Financial Market Commentary

Thursday 23 July 2009 @ 2:03 pm

In the last two weeks, we have gone from a bearish head and shoulders breakdown to a new relative high. The market has rallied almost 10% in that time and the momentum is very strong.

Rising interest rates put the brakes on June’s rally and investors were concerned that the continuous supply of new bonds would put upward pressure on yields. The Treasury has to finance a $2 trillion deficit and huge bond auctions will be held every other week. In its statement, the FOMC said that they will not be buying Treasuries after the September deadline. This was a sign that the Fed is less accommodative and stocks drifted lower. To the surprise of many, the bond auctions over the last few weeks have gone much better than expected and interest rates started to decline. This paved the way for a big rebound.

Technicians could easily see the head and shoulders formation and the neck line at SPY 89. That level also represented the 200-day moving average. When it was breached, bears piled in. The large short interest also provided a catalyst for the rally when shorts had to cover.

Goldman Sachs blew earnings estimates away and financial stocks surged higher last week. That rally got the ball rolling. The next day, Intel beat estimates by a huge margin and they provided strong guidance. This rally sparked a huge round of short covering and Asset Managers that were under allocated scrambled to place money. Since that initial run, the XLF (financial sector ETF) and the SOX (semiconductor index) have been relatively flat indicating that good news is priced into these sectors.

This has been a very busy week and a flood of earnings have hit the market. One general observation is that cyclical stocks are rallying even though the top line growth and the guidance have been weak. Companies have done a great job controlling costs and the bottom line is beating estimates. However, the rally in economically sensitive stocks is all based on the promise of a recovery. I’m also seeing short covering in many of the laggards and they are rebounding after posting weak results. My conclusion is that the market is getting ahead of itself.

The market has been able to hang on to its recent gains and that is a positive sign. Tuesday and Wednesday profit takers were did not spark a round of selling and both days the market recovered quickly. The bid is strong and today the SPY broke to a new relative high not seen since last November. This latest action should spark another round of short covering–however once that impetus runs its course, the market should fall back below SPY 96.

Call us skeptical, but the recent breakdown below SPY 89 did not hold and I don’t believe this breakout above SPY 96 will hold either. The market is searching for direction and these light volume moves will fool as many traders as possible. Good results are already priced into the market and valuations are getting stretched.

Analysts keep talking about a rebound, but that is not being reflected in energy or transportation. If global economies were truly rebounding, we would see oil prices move higher. Production and exploration has been cut and any uptick in demand would deplete inventories. Crude supplies are still running high. Railroads and truckers are posting weak numbers and they are providing dismal guidance. This morning, UPS missed its number by a large margin and it is often considered an economic barometer. Until we see these conditions change, it might not be wise to get too invested in the current recovery theory.

Earnings releases will be heavy next week along with a slew of economic reports including new home sales, consumer confidence, durable goods, the beige book, GDP and Chicago PMI. While this news should generally be positive, a stiff head wind will return. Next week, approximately $110 billion in longer-term Treasuries will be auctioned and there is every reason to believe interest rates will start moving higher.

In summary, the market is likely to break out and then fall back into its trading range the rest of the summer with some surprising breakdowns. The greatest risk right now is to the upside. The best approach now is to use the Live Update page to play the best performing stocks on the upside using tight stops–while keeping a list of bearish plays automatically keyed up for any breakdown.

To your success!

Andy Huang




American International Group- AIG

Tuesday 16 September 2008 @ 8:31 pm

Here is my bold bullish play on AIG

American International Group, Inc., through its subsidiaries, provides insurance and financial services in the United States and internationally. It operates in four segments: General Insurance, Life Insurance and Retirement Services, Financial Services, and Asset Management. The General Insurance segment underwrites various business insurance products, including large commercial or industrial property insurance, excess liability, inland marine, environmental, workers compensation, and excess and umbrella coverages. This segment also offers various specialized forms of insurance, such as aviation, accident and health, equipment breakdown, directors and officers liability, difference-in-conditions, kidnap-ransom, export credit and political risk, and professional errors and omissions coverages. In addition, it provides property and casualty reinsurance products to insurers; automobile insurance products; residential mortgage guaranty insurance products; and second-lien and private student loan guaranty insurance products. The Life Insurance and Retirement Services segment offers individual and group life, payout annuities, endowment, and accident and health policies, as well as retirement savings products consisting of fixed and variable annuities. The Financial Services segment provides aircraft and equipment leasing, capital market transactions, consumer finance, and insurance premium financing. The Asset Management segment operations comprise investment-related services and investment products, including institutional and retail asset management, broker-dealer services, and spread-based investment products. The company was founded in 1967 and is based in New York, New York.

Today this stock has tanked on credit worries. In the last two days it has gone from $20 – $3. Bankrupcy is almost priced in.

Outlook This company is solvent (it can cover its debt obligations), it is simply ill-liquid. It has fantastic assets and it simply needs time – nothing else. If the Fed lets this company fail (and I am not pro-bailout for all of the others), panic will set-in.

They employ 116,000 people worldwide and it has over $1T in assets. With all that the Fed has done to avoid a financial crisis in the last year, a bridge loan seems like a slam dunk.

Tactic Buy AIG shares. They are trading for the price of an option. I believe the stock could rally to $10 or be worth $0. I see a 50:50 chance for either event and I am willing to risk $3 to make $7.

Buy and prosper! Happy Trading.

Andy





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