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Tuesday, 3 Feb 2014 - AMC

      

Market Summary

from Briefing.com

Industry Watch

Strong:  Energy, Financials, Health Care, Materials
Weak:  Energy, Health Care, Industrials, Materials, Utilities

Market Moving Factors  
  • European investors maintain optimism after Greek Finance Minister Varoufakis meets with ECB President Draghi
  • Crude oil pulls back following three-day surge
  • Biotechnology extends recent retreat
Dow +305.36 at 17666.40, Nasdaq +51.05 at 4727.74, S&P +29.18 at 2050.03

[BRIEFING.COM] The stock market registered its second consecutive advance with the S&P 500 climbing 1.4% to retake its 50-day moving average (2,044). The price-weighted Dow (+1.8%) fared a bit better while the Nasdaq Composite (+1.1%) underperformed.

Equities displayed strength from the get-go after markets in Europe responded positively to a Financial Times report suggesting Greece will soften its negotiating stance; however, Finance Minister Yanis Varoufakis said there has been no ‘U-turn' in Greece's position while German Chancellor Angela Merkel has set expectations for a drawn out process, saying the ongoing talks will ‘drag on for months.' In addition, a handful of German lawmakers have voiced their displeasure with the position being assumed by Greece. With no resolution in sight, another chapter in the European saga will be written tomorrow when Mr. Varoufakis meets with European Central Bank President Mario Draghi in Frankfurt.

For the time being, the market happily continued retracing its losses from January. The S&P 500 narrowed its quarter-to-date decline to 0.4% with all ten sectors ending in the green.

Once again, the energy sector (+2.8%) held the lead throughout the session with help from crude oil, which soared 7.0% to $53.04/bbl. In all likelihood, a short squeeze contributed to the surge, but so did better than expected earnings from BP (BP 41.10, +1.24). However, it is worth mentioning that the industry giant plans to cut its 2015 capital expenditure budget by 13.0% to $20 billion.

Similar to energy, materials (+2.2%) and consumer discretionary (+2.2%) jumped more than 2.0% while two of the remaining three cyclical groups also finished ahead of the broader market.

The discretionary sector received broad support with Office Depot (ODP 9.27, +1.64) charging higher by 21.5% after The Wall Street Journal reported the company has been in talks with Staples (SPLS 19.01, +1.87) about a potential merger.

Elsewhere, the technology sector (+1.0%) lagged throughout the session, but was able to settle not far behind the broader market. Chipmakers displayed relative strength (PHLX Semiconductor Index +1.8%), but several top-weighted components like Apple (AAPL 118.57, -0.06), Facebook (FB 75.40, +0.41), and Google (GOOGL 533.30, +1.10) struggled to pull away from their flat lines.

Similar to the tech sector, the Nasdaq spent the day behind the broader market. Biotechnology factored into the underperformance with the iShares Nasdaq Biotechnology ETF (IBB 317.79, -1.79) falling 0.6% while the health care sector (+0.7%) settled near the bottom of the leaderboard.

Treasuries spent the day in a steady retreat, sending the 10-yr yield higher by 11 basis points to 1.78%.

Today's participation was well above average with more than 958 million shares changing hands at the NYSE floor.

Economic data was limited to Factory Orders:
  • Factory orders declined 3.4% in December after declining a downwardly revised 1.7% (from -0.7%) in November while the Briefing.com consensus expected a drop of 2.0% 
    • While the headline decline in factory orders was clear miss in terms of expectations, the underlying data should provide a boost to the second estimate to Q4 2014 GDP 
    • Shipments of nondefense capital goods, excluding aircraft, were much stronger than reported in the advance release. Instead of declining 0.2% in December, shipments increased 0.2%. Since shipments factor into GDP calculations, the upward revision will positively contribute to economic growth 
Tomorrow, the weekly MBA Mortgage Index will be released at 7:00 ET while the ADP Employment Change for January will cross the wires at 8:15 ET (Briefing.com consensus 230K). The day's data will be topped off with the 10:00 ET release of the ISM Services Index for January (consensus 56.5).
  • Nasdaq Composite -0.2% YTD 
  • S&P 500 -0.4% YTD 
  • Russell 2000 -0.6% YTD 
  • Dow Jones Industrial Average -0.9% YTD

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Economic Data

from Briefing.com

Date ET Release For Actual Briefing.com Forecast Briefing.com Consensus Prior Revised From
Feb 03 10:00 Factory Orders Dec -3.4% -2.4% -2.0% -1.7% -0.7%
Feb 03 14:00 Auto Sales Jan 5.5M NA NA 5.9M
Feb 03 14:00 Truck Sales Jan 8.1M NA NA 7.9M

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Technical Update

DOW


NASDAQ


S&P500


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Market Internal

NYSE :
Higher than average volume @ 981.2M vs 838.384M
Advancers outpaced Decliners(adv/dec): 2499M/616M
New highs outpaced low(high/low): 179/12

NASDAQ :
Higher than average volume @ 2143.7M vs 1784.97M
Advancers outpaced Decliners(adv/dec): 2040M/762M
New highs outpaced low(high/low): 71/42

Advancers outpaced Decliners by 3.29 to 1 on higher volumes 3124.9 (+19.12%) than avg 2623 (+0.40%)

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Bonds, Currencies & Commodities

from Briefing.com

Bonds

Tough Day:
  • The selling started overnight and it continued through the day.  Treasuries were down across the curve with the back end bearing the brunt of the selling interest.
    • 2-yr yield +5 bps at 0.51%
    • 5-yr yield +10 bps at 1.28%
    • 10-yr yield +11 bps at 1.78%
    • 30-yr bond +11 bps at 2.37%
  • 2-10-yr spread widened to 127 basis points from 119 basis points at Monday's settlement
  • An unwinding of safety trades pressured the market.  Those trades could be put back on quickly, but for Tuesday's session they rolled off primarily on the following factors:
    • A sense that the "new leaders" in Greece aren't going to be as combative (or successful) in forcing a debt writedown with eurozone partners as the "old candidates" suggested they would be
      • Greek 10-yr yield -148 bps to 9.62%
      • ATHEX Composite +11.3%
    • Another rally in the U.S. stock market precipitated by rising oil prices and influential leadership from the cyclical sectors
      • WTI crude +7.0% at $53.05/bbl
      • Energy sector +2.6%
      • The Reserve Bank of Australia cutting its key policy rate by 25 bps to a record-low 2.25% and chatter that the People's Bank of China may soon introduce additional policy stimulus helped drive the recovery effort in cyclical sectors 
    • Bill Gross cautioning about future loss potential in longer-term bond commitments
  • The December Factory Orders report produced a sizable headline miss, with orders down 3.4% (Briefing.com consensus -2.0%).  The recognition that shipments of nondefense capital goods excluding aircraft increased 0.2% versus a previously reported 0.2% decline acted as an offset
    • This component factors into GDP estimates and will compute favorably for the second estimate of Q4 GDP
  • U.S. Dollar Index -1.0% to 93.54 on the back of a stronger euro
    • EUR/USD +1.5% at 1.1493
    • Weaker dollar helped underpin buying in the oil market
  • Fed speak: Conflicting views from non-FOMC voters
    • St. Louis Fed President Bullard tried to downplay mention of "international developments" in latest policy directive and maintained the Fed should raise rates sooner and then gradually afterwards
    • Minneapolis Fed President Kocherlakota says Fed should refrain from raising rates in 2015 so as not to slow the economic recovery
    • Cleveland Fed President Mester (non-FOMC voter) speaks at 12:45 ET on Wednesday about the economy
  • Wednesday data: MBA Mortgage Index for week of Jan. 31 (07:00 ET); ADP Employment Change for January (08:15 ET); ISM Services report for January (10:00 ET)

Currencies

Dollar Rolls Over:
Dollar, Euro Reverse Roles- The Dollar Index is having its worst day in five months as it tumbles below recent support levels. The DXY showed some signs of tiring around the 96-96 area over the past couple of days. The 17% run up since July is finally showing some signs of tiring. Weaker U.S. economic data, a poor performance by U.S multinationals due to the weak dollar, and the reduction of headline risk as central banks around the globe announce easing measures have all helped lead to some profit taking by dollar bulls. The selling in the dollar began with the poor December Factory Orders and picked up as it broke the 94.40 support level. The DXY is trying to hold the 20 sma (93.50) in late trade. Tomorrow the January ADP jobs report will be released as investors start to focus on the latest employment data.
  • The euro has rallied to test 1.15 for the first time since January 22 when the ECB embarked on its own QE program. The single currency ran to 1.1533 just shy of the 20 sma (1.1535) before seeing a small pullback. The euro is showing signs of holding the 1.15 area. The currency was boosted by headlines from Greek and EU officials that showed some conciliatory tones. This helped offset some of the aggressive comments that came right after Syriza rose to power in Greece. The debt debate promises to drag out over the next couple of months. This should have the euro remain a volatile story in markets. A Eurozone Retail Sales number (5am) and Services PMI numbers will be the economic focus on Wednesday. 
  • The pound was able to rally to 1.5198, falling just shy of the 1.52 resistance level. The pound remains elevated at 1.5165 as the dollar continues to see headwinds. Services PMI is due out tomorrow at 4:30am.
  • The yen continues to trade in the 117 level in relatively uneventful trade. It should be a quiet night in Japan on the economic front as Average Cash Earnings (8:30am) is the only economic report due out. 
  • The Aussie dollar was able to regain all of its overnight losses during U.S. trade. The Aussie fell from 0.7810 to 0.7626 after the RBA cut rates 25 bps. The move was a surprise but not completely unexpected as there were rumors out last week that this would happen. The Aussie's losses against the dollar though would be reversed when the greenback started to sell off. This led to the Aussie erasing all its losses and moving back to 0.7852at 1:30pm. The AUD has pulled back to the 0.7786 since hitting its session highs.

Commodities

Oil Soars 7%, Now Up 19% In Past Three Sessions:
  • Oil prices were at it again today, extending a rally that began late last week.
  • In the past three session, WTI crude oil futures are up 19%
  • Crude is actually up for four consecutive sessions. We just excluded the session on Thursday Jan 29 because crude was up that day, but only posted a six cent gain.
  • Today, Mar crude oil ended pit trading $3.48 higher at $53.04/barrel.
  • Mar natural gas futures rose $0.08 to end the session at $2.76/MMBtu
  • Despite the dollar index selling off today, Apr gold prices lost $17.80.
  • Meanwhile, Mar silver rose $0.07 to $17.32/oz. Mar copper rose $0.09 to $2.58/lb
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Preview: Wednesday, 4 Feb 2015

Economic Data

DateETReleaseForActualBriefing.com ForecastBriefing.com ConsensusPriorRevised From
Feb 04 07:00 MBA Mortgage Index 01/31 NA NA -3.2%
Feb 04 08:15 ADP Employment Change Jan 250K 230K 241K
Feb 04 10:00 ISM Services Jan 56.5 56.5 56.5 56.2
Feb 04 10:30 Crude Inventories 01/31 NA NA 8.874M

Other Events of Interest

Earnings


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