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Zacks #1 Rank Additions for Tuesday – Zacks Tale of the Tape

Zacks Market Commentaries (November 10th, 2009) Writes:

Here are the stocks added to the Zacks #1 Rank ("strong buy") List today:

3M Co (MMM) AMCOL International Corp (ACO) Archer-Daniels-Midland Co (ADM) Arena Resources Inc (ARD) Bell Microproducts Inc (BELM) Bio-Rad Laboratories Inc (BIO) BNP Paribas (BNPQY) Boston Beer Co Inc (SAM) Conmed Corp (CNMD) Crosstex Energy Inc (XTXI) Deutsche Bank AG (DB) Dover Corp (DOV) Dow Chemical Co (DOW) Eaton Corp (ETN) FBL Financial Group Inc (FFG) Fuel Systems Solutions Inc (FSYS) Genoptix Inc (GXDX) ...

The week ahead

Prieur du Plessis (November 2nd, 2009) Writes:

The video clips below provide a handy summary of the reports expected on the economic, financial and corporate front around the globe during the week ahead.

US: Employment, autos, rates

Jobless numbers, auto-sales figures and an FOMC meeting are due in the first week of November. Then there’s the progress of the health-care overhaul in Washington and more.

Europe: BOE meeting, UBS results

The Bank of England may take steps to buy up to 50 billion pounds more of assets on Thursday to help the UK escape recession. Earnings are due from UBS, BNP Paribas, Societe Generale, Total, Adidas and Deutsche Telekom among many others.

Asia: Carmakers in focus

Toyota, the world’s largest carmaker by sales, and

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Oil Steady at $68

Contrarian Profits (September 3rd, 2009) Writes:

Oil prices steadied on Thursday as economic optimism from data showing that the U.S. service sector and retail sales improved was tempered by disappointing news from the labor market.

U.S. crude prices for October delivery rose 2 cents to $68.07 a barrel by 11:44 a.m. EDT (1644 GMT), after earlier reaching a high of $69.40 on U.S. stock gains and a weaker dollar.

London Brent crude was down 32 cents at $67.34 a barrel.

“Right now, there’s not a whole lot of momentum here in either direction. I think the trend for the week, which has been down, is still in force,” said Tom Bentz, senior commodity analyst, BNP Paribas commodity Futures Inc in New York.

“Everything seemed to kind of slip right after the jobs data,” he added.

U.S. jobless claims fell last week, according to a report released by the Department of Labor on Thursday, but the prior week’s figure was revised up.

The number of

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The Undead of the Banking World

Bill Bonner (September 2nd, 2009) Writes:

Hey, the economy is not only recovering…it’s becoming better than ever before!

“Banks recover to their levels before the fall of Lehman,” is a headline in this Monday’s El Pais from Madrid.

“Public assistance enables the world’s largest 15 financial firms to return to the capitalization they had in September 2008,” the article continues. The largest of the largest, HSBC, is now judged to be worth $186 billion, according to the stock market. China’s ICBC is on its heels, with a market cap of $178 billion. BNP Paribas is 7th at $87 billion.

We will overlook the compromising detail that banks actually lost money in the last quarter – more than $3 billion. And let’s forget that China’s major banks are sitting on mega-losses from more than eight years ago (to say nothing of the more recent losses). Western banks, too, still have billions in assets whose real worth is an open question…and

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Buy, Sell or Hold: The iShares iBoxx $ Investment Grade Corporate Bond Fund

Contrarian Profits (August 24th, 2009) Writes:

The U.S. stock market has enjoyed a strong rally since the early spring, but while the economy has shown improvement, it still faces major headwinds. So it may be best to hedge against the U.S. dollar, which is likely to experience a significant decline over the next few months.

There are a lot of uncertainties permeating the market right now, not the least of which is healthcare reform. Will that reform entail a public option that could add $1 trillion to the deficit?  How is reform going to be financed?  And is it going to mean higher costs for employers across the board, or just the healthcare insurers?

Investing is made infinitely more difficult when 18% of U.S. gross domestic product (GDP) is hanging in the balance.

And you still have to consider:

That unemployment is likely to keep rising, perhaps over 10%. That the U.S. ...

Oil Falls Below $66 on US GDP, Slow Demand

Contrarian Profits (July 31st, 2009) Writes:

Oil fell below $66 on Friday, in line with broad falls on global markets after data showing the U.S. economy contracted and consumer spending had declined, with knock-on effects for fuel demand.

U.S. light crude fell 95 cents to $65.99 a barrel by 1325 GMT, pulling back from its gains ahead of the release of the economic data.

London Brent crude dropped by $1.43 to $68.68.

U.S. gross domestic product fell 1.0 percent in the second quarter, with consumer spending falling 1.2 percent, the U.S. Commerce Department said.

Although the contraction was smaller than expected the January-March GDP was revised down to a 6.4 precent drop from the previously reported 5.5 percent fall.

With the contraction in the second quarter, U.S. GDP has fallen for four straight quarters for the first time since government records started in 1947.

“The GDP reading did come better than expected, but the stabilisation is coming off a downward revised first quarter number,”

...

Banks Fall after Morgan Stanley

Contrarian Profits (July 22nd, 2009) Writes:

European shares were down in afternoon trade today, Wednesday, with banks leading the decline after quarterly results from U.S. banks Morgan Stanley and Wells Fargo disappointed investors.

By 1306 GMT, the pan-European FTSEurofirst 300 <.FTEU3> index of top shares was down 0.4 percent at 884.79 points after trading between 879.97 and 888.23 points.

“Morgan Stanley’s operating loss per share looks on the high side, compared to others in the sector. I think Morgan Stanley’s paying back public aid has distorted results; it is not known if this has been incorporated into analysts’ expectations of the results,” said Heino Ruland, strategist at Ruland Research.

Bank shares took the most off the index after Morgan Stanley reported its third consecutive quarterly loss and Wells Fargo reported rising credit losses.

“The continuing decline in asset quality is a worry, and whilst they are making money in other areas it just goes to show that conditions in the consumer segment

...

Wall Street Slips Amid Recovery Worries

Contrarian Profits (July 7th, 2009) Writes:

Global stocks slid anew on Tuesday as an uptick in German manufacturing orders failed to offset persistent concerns about economic prospects, worries that pushed crude oil down prices to below $63 a barrel.

Caution was the order of the day, with the dollar rising against the euro in a seesaw session in which risk tolerance rose and then fell as investors weighed the outlook for growth and corporate earnings.

Data showed orders in Germany, Europe’s largest economy, rose at the strongest monthly pace in nearly two years in May. But economists said the yearly comparison would remain weak for some time.

Euro zone government bond prices fell and the Bund future retreated from seven-week peaks as heavy European supply of almost 14 billion euro cut safety bids for bonds.

Another decline on Wall Street rekindled a safety bid for U.S. government debt, offsetting worries about demand for this week’s sale of $73 billion in

...

Words from the (investment) wise for the week that was (June 22 – 28, 2009)

Prieur du Plessis (June 28th, 2009) Writes:

“Words from the Wise” this week comes to you in a shortened format as I do not have access to my normal research resources while on the road in Europe (also see my post “Gone A.W.O.L. - to Slovenia and Switzerland“). Although very little commentary is provided, a full dose of excerpts from interesting news items and quotes from market commentators is included.

While investors’ hopes of an economic recovery might have got ahead of reality, the cartoonists continually reminded us of worrisome issues …

28-06-09-01

Source: Signe Wilkinson, Washington Post,  June 18, 2009.

The past week’s performance of the major asset classes is summarized by the chart below - a mixed bag so to speak.

28-06-09-02

Source: StockCharts.com

A summary of

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OECD Boosts Outlook but Urges Developed Countries to Keep Lending Costs Low

Contrarian Profits (June 25th, 2009) Writes:

The Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD) raised its growth outlook for industrialized countries for the first time in two years and said the United States would experience a quicker recovery than Europe. However, the group also said that central banks around the world should maintain exceptionally low interest rates with little regard for inflation over the next two years.

After predicting a 0.1% economic contraction for its 30 member nations in March, the OECD said growth would reach 0.7% in 2010. The OECD also said this year’s economic contraction would be 4.1% compared to its earlier forecast of a 4.3% decline.

The good news is that economic activity in OECD countries is reaching bottom, following the deepest decline since the Second World War. In fact, this is the first Economic Outlook in two years to revise up previous projections for OECD economic growth compared with the previous Outlook.”

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