4 Nisan 2011 Pazartesi

On CNBC's Kudlow Report Tonight

Tonight at 7pm ET ...

MARKETS
- Jim Iuorio, Options Action Contributor; Director, TJM Institutional Services
- William Baldwin, Forbes Editor
- Art Nunes, Northwest Asset Management Chief Investment Officer

THE OIL STORY: OIL TRADING NEAR $108 - WHAT'S DRIVING OIL PRICES?
- John Kilduff, Again Capital partner

DRILL! DRILL! DRILL! WHY DIDN'T BP GET OKAY TO DRILL IN THE GULF? WHAT'S TAKING SO LONG TO GIVE PERMITS OUT?
- Rep. Steve Scalise, (R) LA

BUDGET BATTLE: CAN GOP GET RYAN'S $4 TRILLION CUTS THROUGH?
- Rep. Jason Chaffetz, (R) Utah

FED UNDER FIRE: BERNANKE SPEAKS
- Don Luskin, CNBC Contributor; Trend Macro Chief Investment Officer
- David Goldman, Former Head of Fixed Income Research at Bank of America

OBAMA: THE BILLION DOLLAR CANDIDATE…IS PRESIDENT OBAMA'S CANDIDACY A SHAKEDOWN OF THE UNIONS?
- Julien Epstein, Law Media Group; Democratic Strategist
- Ben Ginsburg, Fmr. Bush/Cheney Counsel

Please join us at 7pm ET.

Monday Morning Musings

The market is roughly flat in early trading, with the Nazz down slightly due to heaviness in AAPL, GOOG, and a few others. The economic and corporate newsflow is relatively light today, and the markets come into the day's session at overbought levels. The chart below shows that the Nazz is actually more overbought than it has been in many months. The dollar is roughly flat, and precious metals are moving higher. Gold prices are up near $1437, while silver prices are 2% higher above $38.50. Oil prices are also hovering near 2-year highs at $108. Asian markets were mostly higher overnight, with China closed for a holiday. But China's service PMI came in at 60.2, which is up sharply from February's 44.1 reading, so that should be a boost. The 10-year yield is lower to 3.41%; and the VIX is 1.5% higher to 17.67. Trading comment: We continue to see more breakouts amongst leading growth stocks. But the old generals like AAPL and GOOG continue to lag. I showed the chart of the oscillator above, which shows how overbought the market is currently. As such, I would expect some backing and filling as we head into earnings season next week. I expect earnings to be solid again, and would go back and look for those stocks (I will try to highlight some) which beat estimates handily last quarter and reacted well. They could have a repeat performance. long AAPL, GOOG

LIFTING RESULTS

I'll try to post something financially related later today or tomorrow but for now I'll do a comment cleaner and  let everyone know I did win my 9th national title over the weekend. I made new personal bests in both the Snatch (224 lbs.) and Clean & Jerk (266 lbs.) and won best lifter for the 50-54 age group.

1 Nisan 2011 Cuma

A Reelection Jobs Report?

Did the big March jobs report put President Obama back on the road to reelection? If so, he can thank the GOP, whose tax cuts saved him from himself.

You could hear cheering all the way from the West Wing when the Labor Department showed a 216,000 gain in nonfarm payrolls, the biggest number in quite some time. Plus, the unemployment rate continued its decline to 8.8 percent. Not so long ago it was nearly 10 percent.

Corporate payrolls have now increased by 478,000 for the first three months of the year. Over the past three months, the average payroll gain has been 159,000, which is more than twice the monthly gain in 2010. If payrolls stay on track, that would mean nearly 2 million jobs created in 2011.

So sure, the White House must be very happy. In fact, everybody should be happy at an improving jobs picture.

But here’s the sublime irony. The wake-up in job creation is a function of Republican policy. After all, for two years the Obama Democrats spent themselves into oblivion, with over $1 trillion of so-called big-government stimulus. Didn’t work. By the end of last year, that failed stimulus wore off, and it was replaced by Republican tax cuts.

Remember that in mid-December, after his election shellacking, President Obama signed a deal that extended the Bush tax rates across the board. The top marginal rate stayed at 35 percent. Investment tax rates for cap-gains and dividends held at 15 percent. Most business people I know — folks who work in both large and small companies — welcomed the tax-rate freeze as a sign that maybe the war against growth, capital formation, and small business was either coming to an end or at least a two-year truce.

So, presto, the jobs numbers start jumping in the new low-tax year.

The most important tell-tale sign for jobs is the household employment survey, which includes most of the nation’s small businesses. It’s the survey that signals real turning points in job creation since it’s the small-business owner-operators who are most sensitive to changing marginal tax rates.

And clearly, tax incentives matter: For March, the household survey jumped 291,000. Year-to-date, household employment is up 658,000, and is on track for a 2.6 million gain for the year. This small-business jobs push is also what’s driving down the unemployment rate.

So it looks like Republican tax cuts have saved Obama from himself. And the GOP ought to stay on this tax-cutting path as they move toward limiting the budget. Full-throated flat-tax reform to lower marginal rates and broaden the base will create brand new incentives for growth and jobs.

The GOP also should be on the warpath for full-fledged corporate-tax-rate reduction. Get rid of the GE loopholes and knock the rate down to 15 percent. As they continue to advance on the spending-cut front, Republicans should balance out their message with strong pro-growth tax cuts.

That said, there is a big glitch in the economic and jobs story: It’s called inflation — especially oil- and gas-price increases, but also food-price hikes. And there are new signs of price increases for all manner of goods and services. Inflation is the economy’s Achilles ’ heel.

Crude oil just hit $108. Nationwide gasoline is now around $3.60.The CEO of Wal-Mart warns of major retail price increases, saying they are already showing up in dairy and cotton products, with more coming in transportation. Consumer product companies are raising prices. Hershey’s chocolate is raising prices. And while the ISM manufacturing report in March showed strong business conditions, 85 percent of survey respondents reported higher prices.

And the energy-price hikes are already depressing consumer incomes. Average hourly earnings in the jobs report have been flat for the last two months, even while the consumer price index has been steaming ahead at a 5.6 percent annual rate over the past three months. In fact, measured over three-month periods, a real-wage income proxy, which includes average hourly earnings and hours worked adjusted for the CPI, has actually declined four consecutive months. This is a warning that inflation is taking its toll.

Both Democrats and Republicans in Washington must understand that over-easy Fed policy has depressed the dollar and reignited inflation. Politicians in both parties should be fighting for stable money. On the energy front, deregulation to unleash drill, drill, drill is more important now than ever.

So while there’s good news on jobs, the battle for the economy has not yet been won. And the November 2012 election is still a long way away.

On CNBC's Kudlow Report Tonight

Tonight at 7pm ET ...



THE MARKETS

- David Dietze, Point View Financial Services Chief Investment Strategist

- Joe Battipagila, Stifel Nicolaus Market Strategist

- Jack Bouroudjian, CEO of Index Futures Group





A WAKE UP CALL FOR THE BERNANKE FED?


- Jim LaCamp, Macroportfolio Advisors Sr. VP, Portfolio Manager

- David Gilmore, Foreign Exchange Analytics, Partner



LIBYA LATEST- NBC’s Jim Maceda reports.



IS OIL THE ACHILLES HEEL OF RECOVERY?

- Sen.David Vitter - (R) Louisiana

- John Hofmeister, Citizens for Affordable Energy Founder & CEO; Fmr. President & CEO of U.S. Operations, Shell Oil

- John Kilduff, Again Capital partner



WILL JOBS TURNAROUND RE-ELECT OBAMA?

- Matt Miller, Washington Post Online Columnist; Public Radio's "Left, Right and Center" Host

- Kellyanne Conway, The Polling Company President & CEO

- Jimmy Pethokoukis, Reuters Breakingviews: Money & Politics Columnist; CNBC Contributor



Please join us at 7pm ET.

Market Hitting New Highs On Solid Jobs Report

The market is rallying again in early trading, with some indexes hitting new highs for the year. Some of the buying could be first day of the month and quarter new money coming in, but the action is solid nonetheless. While the S&P 500 and the Nasdaq are still below their Feb. highs, the Dow, the S&P mid-cap index, and the Russell 2000 small-cap indexes have all surged to new highs for the year. So I would expect the S&P 500 and Nasdaq to play catch-up. This morning's jobs report was pretty solid. The economy added 216,000 jobs in March, which is better than the 185k economists were looking for. The unemployment rate fell slightly to 8.8%. If the economy can keep adding 200k+ jobs each month, this recovery should remain on solid ground and improve consumer sentiment. In corporate news, the ICE and Nasdaq (NDQ) have announced their rival bid for the NYSE (NYX) of about $11.3 billion. That is roughly a 19% premium to the offer made by Deutsche Boerse. Asian markets were mostly higher overnight, except for Japan. China's manufacturing PMI came in at 53.4, which is higher than last months 52.2. But more and more stories are surfacing about China's inflation problems. Oil prices are higher near $107, while gold prices are down today, back to $1422. The 10-year yield is higher to 3.48%; and the VIX is falling -7% back to 16.50. Trading comment: The indexes are moving higher, and the list of stocks breaking out continues to grow. Here are some more names to add to the list:

  • MELI, ISRG, TIBX, WYNN, VRX, CMG, DE, CTSH, LSTR, TSCO, BIDU, SRCL, etc.
Earnings season will start soon, and I expect earnings to be good for the most part. But if stocks keep rallying into earnings reports, we could see some sell on the news reactions. But let's not get ahead of ourselves. Right now, the action is very positive. long MELI, ISRG, VRX, DE, CTSH, LSTR, SRCL

One-On-One with the Legendary James Grant

Last night I had the pleasure of speaking with James Grant, the legendary founder of Grant's Interest Rate Observer. He called the bubble in the 2000s. Right now he's worried about a big jump in inflation. He thinks interest rates are totally unprepared for it. His solution is to restore dollar and gold convertability.