28 Şubat 2011 Pazartesi

On CNBC's Kudlow Report Tonight

On Kudlow Report tonight at 7pm ET:

MARKETS

- Jeff Matthews, founder of the hedge fund Ram Partners LP; "Pilgrimage to Warren Buffett's Omaha" author
- Philip Silverman, Kingsview Management Managing Partner
- Don Luskin, CNBC Contributor; Trend Macro Chief Investment Officer

ARE UNIONS HOLDING STATES HOSTAGE?

- Gov. Sam Brownback (R-Kansas)

MIDDLE EAST IN TURMOIL … IS SAUDI ARABIA NEXT? IMPACT ON OIL PRICES?
- Karen Eliot House, WSJ Publisher
- Dan Senor, Council on Foreign Relations Sr. Fellow for Middle East Studies

BUDGET BATTLE: REPORT CLAIMS GOP SPENDING PLAN WOULD COST 700,000 JOBS

- Mark Zandi, Economy.com Chief Economist; McCain Campaign Economic Advisor; Author, "Financial Shock"
- Steve Moore, Senior Economics Writer for WSJ Editorial Board; "Return to Prosperity" co-author

Please join us at 7pm ET on CNBC.

Monday Morning Musings

The market is nicely higher in the first hour of trading, after last week's pullback. Asian markets were higher across the board overnight after China's Premier said the China's economy is expected to grow by approx. 7% over the next five years.

The dollar is weaker this morning, but its effect on commodities is mixed. Oil prices have fallen back to $97.75 after Saudi Arabia has reported it fulfilled its promise to cover the supply shortage from Libya. Gold prices are higher to $1413.

In economic news, the Chicago PMI rose to 71.2 in Feb., well above expectations of 67.5.

Earnings season starts to wind down this week, although there are still a few companies left to report. But overall it was another solid earnings season, and now folks will begin to look at Q1 and Q2 EPS.

The 10-year yield is lower to 3.41%; and the VIX is also lower by -4% near 18.42.

Trading comment: Some of today's bounce could be month end buying as funds do some window dressing. Some folks are also pointing at the bullish tone struck in Warren Buffet's annual letter. Regardless, volume has been light on these bounces, and the market isn't out of the woods yet. Friday's jobs report looms large as well. I still think the market has some more work to do on the downside, but one never knows. That is why I put some money to work into last week's decline, just in case I'm wrong about seeing more downside. But for now, let's see if today's early strength holds and how the day's volume comes in.

25 Şubat 2011 Cuma

GDP Revisions Lower Initial Growth Estimates

The market is rallying in early trading, lessening the declines for the week. If the market closed at current levels, the S&P 500 would be down roughly -2% for the week. From its recent peak to trough, this correction has been about -3.7% so far.

Unrest in Libya is still in full force, but news that Saudi Arabia was raising oil production has calmed he oil markets a bit. Oil prices are steady right now, near $97.45. Gold prices are down a little to $1403.

In economic news, the second read on Q4 GDP indicated that the economy expanded at a 2.8% rate, which is lower than the initial estimate of 3.2%. This is a slight negative, but I think most participants are looking for strong GDP readings starting in 2011 and firming throughout the year. On the consumer front, the Univ. of Mich. sentiment survey rose to 77.5 in February, the highest reading since January 2008.

In corporate news, there was a strong batch of earnings reports in the tech sector last night, including CRM, ADSK, and AMAT.

Asian markets were higher overnight; the 10-year yield is lower to 3.43%; and the VIX is currently plunging -10% back down below 20 to 19.08.

Trading comment: This is the normal course for markets. After a sharp 3-day selloff, the market had become oversold, so a bounce was in the cards and should be expected. But it doesn't mean we are out of the woods yet. It is possible, but the odds still favor more of a pullback after some relief to the selling. My game plan was to put a little money to work during the first phase of the selloff, and then step back. If we get a second wave, I will look to do a little more. But if you look at most market corrections, the typical duration is somewhere in the range of 3-6 weeks, so we are still early in terms of how much time has elapsed.

long CRM

Rebate

I've known this has been a problem for quite some time but have just chosen to mostly ignore it. I think it's now time to address the problem of subscribers forwarding the nightly reports.

Realistically there's no way to police this kind of theft, and if you just want to forward one or two reports to a friend so they can sample the SMT I have no problem with that.

I do have a problem when someone copies the report and forwards it to 20 of his investing buddies though.  

I think we can all agree that the price of the newsletter is chump change, especially compared to the profits we made last year or even so far this year for that matter.

I've kept the cost of a subscription down to a reasonable level to where virtually anyone can easily afford a yearly subscription. So price really shouldn't be an issue. 

So here's what I'm going to do. I'm going to give everyone an incentive not to pass on the reports freely. I'm going to rebate $50 for every friend or associate you send to the SMT that signs up for a yearly membership.

If you sign up 4 people your membership for the year is free. If you sign up 8 people not only is your membership free but you will make $200 (go buy some silver Eagles).

They have to sign up for a year. They will need to tell me at the time who referred them and give me your email address so I can deposit the funds in your Paypal account.

There will be no limit to how many people you can refer but I'm not going to try and keep track of this on a yearly basis and I'm not going to do retro rebates. The program will begin today. It's just going to be a one time rebate of $50 whenever you refer a new subscriber for a yearly membership. 


Hopefully this will be enough incentive to cure this problem.

24 Şubat 2011 Perşembe

On CNBC's Kudlow Report Tonight

On Kudlow Report tonight at 7pm ET:

**CNBC’s Trish Regan will be hosting tonight.

MARKETS: WHICH WAY WILL THE BULL RUN?

- Joe Battipaglia, Stifel Nicolaus Market Strategist
- Michael Farr, Farr, Miller & Washington; CNBC Contributor
- Phillip Silverman, Kingsview Management Managing Partner

WILL INFLATION DERAIL THE ECONOMY?

- Peter Cohan, Peter Cohan & Associates Pres.; Professor at Babson School of Business; e-Stocks, Author
- Andre Julien, Senior Market Strategist at OpVest

BUDGET CUT STANDOFF IN WISCONSIN

- Zac Schultz reports from Madison.

UNREST IN THE MIDWEST - UNION RIGHTS SHOWDOWN

- Gov. Ed Rendell, Former DNC Chairman; Pennsylvania Governor (D-PA)- Democratic Wisconsin State Senator
- Dean Knudson, (R) Wisconsin State Representative

CRISIS IN THE MIDEAST

- NBC’s Richard Engel reports.

THE MIDEAST POWDER KEG … U.S. MILITARY INTERVENTION IN LIBYA?

- Gen. Barry McCaffrey, McCaffrey & Assocs; NBC News Military Analyst; Fmr. Gulf War Div. Commander; Fmr. Nat'l Secy Council Member
- Dan Goure, Lexington Institute; Vice President; fmr.Sr. Defense Analyst

Please join us at 7pm ET on CNBC.

Oil Prices, Mideast Turmoil Still Weighing On Sentiment

The market tried to rally in early trading, but the lift has been somewhat muted and lacking real buying power.

Ongoing social unrest in the Middle East has kept oil prices high, and is weighing on investor sentiment. If high oil prices lead to higher prices at the pump, that could crimp consumer spending and be a headwind for the economy. And many emerging markets are less resilient to higher energy prices than the U.S.

Brent crude oil hit $113.75 this morning, while WTI prices are hovering near $99.25. So far, that $100 level has acted as a bit of resistance for WTI prices, but we will have to see if it holds.

Other commodity prices are mixed. Gold prices are not rallying again today, falling slightly to $1413. And cotton futures are limit down for the fourth consecutive daily loss.

In earnings news, Priceline (PCLN) reported a strong quarter, and the stock surged +10% in early trading. A reader asked me last week my thoughts going into earnings, and I replied that I felt the recent pullback lessened the risk, and a strong report should lead the stock to rally. Glad I held on. VRX, TGT, and KSS are also seeing their stocks higher after earnings.

In economic news, new home sales fell -12.6% in January, reversing the prior months 15.7% gain. Housing seems to merely be bouncing along the bottom, unable to really mount a rebound that lasts for more than a few months. Weekly jobless claims fell more than expected.

Asian markets were mostly lower overnight. China bounced slightly, but India was very weak; the 10-year yield is lower again to 3.42%; and the VIX is down 4% today to 21.20, despite the ongoing heightened geopolitical concern.

Trading comment: Volume rose on the Nasdaq during yesterday's decline, making for another distribution day. That brings the count to roughly 5 distribution days in the last several weeks, which is another red flag. I think as long as Libya stays in the headlines, and oil prices flirt with $100, we are going to be in sell mode and stocks will be unable to mount sustainable rallies. As such, I want to space out any dip buying I do. I put a little cash to work yesterday, and now I'll take a step back to assess the price/volume action. The 50-day average on the SPX is at 1287 currently, a level that should come into play at some point.

long PCLN, VRX

23 Şubat 2011 Çarşamba

THERE GOES THE FIRST SECTOR

Bear markets begin when something fundamental breaks. Usually the sector initially affected will roll over before the general market and tends to be a warning sign of what lies ahead.

The last bear market was triggered when the credit bubble created by Greenspan's foolish monetary policy burst. It was exacerbated by Bernanke's foolish attempt to debase the currency and reflate the bubble. All he succeeded in doing was to inflate oil to $147, which put the finishing touches on an already crumbling economy.

The market gave us a warning when the financials began to diverge from the rest of the market. Considering that the banks were one of the leading sectors during the `02-`07 bull the fact that they couldn't follow the rest of the market to new highs after the February `07 correction was a big red flag that the bull was on it's last legs.


I've been saying for more than a year now that the unintended consequences of QE would be to spike inflation, which in turn would poison the global economy. I knew all along that Ben was never going to create any jobs by printing money and of course he hasn't. 

So if inflation is going to sink the economy and kill the stock market we should see warning signs from the sectors most affected by rising inflationary pressures, just like the banks warned us in `07 that the fundamentals were broken. 

Sure enough I think we are starting to see those warning signs. 

Emerging markets have been the hit hard by food inflation. We are now seeing food riots in many third world countries. Emerging markets just like financials during the last bull were one of the leading sectors. EEM is now starting to diverge from the rest of the global stock markets. It's now on the verge of breaking back below the November cycle low.


The other sector that is extremely sensitive to inflation are the transports. When energy costs spike shipping companies profit margins are squeezed. The last two days have seen the Dow Transports fold under the pressure of surging oil prices. Keep in mind oil is only on the 17th day of it's intermediate cycle. That cycle lasts on average 50-70 days. I think we are going to see $5.00 gasoline by the time the dollar collapses into it's three year cycle low later this spring.



If the market can recover from the recent correction and make new highs I don't expect the transports will be able to follow. That will set up a Dow Theory non-confirmation and most bear markets begin with a Dow theory non-confirmation.

China is already in a bear market. I think most emerging markets have probably topped and I doubt the rest of the global markets have more than 2 or 3 months left before the next leg down in the secular bear market begins. 

I think the brief party created by Bernanke's printing press is about to come to an end.

On CNBC's Kudlow Report Tonight

On Kudlow Report tonight at 7pm ET:

**CNBC’s Michelle Caruso-Cabrera will be hosting tonight.

MARKETS: THE FEAR TRADE...WHERE ARE THE SAFE HAVENS?

- Bob Gelfond, MQS Asset Management CEO
- Jim Iuorio, Options Action Contributor; Director, TJM Institutional Services
- Don Luskin, CNBC Contributor; Trend Macro Chief Investment Officer

OIL RALLIES TO $100
IS THE ECONOMY IN A STRONGER POSITION TO HANDLE RISING OIL PRICES?
DOES SAUDI ARABIA HAVE THE CAPACITY THEY CLAIM THEY DO?

- Dan Yergin, IHS Canbridge Energy Resources Chairman; CNBC Global Energy Expert; "The Prize" Author
- Peter Beutel, Cameron Hanover President
- Chris Edmonds, FIG Partners Managing Principal

PRO-UNION PROTESTS
- Zac Schultz reports from Madison, WI.

SHOULD UNIONS BE ABOLISHED? ARE UNIONS HURTING OUR ECONOMY? WHAT’S THE IMPACT ON ECONOMY IF WALKER SUCCEEDS?

- Mark Levine, Radio Host & Democratic Strategist
- Rep. John Nygren, (R) Wisconsin State Assembley

MOAMMAR THE MADMAN?
IS HE "CRAZY" ENOUGH TO SET THE OIL FIELDS ON FIRE?

- Hisham Melhem, Al Arabiya Washington Bureau Chief
- Ken Timmerman, Middle East Data Project President; "Countdown to Crisis: The Coming Nuclear Showdown with Iran" Author

Please join us at 7pm ET on CNBC.

How High Will Oil Go?

The market was up briefly after the open, but has since rolled over and is under selling pressure again. Just about everyone will point to the turmoil in Libya and concerns it will spread into the middle east, but we know that the news breaks with the cycles. That is, the market was overbought and due for a correction. So I think it could have been any news that would have served as the selling spark. But Libya gets the credit.

That is not to make light of the situation, or the real concerns about rising oil prices. Nymex crude prices are up near $97.50, while the Brent crude (like that of Libya) has hit $110 already. Rising oil prices could crimp economic growth if they persist, and prices at the pump are likely to rise as well. So that is the trend that bears watching. But if Libya cools, I could see oil prices falling back quickly.

While energy prices are higher - gold is up near $1415 also - most industrial and ag commodity prices are lower today.

Tech stocks are lagging today after a poor earnings report from HPQ and a big drop in its stock.

Asian markets were mixed overnight; the dollar is surprisingly weak today, at the expense of a rising euro; the 10-year yield is lower to 3.44%; and the VIX is another 4% higher to 21.70.

Trading comment: The SPX has broken support at its 20-day moving average (1315), and the next support area is the big round number of 1300. After that, the 50-day average comes into play at 1286. The Nasdaq is already at its 50-day average today (2723). I want to start dipping my toe in and adding to some stocks that have pulled back. I am starting with the more "blue chip" type names. Many of the growth leaders that have had such big runs likely have more consolidating to do, as they were more extended. For those types, I want to see them build new bases and then start to look for breakouts from those bases. We are not there yet.

22 Şubat 2011 Salı

On CNBC's Kudlow Report Tonight

On Kudlow Report tonight at 7pm ET:

**CNBC’s Michelle Caruso-Cabrera will be hosting tonight & tomorrow night.

MARKETS

- Keith McCullough, Founder & CEO of Hedgeye Risk Management; CNBC Contributor
- Jack Bouroudjian, CEO of Index Futures Group; CNBC contributor
- Jim Glassman, "Safety Net" Author; George W. Bush Institute Executive Director

CRISIS IN THE MIDDLE EAST; LIBYA & KHADDAFY

- NBC’s Richard Engel reports.

OIL SPIKE: HOW HIGH & HOW LONG?

- John Kilduff, CNBC Contributor; Again Capital LLC Partner
- Dan Dicker, Independent Oil Trader, TheStreet.com Senior Contributor
- Robert Baer, former Middle East CIA field officer; TIME.com's intelligence columnist; author of See No Evil" & "The Devil We Know: Dealing with the New Iranian Superpower"

MORE MAYHEM IN MADISON

- Zac Schultz, WMTV Madison Reporter.

UNION BUDGET BATTLE

- Ben Manski, Liberty Tree Foundation Executive Director
- State Rep. Scott Suder, (R-WI) State Assembly Majority Leader

GOVERNMENT SHUTDOWN?

- Dan Mitchell, CATO Senior Fellow
- Keith Boykin, Former Clinton White House Aide; Editor of The Daily Voice online news site; CNBC contributor

Please join us at 7pm ET on CNBC.


Will Libya Halt Oil Production?

The market is trading lower this morning amid fears surrounding the turmoil in Libya. Libya has the largest oil reserves in Africa, so that is where we are seeing the most concern. Oil prices have spiked all the way to $95, and there is concern that prices could hit $100.

If oil continues higher and prices at the pump here in the U.S. begin to approach $4, that could be a headwind for the economy and dampen consumer spending. But let's see what happens with Libya first.

The usual flight to safety is on. Investors are flocking into Treasuries, pushing the yield on the 10-year yield down to 3.50%. Gold prices are also rallying, as buyers push prices back above the $1400 level.

In economic news, Consumer Confidence for February was released this morning, and hit its highest levels in almost three years at 70.4 (vs. 67.0 consensus). Rising consumer confidence would be a nice boost for the economy.

Asian markets were lower across the board overnight, with most markets down in excess of 2%. News that Moody's lowered the outlook for Japan only exacerbated the selling.

For its part, the volatility index (VIX) is spiking +14% higher this morning to 18.70.

Trading comment: The market was overbought coming into today, and obviously due for a correction. If oil prices continue higher, then this could turn into a deeper pullback, but if the Libya situation is contained I don't think this will be more than a normal consolidation. At this point, I think it is likely buying comes back into the market before anything more than a 2-3% dip. But for now, I am holding off on new buys, hoping for a little more of a pullback in prices.

long VIX calls

$5 EXPIRATION

The 15 month & $5 subscription offers will expire at the end of the day.

21 Şubat 2011 Pazartesi

$5 for February

I think we are on the cusp of an amazing run in the precious metals markets. The time to get on board is now before the train completely leaves the station.

Starting today I'm going to do a $5 for the rest of February offer. For $5 you will get the nightly reports for the rest of the month and access to all historical reports, COT data & the terminology document.  

At the beginning of March this will convert to a reoccurring 6 month subscription. This should be long enough to get new subscribers through the rest of the C-wave and possibly through the D-wave this summer.

If you decide you don't want to subscribe for the 6 months just log in to your account, go to the manage subscription page and cancel your subscription any time before the end of the month. Your subscription will stay active till March and then expire without any further billing.

To activate the $5 special offer click on the link below and click on the $5 February offer.

https://smartmoneytrackerpremium.com/?pagename=Subscribe

I will also reactivate the special 15 month subscription for the next few days. In order to view that option you will need to enter the word smtwebinar in the promotional code box and then click continue.

20 Şubat 2011 Pazar

Weekly Recap

Here is Briefing.com's Weekly Wrap:

The major indices logged another weekly gain, with the S&P 500 climbing 1.0% after posting modest gains in four of the five sessions. The S&P 500 and Dow hit fresh two year highs, while the Nasdaq hit a three-year high and is 30 points away from its 2007 high. Overall it was a relatively slow week, with energy stocks acting as the primary driver of this week's gains.

Eight of the 10 sectors advanced. Energy (+3.7%) led the way as oil gained 0.7% and a dividend hike from ConocoPhillips (COP +7.0%).

ConocoPhilips rallied 7% after raising its quarterly dividend 20% to $0.66 per share, adding $10 bln to its share repurchase program and approving $13.5 bln in capex in 2011.

FedEx (FDX +3.0%) issued an earnings warning. But the stock managed to gain as the company cited rough weather.

Dell (DELL +10.5%) rallied on better-than-expected earnings results and guidance.

In economic news, retail sales increased 0.3% in January (Briefing.com consensus +0.5%). Excluding autos, they also rose 0.3% (Briefing.com consensus +0.6%). The January figures followed on the heels of downward revisions for December, which showed total retail sales up 0.5% (prior +0.6%) and retail sales excluding autos up 0.3% (prior +0.5%).

Retail sales have now risen seven months in a row. The Producer Price Index increased 0.8% in January (Briefing.com consensus +0.7%) on top of a downwardly revised 0.9% increase in December. Core prices, though, were up a stronger than expected 0.5% (Briefing.com consensus +0.2%), which was the largest rise since October 2008.

Core prices exclude food and energy. The jump in January was attributed primarily to the index for pharmaceutical preparations, which was up 1.4%, and higher prices for plastic products.

The January figures left total PPI up 3.6% year-over-year and core PPI up 1.6%. The Consumer Price Index for January validated the last point. Overall prices rose 0.4% while core prices, which exclude food and energy, increased 0.2%. The Briefing.com consensus estimates called for increases of 0.3% and 0.1% respectively.

Increases in the food and energy indexes accounted for over two thirds of the all items increase, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics.

On a year-over-year basis, total CPI is up 1.6% and core CPI is up 1.0% versus 1.5% and 0.8%, respectively, in December. This is an encouraging uptick that supports a disconnect from a trend of disinflation.

Separately, initial claims for the week ending February 12 jumped 25,000 to 410,000. That was close to the Briefing.com consensus estimate of 408,000 and left the 4-week moving average fairly steady at 417,750.

In commodities, silver climbed to a thirty year high and the CRB Index climbed 1.2%.

The U.S. stock and bond market is closed Monday in observance of President's Day.

19 Şubat 2011 Cumartesi

Madison Madness

The Democratic/government-union days of rage in Madison, Wis., are a disgrace. Wisconsin congressman Paul Ryan calls it Cairo coming to Madison. But the protesters in Egypt were pro-democracy. The government-union protesters in Madison are anti-democracy; they are trying to prevent a vote in the legislature. In fact, Democratic legislators themselves are fleeing the state so as not to vote on Gov. Scott Walker’s budget cuts.

That’s not democracy.

The teachers’ union is going on strike in Milwaukee and elsewhere. They ought to be fired. Think Ronald Reagan PATCO in 1981. Think Calvin Coolidge police strike in 1919.

The teachers’ union on strike? Wisconsin parents should go on strike against the teachers’ union. A friend e-mailed me to say that the graduation rate in Milwaukee public schools is 46 percent. The graduation rate for African-Americans in Milwaukee public schools is 34 percent. Shouldn’t somebody be protesting that?

Governor Walker is facing a $3.6 billion budget deficit, and he wants state workers to pay one-half of their pension costs and 12.6 percent of their health benefits. Currently, most state employees pay nothing for their pensions and virtually nothing for their health insurance. That’s an outrage.

Nationwide, state and local government unions have a 45 percent total-compensation advantage over their private-sector counterpart. With high-pay compensation and virtually no benefits co-pay, the politically arrogant unions are bankrupting America — which by some estimates is suffering from $3 trillion in unfunded liabilities.

Exempting police, fire, and state troopers, Governor Walker would end collective bargaining over pensions and benefits for the rest. Collective bargaining for wages would still be permitted, but there would be no wage hikes above the CPI. Unions could still represent workers, but they could not force employees to pay dues. In exchange for this, Walker promises no furloughs for layoffs.

Indiana Gov. Mitch Daniels is also pushing a bill to limit the collective-bargaining rights of teachers for wages and wage-related benefits. Similar proposals are being discussed in Idaho and Tennessee. In Ohio, Gov. John Kasich wants to restrict union rights across-the-board for all state and local government workers. More generally, both Democratic and Republican governors across the country are taking on the extravagant pay of government unions.

Why? Because taxpayers won’t stand for it anymore.

In an interesting twist on this story, even private unions are revolting against government unions. Private unions pay taxes, too. And they don’t have near the total compensation of the public unions. It’s no wonder they’re fed up.

So, having lost badly in the last election, the government-union Democrats in Wisconsin have taken to the streets. This is a European-style revolt, like those seen in Greece, France, and elsewhere. So it becomes greater than just a fiscal issue. It is becoming a law-and-order issue.

President Obama, who keeps telling us he’s a budget cutter, has taken the side of the public unions. John Boehner correctly rapped Obama’s knuckles for this. If the state of Wisconsin voters elected a Chris Christie-type governor with a Republican legislature, then it is a local states’ rights issue.

But does President Obama even know that the scope of collective bargaining for federal employees is sharply limited? According to the Manhattan Institute, federal workers are forbidden to collectively bargain for wages or benefits. Instead, pay increases are determined annually through legislation.

Meanwhile, Gov. Scott Walker said it would be “wise” for President Obama to keep his attentions on Washington, not Wisconsin. “We’re focused on balancing our budget,” he said in a television interview. “It would be wise for the president and others in Washington to be focused on balancing their budget, which they’re a long ways from doing.”

Amen.

Obama should stay out. And Governor Walker should stand tall and stick to his principles. A nationwide taxpayer revolt against public unions can save the country. Otherwise, the spiraling out-of-control costs of state public-union entitlements will destroy the local fisc, just as surely as the unreformed federal entitlements of Social Security and health care are wrecking our national finances.

18 Şubat 2011 Cuma

On CNBC's Kudlow Report Tonight

On CNBC's Kudlow Report tonight at 7pm ET:

THE MARKET

- Stephanie Link,TheStreet; Dir of Research/VP of Strategy
- Dan Genter, RNC Genter Capital Management President, CEO & Chief Investment Officer
- Larry Glazer, Co-Founder of Mayflower Advisors


INFLATION ALARM

- Joe LaVorgna, Deutsche Bank Chief U.S. Economist & CNBC Contributor
- Vince Reinhart, American Enterprise Institute resident scholar; former director of monetary affairs at the FOMC

TURMOIL IN THE MIDDLE EAST … BLOODBATH IN BAHRAIN; EGYPT SIGNS OFF ON IRANIAN WARSHIPS PASSING THROUGH SUEZ CANAL
- NBC’s Richard Engel reports.

WISCONSIN BUDGET BATTLE PROTESTS

- Zac Schultz, WMTV Madison Reporter joins us live from Madison, WI.

WISCONSIN: BATTLE BETWEEN TAXPAYERS & GOVERNMENT UNIONS - IT'S A STATE ENTITLEMENT ISSUE - PATCO THE TEACHERS UNION!

- Robert Reich, Fmr. Labor Secy; "Aftershock: The Next Economy & America's Future" author; CNBC Contributor
- State Rep. Scott Suder, (R-WI) State Assembly Majority Leader

IBM & THE WATSON COMPUTER: THE WAVE OF THE FUTURE; JOB KILLING COMPUTER?

- Katharine Frase, Vice President of Industry Solutions, IBM Research

FREE MARKET FRIDAY
a) BUDGET BATTLE: IS A GOVERNMENT SHUTDOWN LIKELY?
b) SHOULD UNIONS BE BUSTED?

- Dolly Lenz, Vice Chairman Prudential Douglas Elliman
- Dan Gerstein, Political Consultant Dan Gerstein Consulting
- Chystia Freeland, Thomson Reuters Global Editor at Large

Please join us at 7pm ET on CNBC.

Early Look: More Tightening In China

The market is doing its thing again, hanging around near the flat line. Apple (AAPL) is holding back the Nasdaq as rumors swirl about the health of Steve Jobs after no photos were released from last night's dinner with Obama.

There was another batch of stocks that gapped nicely higher after reporting earnings, including ARUN, BRCD, VMI, and SPWRA.

Asian markets were mixed overnight, with China pulling back after they hiked their reserve requirement ratio another 50 basis points. China's market has been up for four straight weeks, but the continued monetary tightening has many participants worried about cooling growth.

The dollar is lower and commodities are mostly higher. Cotton prices were limit down this morning after reaching all-time highs yesterday. But oil and gold are both higher, to $87.28 and $1385, respectively.

The 10-year yield is bouncing to 3.63%; and the VIX is down 1.8% so far to 16.30.

17 Şubat 2011 Perşembe

The Madison Disgrace

The Democratic/government-union days of rage in Madison, Wis., are a disgrace. Paul Ryan calls it Cairo coming to Madison. But the protesters in Egypt were pro-Democracy. The government-union protesters in Madison are anti-democracy. In fact, Democratic legislators are fleeing the state so as not to vote on Gov. Scott Walker’s budget cuts.

The teacher’s union is going on strike in Milwaukee and elsewhere. They ought to be fired. Think Reagan PATCO in 1981. Think Calvin Coolidge police strike in 1919.

Governor Walker is facing a $3.6 billion budget deficit, and he wants state workers to pay one-half of their pension costs and 12.6 percent of their health benefits. Currently, most state employees pay nothing for their pensions and virtually nothing for their health insurance. That’s an outrage.

Nationwide, state and local government unions have a 45 percent total-compensation advantage over their private-sector counterpart. With high-pay compensation and virtually no benefits co-pay, the politically arrogant unions are bankrupting America -- which by some estimates is suffering from $3 trillion in unfunded liabilities.

Exempting police, fire, and state troopers, Governor Walker would end collective bargaining for the rest. Unions could still represent workers, but could not get pay increases above the CPI. Nor could they force employees to pay dues. And in exchange for this, Walker promises no furloughs for layoffs.

So, having lost badly in the last election, the government-union Democrats have taken to the streets. This is a European-style revolt, like those seen in Greece, France, and elsewhere. So it becomes greater than just a fiscal issue. It is becoming a law-and-order issue.

President Obama, who keeps telling us he’s a budget cutter, has taken the side of the public unions. John Boehner correctly rapped Obama’s knuckles for this. If the state of Wisconsin voters elected a Chris Christie-type governor with a Republican legislature, then it is a local states’ rights issue.

Obama should stay out. And Governor Walker should stand tall and stick to his principles. Otherwise, a nationwide revolt of state-government unions will destroy the country as well as its finances.

On CNBC's Kudlow Report Tonight

On CNBC's Kudlow Report tonight at 7pm ET:

MARKETS

- Keith McCullough, CEO of Hedgeye Risk Management
- Bob Froehlich, The Hartford, Sr. Managing Director
- Don Luskin, Trend Macro Chief Investment Officer


AN INFLATION TSUNAMI COMING?

- Brian Wesbury, First Trust Advisors Chief Economist
- Lee Munson, Portfolio Asset Management Chief Investment Officer

BRUTAL CRACKDOWN IN BAHRAIN

- NBC’s Richard Engel reports.

UNIONS UNDER FIRE…WISCONSIN PROTESTS OVER BUDGET BILL

- Howard Dean, Fmr. VT Governor & Presidential Candidate; "Howard Dean's Prescription for Real Health Care Reform" Author; CNBC Contributor
- State Rep. Robin Vos, (R-Wisc.) co-chair of the state's Joint Finance Cmte

DEFICIT PLAN DETAILS EMERGE: SO WHAT'S THE PLAN HATCHING?

-Senate Budget Committee members Rob Portman (R-OH) and Ron Wyden (D-OR) will join us.

Please join us at 7pm ET on CNBC.

Oil Not Rising Despite Geopolitical Tensions

The market was lower in early trading under mild selling pressure, but since then things have started to firm up and the declines are fading.

Commodities are rallying as there is some weakness in the dollar. Cotton is hitting more new highs, and gold prices have rallied back to $1380. But oil really can't get moving, and is lower near $85.15. This comes despite the news that Iran is sending war ships to the Suez. Normally, this would cause a big spike in oil prices. So the lack of strength in oil could be portending more weakness once the geopolitical scene eases.

In economic news, the Philly Fed survey surged to 35.9 (vs. 21.0 consensus), which marks the best reading in several years. It is surprising how many indicators we have seen lately hit levels that mark multi-year highs. Corporate earnings should surpass their all-times this year, which makes it more likely that the equity markets should reach new highs in the near future as well.

In corporate news, we got more earnings reports. Strong reactions can be seen in stocks such as WMB, TBL, and NVDA. While negative reactions are hitting NTAP and LIZ.

Asian markets were higher overnight, after strong GDP reports in Taiwan and Singapore. The 10-year yield is lower to 3.56%. And the VIX is up 1% near 17.0.

Trading comment: Semi stocks are especially strong. Look at VSEA, CYMI, LRCX to name a few. And the semi etf (SMH) continues to make new highs also. Energy stocks are strong so far today, while financials are lagging. Tech is solid as well, except for AAPL which is not participating today.

long AAPL

DOLLAR ON THE EDGE OF THE ABYSS

The dollar is now poised on the edge of the abyss. 

The current intermediate cycle has rolled over and is making lower lows and lower highs. The current daily cycle has formed a swing high and is in jeopardy of rolling over into a left translated cycle. If the dollar breaks below the November intermediate bottom of 75.63 it will be an incredibly bearish sign as not only will the current intermediate cycle have topped in only 4 weeks but the larger yearly cycle will also have topped in only 4 weeks. 

If that happens there is little chance the dollar will be able to hold above the March 08 lows as the crash down into the three year cycle low begins in earnest.



This will not only drive the final leg up in gold's huge C-wave it will also drive a huge spike in inflation in all other commodities. Food riots world wide will intensify. The rest of the world will be in an uproar over the collapsing dollar. Spiking commodity prices will collapse discretionary spending just like it did in 08 and 09. 

The phony economy driven by Ben's printing press will roll over when he's forced to turn off the presses to halt the dollar collapse. (Just like it started to do last summer when QE ended and the stock market started to collapse.) 

The dollar's rally out of the three year cycle low should correspond with stocks beginning the next leg down in the secular bear market and the next brief deflationary period just like the bounce out of the 08 three year cycle low drove the second leg down in the secular bear market.

The rally out of a three year cycle low usually lasts about a year to a year and a half. The next 4 year cycle low in the stock market is due in 2012. I expect that year long rally out of the coming three year cycle bottom to drive stocks down into the next major 4 year cycle trough and drive the CRB into it's next major cycle bottom.




A lot is riding on the next 2/3 weeks. If the swing high in the dollar yesterday does signal the top of the dollar's daily cycle then the November low will almost surely be broken and the chain of events I laid out will be set in motion.

The Potential Profits Squeeze

"Don’t fight the Fed” is an old stock market adage. Successful investors pay a lot of attention to it. It means that when the central bank is easy, it’s bullish for stocks. And when the bank turns tight, it’s bearish for stocks.

Obviously, the Bernanke Fed has been ultra-easy for a couple of years now: The bullish stock market has just doubled its value from the early March 2009 bottom.

However, another old stock market slogan is “follow profits.” Profits are the mother’s milk of stocks, and they have been doing very well over the past two-year market rally. So don’t fight profits, either.

But some new information raises a question mark about the longevity of rising profits. Namely, producer prices— which used to be called wholesale prices—are now rising much faster than consumer prices.

In other words, if the input costs for a company are rising more than the prices it gets at final sale, that’s gonna squeeze earnings. And that’s exactly what’s happening now, even though the ebullient stock market seems to be ignoring it.

The January report on producer prices showed a third-straight outsized increase, summing to 9.6 percent at an annual rate. Over the past 12 months, PPI is up 3.6 percent. Behind these big jumps is the import-price index, which just increased above 5 percent year-on-year for the second-straight month.

The unreliable dollar has something to do with it. As the Fed keeps printing new greenbacks, both real and nominal broad-dollar indexes measured by the Fed are showing nearly four-decade lows. And of course, commodity indexes have been exploding. You might say there’s too much money chasing too few goods and assets at home and around the world.

But on the potential profits squeeze, consumer prices through December (we get a new January CPI tomorrow) are rising at a 1.5 percent rate -- 2.1 percentage points less than the PPI. That erodes profit margins. This is a profits warning and a yellow flag for the stock market.

Incidentally, speaking of the CPI, there is an important consumer-goods component of the PPI. Overall consumer-goods prices are up 12.2 percent annually over the past three months and 4.7 percent over the past year. Even the core ex-food-and-energy part of consumer goods is rising 4.8 percent annually over the past three months.

So the combination of easy money, a cheap dollar, and rising commodity and import prices, along with the fact that wholesale prices are gaining much faster than consumer prices, should provide a sober reminder that this big stock market rally is not completely glitch free.

Finally, in the most recent Fed policy minutes released today, the central bank acknowledges a more optimistic economic-growth story. It has raised its 2011 forecast to a range of 3.4 to 3.9 percent, up from its earlier band of 3.0 to 3.6 percent. But it remains unconcerned about inflation. So as far as QE2 goes, expect the Fed to keep on pumping.

Which brings me back to that old adage, “don’t fight the Fed.” Sure, the Fed is your friend. That is, until it’s no longer your friend. There is such a thing as the law of unintended consequences.

16 Şubat 2011 Çarşamba

On CNBC's Kudlow Report Tonight

On CNBC's Kudlow Report tonight at 7pm ET:

THE MARKETS

- Jim LaCamp, Macroportfolio Advisors Sr. VP, Portfolio Manager
- Jeff Kleintop, LPL Financial Chief Market Strategist



ARE YOU READY FOR INFLATION? CORE PRODUCER PRICES SPIKE

- David Gilmore, Foreign Exchange Analytics, Partner
- David Goldman, Fmr. head of fixed income research at Bank of America


IRANIAN WARSHIPS TO PASS THROUGH SUEZ CANAL?

- Dan Senor, Sr. Fellow for Middle East Studies; Council on Foreign Relations

IS A BUDGET DEAL POSSIBLE? IS OBAMA NEGIOTIATING FROM WEAKNESS, NOT STRENGTH? SHOULD GOP STRIKE WHILE THE IRONS HOT ON TAX REFORM, SPENDING CUTS, SOUND DOLLAR … PLUS.... STATE VS. UNIONS: SHOULD UNIONS BE GUTTED?

- Robert Reich, Fmr. Labor Secretary; "Aftershock: The Next Economy & America's Future" author; CNBC Contributor; Univ. of CA., Berkeley, Prof.
- Steve Moore, Wall Street Journal Editorial Board Sr. Economics Writer; "Return to Prosperity" co-author

ONE-ON-ONE WITH THOMAS SOWELL

- Thomas Sowell, Syndicated Columnist; Hoover Institute Senior Fellow

Please join us at 7pm ET on CNBC.

S&P 500 Reaches Milestone From March 2009 Bottom

The market is higher again, and there is a reason than some people have been watching this SPX 1334 level. You see, at the bear market bottom reached in March 2009 the SPX touched 667. Today, less than 2 years from that low, the market has now rebounded fully 100% from the bottom.

To be clear, the market is up 100% from the bear market bottom, but has yet to fully recoup all of its losses. It still needs to get back to SPX 1576, which would require an additional 18% rise from current levels.

The march higher in recent months has been relentless, and it certainly feels like each small dip is being bought as the fear of missing out on future gains is finally beginning to set in. Not to mention that stock funds saw 3 consecutive years of outflows at the expense of bond funds, so a reversal of that trend would be normal.

In corporate news, there were more good earnings reports last night. Deere (DE) topped estimates and raised guidance; ditto for DELL, and Comcast (CMCSA) also had a strong report. All of these stocks are nicely higher today.

Markets in Asia were higher overnight; the dollar is up slightly so far, and commodities are mixed; oil prices are lower near $84.80, while gold prices are higher to $1371.

The 10-year yield is a touch higher at 3.63%; and the VIX is down -3.1% so far to 15.86.

Trading comment: Sometimes the hardest thing to do is just do nothing. Sit tight and let your winners run, as they say. Famed investor Jesse Livermore said that he made his biggest gains by just sitting on his hands. It is very tempting to take profits on things, but the best course has been to hold. I took profits on MERU the other day, as I felt the big spike higher would surely be retraced. But after a very brief pause, it is much higher again today (without me).

long DE

15 Şubat 2011 Salı

On CNBC's Kudlow Report Tonight

On CNBC's Kudlow Report tonight at 7pm ET:

MARKETS

-Keith McCullough, Hedgeye Risk Management CEO
-Lee Munson, Portfolio Asset Management CIO
-David Goldman, former head of Fixed Income Research at Bank of America

GROWING GLOBAL INFLATION FEAR

-David Gilmore, partner at Foreign Exchange Analytics
-John Tamny, editor of RealClearMarkets and Forbes Opinions

WHAT'S IN THE BUDGET YOU DON'T KNOW ABOUT?

-Ryan Ellis, Tax Policy Director at Americans for Tax Reform

THE BATTLE OF THE BUDGET

-Sen. Tom Coburn (R-OK)
-Sen. Mark Warner (D-VA)

THE GERMANS ARE COMING! THE GERMANS ARE COMING!

-Peter Navarro,business professor at the University of California-Irvine
-David Goodfriend, former Clinton White House official

Please join us at 7pm ET on CNBC.

Spending Restraint, Part I: Lessons from Ronald Reagan and Bill Clinton

Take a couple minutes to watch Dan Mitchell's new mini-documentary released to coincide with President Obama's FY2012 proposal.

The Song Remains The Same

The market is lower again in early trading, but it remains to be seen if the bears can gain any traction, or if the market will once again rally into the close. The financials are bucking the early weakness and trading in positive territory, so that is at least one sign that the selling isn't that pervasive.

Yesterday's winners, namely energy and materials, are down the most this morning. Advance retail sales for January came in at +0.3%, which was less than expected.

Asian markets were mixed overnight. China's CPI showed a 4.9% increase, up from last month's 4.6% rise. European markets are also mixed after eurozone GDP for Q4 grew by 0.3%.

The dollar is lower today, and most commodities are mixed. Oil prices are lower again to $85, while gold prices are rallying back to $1372.

The 10-year yield is lower to 3.60%, and the VIX is bouncing +3.6% to 16.53.

Trading comment: CRM continues to build its base as the cloud stocks mend themselves. And PCLN continues to add to its gains. Group rotation continues. Today energy and materials are seeing profit taking, while financials are rallying. That has been the hallmark of this multi-month rally. Corrections have come in certain sectors, in the form of group rotation, as opposed to the whole market being sold off at one time.

long CRM, PCLN

PORTFOLIO CHANGE

A portfolio change has been posted to the website.

14 Şubat 2011 Pazartesi

On CNBC's Kudlow Report Tonight

On CNBC's Kudlow Report tonight at 7pm ET:

THE MARKETS
-Ron Kruszewski, Stifel President & CEO
-Jack Ablin, Harris Private Bank chief investment officer
-Larry Glazer, Mayflower Advisors co-founder



OBAMA'S BUDGET PLAN
-Douglas Holtz-Eakin, former Congressional Budget Office director
-Howard Dean, former Vermont governor

ONE-ON-ONE WITH RON PAUL
Congressman Ron Paul (R-TX), winner of this weekend's CPAC presidential straw poll will join us.

MUBARAK'S BILLIONS...NEW INFO
CNBC's Scott Cohn reports.

RED CHINA RISING...CHINA SURPASSES JAPAN...IS THE U.S. NEXT?


Please join us at 7pm ET on CNBC.

Monday Morning Musings

The market is slightly higher in early trading, after a strong finish on Friday and positive overseas action overnight.

Asian markets were higher overnight, led by a 2.5% gain in China. European markets are mixed this morning.

There haven't been any big corporate news items, nor any major economic releases. The dollar is rallying again, but most commodities are still higher on the day.

Gold prices are higher to $1365, while oil prices are lower again falling back to $85.72.

The energy sector (+1.21%) is the strongest sector so far, followed by materials (+0.88%). Utilities (-1.03%) are the weakest sector. Among industries, semis (+0.89%) are leading, while homebuilders (-1.14%) are among the biggest laggards.

The 10-year yield is lower to 3.62%; and the VIX is currently +2.5% higher to 16.08.

Trading comment: The market continues to march ahead, with little change in the action. When the bears can't knock the market lower, it appears that short-covering surfaces and helps push the market further to new highs. This looks like what happened on Friday as well. The market has been showing a patter of opening lower, but when the bears can't gain traction, the market reverses and closes on a high not. This is the 'stair-step' action that I often refer to.

The cloud computing stocks continue to build their bases, and CRM looks like it is in the best shape so far. Networking stocks are still hitting new highs daily, and semi stocks are strong as well. SNDK has come roaring back, and is now poised to breakout to new highs soon. I am focusing on tech stocks, but there are also plenty of leaders among the energy and industrial sectors as well.

long CRM, SNDK

12 Şubat 2011 Cumartesi

SILVER BULL

I've pointed out in the past how consolidation size is usually predictive of how large a move will be once a breakout occurs. I thought I would take a quick look at the silver bull today using that criteria.

As most people know I'm mostly interested in silver during this bull market. I really doubt that I will ever buy another oz. of gold again.

So let's start by taking a look at the long term chart of silver.


As you can see the consolidation principle works perfectly in the silver market. So far we've had three major consolidations and each one as been followed by a powerful rally driven by the size of the preceding consolidation.

The relevant fact is that the longest consolidation has also produced the biggest breakout. If that continues to hold (and I think it will) then the current rally is probably only half over.

A meager 46% breakout is way too small for a 30 month consolidation. If I had to guess I would say silver might be in the process of forming a triangle consolidation pattern, especially if gold has one more drop down into a final intermediate cycle low. 


Ultimately I expect this breakout to launch silver to somewhere between $43 and $50 before the next consolidation phase begins.

Obama = Reagan?

A week after Ronald Reagan’s 100th birthday celebration, comparisons between presidents Obama and Reagan continue.

The conversation began when Obama praised Reagan in a USA Today op-ed. He commended Reagan’s leadership, his confidence in and optimism for America, and his great ability to communicate his vision for the country. Reaganites like myself appreciate these sentiments.

But so far, the differences between the two presidents are still huge.

Begin with the economy. Reagan and Obama both inherited deep and brutal recessions. But the first six recovery quarters look completely different for each president.

So far, real GDP has averaged only 3 percent annually for Obama. Employment as defined by nonfarm payrolls has increased by a paltry 121,000.

On the other hand, going back to Reagan’s first six recovery quarters, real GDP averaged 7.7 percent annually while nonfarm payrolls rose by 5.3 million.

No two situations are exactly alike. Reagan inherited massive double-digit inflation with 20 percent interest rates. Obama was left with a colossal financial meltdown. But Reagan’s economic vision put private-sector free-enterprise at the center. Obama has chosen a massive expansion of government power.

These are huge differences. One succeeded, while thus far the other has not.

While Obama’s first act was an $800 billion government-spending package, one of Reagan’s first decisions was a near $50 billion domestic-spending cut ($100 billion constant dollars today). Obama went for a nationalized health-care plan, energy cap-and-tax-and-trade, and pro-union card check. Reagan ended wage and price controls, deregulated all energy prices, terminated the Synthetic Fuels Corp., and fired the striking air-traffic controllers. Big differences.

Drawing from the work of Arthur Laffer and Robert Mundell, Reagan saw the economic-growth benefits of limited government, lower tax rates, and a dollar as good as gold. Gold prices plunged as Reagan and Paul Volcker worked to vanquish inflation. Ever-soaring inflation was the cruelest tax hike of all. But in the Reagan years the inflation rate dropped from near 13 percent to as low as 2 percent — a huge disinflation tax cut. Accompanied by lower marginal tax rates, the Reagan policies sparked a powerful recovery in business and jobs.

Reagan slashed tax rates across-the-board for individuals, investors, and businesses. At the margin, his reforms lowered the top personal rate from 70 percent to 28 percent. And he left a simple two-bracket tax code that cut thousands of pages of IRS rules and regulations.

And while the top individual tax rate was slashed under Reagan, individual income-tax revenues increased from roughly $300 billion to $450 billion. In other words, the Laffer curve worked. With surging economic growth, the incentives from lower tax rates actually raised tax revenues.

Mr. Obama, on the other hand, campaigned to raise tax rates on successful earners and investors. Along with the dozens of taxes legislated into Obamacare, these are all job stoppers.

Only after the 2010 election landslide did Mr. Obama finally agree to extend the 2003 Bush tax rates for a couple of years. But, he continues his pledge to hike those taxes again when the deal expires in 2012.

From his experience as a movie actor facing a 90 percent tax rate, Reagan always encouraged success. Everyone’s success. And he came to believe that if it pays more after tax to work and invest, then people will do so.

Of course, Reagan increased the defense budget to defeat the Soviets. But during the seven fat years of growth — to use the late Robert Bartley’s term — overall federal spending dropped from 23 percent of GDP to 21 percent. (Obama has taken the size of government to 25 percent of GDP.)

As for the budget deficit, Reagan left it around 3 percent of GDP — almost exactly where he inherited it.

Overall, Reagan’s policies created 21 million new jobs as real GDP averaged 3.5 percent annually during the seven fat years of recovery. The unemployment rate dropped to 5.3 percent from 10.7 percent. The stock market rose nearly 200 percent. And household net worth expanded by $8 trillion.

Quintessentially, Mr. Reagan was a private-sector, free-enterprise man. His policies of low tax rates, lighter regulation, domestic-spending limits, and low inflation rescued the country from the malaise of stagflation. Meanwhile, his military build-up, tough diplomacy, and “evil empire” battle cry defeated Soviet communism. Reagan was an optimist, but a tough-minded one. He believed in American exceptionalism. He also fervently believed in freedom.

Since last November’s Tea Party election, Obama has read about Reagan, talked about Reagan, and very cautiously moved economic policy in the direction of Reagan. I am open-minded. Let’s hope the current president stays on his new Reagan path.

But let’s never forget: Ronald Reagan saved the country 30 years ago. He also saved our future. Hopefully Mr. Obama will learn from that.

11 Şubat 2011 Cuma

On CNBC's Kudlow Report Tonight

On CNBC's Kudlow Report tonight at 7pm ET:

THE MARKETS…EGYPT, STOCKS, COMMODITIES & MORE

- Jack Bouroudjian, IndexFuturesGroup.com CEO
- Helima Croft, Barclay's Geopolitical Analyst
- Brian Wesbury, First Trust Advisors Chief Economist
- Evan Newmark, Mean Street columnist Wall Street Journal

WHAT'S NEXT FOR OIL?

- John Kilduff, CNBC Contributor; Again Capital LLC Partner
- Kevin Kerr, Kerr Commodities Watch Editor; Kerr Trading International President
- CNBC’s Sharon Epperson

CHANGE IN CAIRO

- NBC’s Richard Engel reports.

EGYPT & AN UNCERTAIN ERA IN THE MIDDLE EAST

- Dan Senor, Sr. Fellow for Middle East Studies; Council on Foreign Relations
- Gen. Barry McCaffrey, NBC Military Analyst; 4-star General; U.S. Army (Ret.); McCaffrey Associates Pres.
- William Cohen, Fmr. Defense Secretary; The Cohen Group Chairman and Chief Executive Officer
- Dan Goure, Lexington Institute Vice President; Fmr. Pentagon Official

WHITE HOUSE FANNIE/FREDDIE PLAN

- CNBC’s Diana Olick reports.

GOV'T GETTING OUT OF FANNIE & FREDDIE?

- Ed Pinto, Mortgage Consultant; Fmr. Chief Credit Officer to Fannie Mae in the 1980's -
- John Taylor, President and CEO National Community Reinvestment Coalition

IS THE ECONOMY IMPROVING YET?

- Robert Reich, Fmr. Labor Secretary; "Aftershock" Author; CNBC Contributor; Univ of CA, Berkeley Prof.
- Steve Moore, WSJ Editorial Board Sr. Writer; "Return to Prosperity" co-author

Please join us at 7pm ET on CNBC.

10 Şubat 2011 Perşembe

On CNBC's Kudlow Report Tonight

On CNBC's Kudlow Report tonight at 7pm ET:

EGYPTIAN UPRISING & BEYOND

- Gen. Barry McCaffrey, McCaffrey & Assoc; NBC News Military Analyst; Fmr. Gulf War Div. Commander; Fmr. Nat'l Security Council Member
- Steve Forbes, Forbes Chairman and CEO; Forbes Editor-in-Chief; Fmr. Presidential Candidate; "How Capitalism Will Save Us" Co-Author
- John Kilduff, CNBC Contributor; Again Capital LLC Partner
- Larry Korb, Ctr for Amer Progress Sr Fellow; Fmr. Asst. Defense Secy during Reagan Administration- Council on Foreign Relations member

MARKETS: EGYPT IMPACT ON STOCKS/ECONOMY/INFLATION

- Doug Kass, Seabreeze Partners Management Founder & President
- Barry Ritholtz, Fusion IQ CEO, Director of Equity Research
- Jim LaCamp. Macroportfolio Advisors Sr. VP, Portfolio Manager

MILITARY COUP FORCES OUT MUBARAK?

- NBC's Richard Engel reports.

EGYPTIAN UPRISING

- Amb. Daniel Kurtzer, Princeton Univ Professor in Middle Eastern Studies; Fmr. Amb to both Egypt & Israel; fmr. Amb to Egypt
- Genr'l Montgomergy Meigs, US ARMY (Ret.)
- Michael Rubin, co-author of a study of Arab democracy “Dissent and Reform in the Arab World”; AEI Middle East Expert Resident Scholar

FROM EGYPTIAN ECONOMY TO U.S. ECONOMY

- Mark Perry, University of Michigan-Flint economics & finance professor; AEI Visiting Scholar; "Carpe Diem" Blogger
- Steve Forbes, Forbes Chairman and CEO; Forbes Editor-in-Chief; Fmr. Presidential Candidate; "How Capitalism Will Save Us" Co-Author
- Jim LaCamp. Macroportfolio Advisors Sr. VP, Portfolio Manager

OBAMA'S BIG LIE ON TAXES; REPUBLICANS SPLINTERING ON SPENDING

- Keith Boykin, Fmr Clinton White House Aide; Editor of The Daily Voice online news site; CNBC contributor
- Steve Forbes, Forbes Chairman and CEO; Forbes Editor-in-Chief; Fmr. Presidential Candidate; "How Capitalism Will Save Us" Co-Author

Please join us at 7pm ET on CNBC.

Back In The Saddle

The market pattern looks similar to the last several days, where there is some brief selling in early trading, but then the market firms up into the close. This has kept the long-awaited correction at bay, and helped propel the Dow to an 8-day win streak.

Asian markets were mostly lower overnight (except China), and Europe is lower this morning. It was just announced that Egypt's president could step down and let the VP lead. This should offer some relief in the financial markets over there, although oil prices are still trading higher on the day.

The dollar has been higher on these middle east concerns, and that is pressuring most commodities today. Gold prices are lower to $1352.

In earnings news, Cisco (CSCO) and Akamai (AKAM) both offered tepid guidance, and their stocks are getting hit this morning. On the upside are Whole Foods (WFMI), which raised guidance, and Prudential (PRU). Both of those stocks are higher, with WFMI up by a lot.

In economic news, weekly jobless claims fell below 400,000 for only the second time since July 2008, which could be a good sign. As Bernanke said yesterday, unemployment has remained stubbornly high.

The 10-year yield is higher again to 3.68%; and the VIX is +3.5% higher to 16.45, but still trading below its 50-day average.

Trading comment: Sector rotation continues. Today, tech is out of favor (CSCO, AKAM), but food and restaurant stocks are strong, and materials stocks are bouncing as well. And the real estate etf (IYR) is at a new multi-year high. The market remains fairly overbought, but that has been a persistent condition for the last couple weeks, and hasn't been a good sell indicator. I think most participants remain in dip-buying mode for now.

Also, the cloud stocks (FFIV, CRM, VMW, etc) continue to work on putting in new corrective bases. This is constructive, and I wouldn't be surprised to see these stocks back on the leaders list at some point. Networking stocks (APKT, ARUN, RVBD, etc) remains strong right now, but the leader list is fairly broad, with good representations from a wide variety of industries.

long CRM, FFIV, IYR

1-2-3 REVERSAL

While I don't think gold is likely to head back down and make a lower low I'm going to lay out a simple strategy to protect against getting caught in case it does.

It appears likely that we may see our first reaction against the new uptrend. This is the #2 test of the lows in a 1-2-3 reversal.


If gold then reverses and breaks through the pivot it will complete the 1-2-3 reversal and it will have begun a pattern of higher highs and higher lows.


That would be the signal that the down trend has been broken and one could add in full positions or leverage (don't get carried away) as they see fit.

The downside is of course one will lose some profit potential waiting for confirmation and if gold reverses the early morning weakness you will just have to immediately buy back.

The action would be to lock in some profits this morning and then wait for the pattern of higher highs and higher lows to complete before putting positions back on.

9 Şubat 2011 Çarşamba

On CNBC's Kudlow Report Tonight

On CNBC's Kudlow Report tonight at 7pm ET:

THE MARKETS

- Joe Battipaglia, Stifel Nicolaus Market Strategist
- Vince Farrell, Soleil Securities Chief Investment Officer
- Mike Ozanian, Forbes Executive Editor


DEUTSCHE BOURSE TO BUY NYSE: U.S. FINANCIAL & ECONOMIC SECURITY AT STAKE? DOES U.S. LOSE CONTROL OF ITS FLAGSHIP EXCHANGE?

- Harvey Pitt, fmr. SEC Chairman; Kalorama Partners, CEO & Founder
- Rep. Ed Royce, (R) CA; Financial Services Cmte.

IS MEREDITH WHITNEY RIGHT? ARE STATES GOING BANKRUPT? MUNI-MARKET DEFAULTS COMING?

- Jim Lebenthal, Lebenthal & Co. co-founder
- Shah Gilani, Capital Wave Forecast Newsletter Author; MoneyMorning.com Contributing Editor -

HOUSE EPA HEARINGS
Representative Fred Upton (R - MI) joins us.

SHOULD FANNIE/FREDDIE BE COMPLETELY DONE AWAY WITH, TIME TO TRANSITION COMPLETELY TO FREE MARKET?

- Henry Cisneros, CityView Chairman & CEO; Former Mayor of San Antonio, TX; Former HUD Secretary
- Mark Calabria, Cato Institute Director of Financial Regulation Studies

Please join us at 7pm ET on CNBC.

A Thought on Obama = Reagan

In the battle over Ronald Reagan’s legacy, where media liberals and even the president are trying to suggest that Obama equals Reagan, here’s a quick thought:

Both Obama and Reagan inherited deep and brutal recessions. But the first six recovery quarters look much different for each president.

For President Obama, from the middle of 2009 through the end of 2010, real GDP growth has averaged only 3 percent annually and nonfarm payroll jobs a paltry 121,00.

On the other hand, in 1983-84 period, Reagan’s first six quarters of recovery saw real GDP averaging 7.7 percent annually with nonfarm payrolls rising 5.3 million.

So the numbers are different. And so are the philosophies. President Obama is strictly big-government spending, while President Reagan cut spending and tax rates to solve recession.

All of us Reaganites appreciate Obama’s kind words about the Gipper, but the differences between the two presidents are huge.

I’ll be writing more on this shortly.

8 Şubat 2011 Salı

On CNBC's Kudlow Report Tonight

On CNBC's Kudlow Report tonight at 7pm ET:

MARKETS: CAN ANYTHING STOP STOCKS?

- Don Luskin, Trend Macro Chief Investment Officer
- Daryl Jones, Hedgeye Managing Director
- Michael Farr, Farr, Miller & Washington president


WHAT DO BIG MORTGAGE MARKET CHANGES MEAN TO TEETERING HOUSING MARKET?

- CNBC’s Diana Olick reports.


- WOULD RADICAL CUT BACK OF GOVT'S MORTGATE ROLE BE GOOD OR BAD?
- SHOULD FANNIE/FREDDIE BE DOWNSIZED?
- DO HOMEOWNERS NEED TO PUT DOWN BIGGER DOWNPAYMENTS?

- John Taylor, President and CEO National Community Reinvestment Coalition
- Stephen Meister, founding partner of Meister, Seelig & Fein

REP. RON PAUL'S FIRST HEARING ON THE FED TOMORROW...IMPACT OF FED ON JOB CREATION & UNEMPLOYMENT RATE

- Rep. Ron Paul (R/TX) will join us in an exclusive interview.

DOES OBAMA REALLY WANT TO HELP BUSINESS? … OBAMA BUDGET A BAIT & SWITCH ON TAXES?

- Howard Dean, Fmr. Vermont Governor & Presidential Candidate; "Howard Dean's Prescription for Real Health Care Reform" Author; CNBC Contributor
- Steve Moore, Sr Economics Writer for WSJ Editorial Board; "Return to Prosperity" co-author

Please join us at 7pm ET on CNBC.

Scheduling Conflict

We will be back on Thursday, Feb. 10th

7 Şubat 2011 Pazartesi

On CNBC's Kudlow Report Tonight

On CNBC's Kudlow Report tonight at 7pm ET:

THE MARKETS

- Jeff Kleintop, LPL Financial Chief Market Strategist
- James Altucher, Formula Capital Managing Director
- David Dietze, Point View Financial Services President & Chief Investment Strategist

HOW TO PROFIT FROM INFLATION

- Lee Munson, Portfolio Asset Management Chief Investment Officer
- Jim Iuorio, Options Action Contributor; Director, TJM Institutional Services

OBAMA TALKS TO THE CHAMBER OF COMMERCE… WHERE'S THE BEEF? … IS HE SERIOUS ABOUT HELPING BUSINESS OR IS IT JUST A P.R. CAMPAIGN?

- CNBC’s John Harwood reports from Washington.
- Jack Welch, Fmr. General Electric Chairman
- William George, Fmr. Medtronic Chairman & CEO; Harvard Business School Management Practice Prof.

GOVERNORS CHOP SPENDING … BUT IS ENOUGH BEING CUT?

- Gov. Bob McDonnell, (R-Virginia)
- Gov. Earl Ray Tomblin (D-West Virginia)

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