sales Growth
Moody’s Downgrades Nokia Citing Weaker Market Position
Santander Profit Tumbles On UK Charge; Delays IPOs
Dow Profit Tops Estimates on Plastics, Chemicals
Nasdaq OMX Profit Dips in Q2, Beats Estimates
Dunkin’ Brands Raises $422.8 Million in IPO
Soros to End Four-Decade Hedge-Fund Career
Howard Lindzon: Should You Paper Trade?
Paul Kedrosky: Hey, It’s Like Selling Stocks to Koreans
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Cyclicals Continue to Lag
Posted by Eddy Elfenbein on July 26th, 2011 at 10:24 pmI’ve warned investors that cyclical stocks are poised for a period of under-performing the market. These are stocks whose business fortune is more closely tied to the ups and downs of the economy.
The shorthand I like to use in following the cyclical sector is the ratio of the Morgan Stanley Cyclical Index (^CYC) to the S&P 500. That ratio reached an all-time high on February 11th and has gradually dropped ever since. Since the beginning of July, the ratio has really started to head south. From July 1st to July 26th, the S&P 500 is down just 0.58% while the cyclicals are off by 4.73%.
On Friday we’re going to get our first peek at how well the economy did during the second three months of the year. The report will most likely be depressing. While the economy is indeed growing, it’s not growing at the speed needed to put people back to work. As long as the economy remains sluggish, cyclical stocks will continue to do poorly. Outside of a few exceptions, I urge investors to steer clear of cyclicals.
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Netflix Poised to Plunge
Posted by Eddy Elfenbein on July 26th, 2011 at 9:28 amOne of the of the things about having a blog is that I can’t hide my awful market calls. A little over a year ago, I called Netflix ($NFLX) “the absolute worst stock to buy right now.” I even got a snarky email from the CEO. The stock has jumped about $200 since then.
Sure, it’s embarrassing. But I’ve consistently believed that Netflix was absurdly overpriced. As it climbed higher, I thought it was just becoming even more and more overpriced.
Netflix just reported second-quarter earnings of $1.26 per share which was 14 cents more than expectations. Yet NFLX said to expect Q3 sales of $780 million to $805 million where Wall Street was expecting $845.3 million. The early indications are that the stock will open down about $25 per share.
I think Netflix’s decision to raise its prices has struck a nerve among its customers and some investors. Just as the stock’s price rise was in no way close to the earnings increase, so too is today’s sell-out matched by the poor sales forecast. When a stock plunges 10% on news that really isn’t that bad, you know something was wrong to begin with.
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Ford Earns 65 Cents Per Share
Posted by Eddy Elfenbein on July 26th, 2011 at 8:47 amToday is a huge day for earnings for our Buy List. Ford ($F) kicked things off by reporting adjusted earnings of 65 cents per share. Wall Street was expecting 60 cents per share although I thought it could have been as high as 70 cents per share.
Ford also said it is spending more to increase production because of rising post-recession demand. U.S. consumers are expected to buy nearly 2 million more cars this year than they did last year. Dealers say they are selling some Ford Focus sedans hours after they hit the lot. Earlier this month, Ford held a lottery to fill 1,800 jobs at its Louisville Assembly Plant after nearly 17,000 people applied.
Ford projects that annual U.S. sales will be in the lower end of its 13 million to 13.5 million forecast.
U.S. auto sales stumbled in the quarter, losing the momentum they had before the March 11 earthquake in Japan. Some buyers turned to Ford and other brands when Japanese cars were in short supply. But others seem determined to wait until later this year, when Japanese supplies will be replenished and prices are expected to fall.
Ford was able to command higher prices for its cars and trucks in the U.S., partly because of tight supplies of vehicles after the earthquake.
For the second quarter, revenue rose 13 percent to $35.5 billion. Analysts polled by FactSet had forecast revenue of $32.15 billion.
Ford paid off $2.6 billion in debt during the quarter. The company now has $14 billion in debt, down from $16.6 billion in the same quarter a year ago, a legacy of its 2006 decision to borrow $23 billion to restructure the business. Ford hopes its steady reduction in debt will convince ratings agencies to return the company to investment-grade status, which would make it cheaper to borrow money.
Booth said ratings agencies aren’t expected to act until after the company completes contract talks with the United Auto Workers union. Ford and the UAW are expected to kick off negotiations on a new contract this Friday.
The stock looks to open higher this morning.
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Morning News: July 26, 2011
Posted by Eddy Elfenbein on July 26th, 2011 at 8:05 amMoody’s Again Reduces Greece’s Credit Rating
Greece Expects Bond Swap in August
Deutsche Bank Slashes Peripheral Europe Risk
Beef Tainted by Radiation to Be Recalled in Japan as Contamination Widens
Spanish, Italian Borrowing Costs Soar
Manufactured Goods Lead Surge in Indian Exports
Pox on Dollar, Euro Makes Swissie Good as Gold
Obama Presses for Debt Ceiling Deal
Republican Leaders Voted for Drivers of U.S. Debt They Now Blame on Obama
Treasurys Weaken on Debt Impasse
Baidu Profit Jumps on Customer Growth
Ford Second-Quarter Profit Beats Estimates
UBS Scraps Earnings Goal After Profit Falls 49%
Need a Light Bulb? Uncle Sam Gets to Choose: Virginia Postrel
Joshua Brown: The Law of Unintended Consequences, Part 657
Brian Shannon: Webinar Recording & Trade Ideas for 7/26
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Sector Performance Since June 20
Posted by Eddy Elfenbein on July 25th, 2011 at 6:10 pmHere’s a look at how the different S&P 500 sectors have performed since June 20th. What’s interesting is how wide the spread is. A rising tide has not lifted all boats.

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