Archive for the ‘Large Cap Stocks’ Category

Stock Watch Of The Evening 1-11-12

Wednesday, January 11th, 2012

This evening we are launching for the first time, video log of ACE’s stock picks. Stocks have beaten down the last several months which provides a great opportunity to make tons of money. Last night, I highlighted 2 stocks prime for takeoff. Sure enough they exploded to the upside. The 2 stocks TXT January 22.50 for .02 or equivalent to $20 contracts. It had 5800 in open interest. The stock was trading at $20.25 at the time. The option contract closed up today a whopping 750% to .17. Today’s high was .36 or 1700%. That’s amazing. The second one was AMSC. A small cap stock that has been beatendown to shreds. It had 31% short float of 51 million shares outstanding. This is a target of a short sueeze. Sure enough today began it’s squeeze. Expect more gains!!

1-11-12

Best Stocks & Sectors Of 2011

Friday, December 30th, 2011

As we round out 2011, let’s put this tumultuous year in review. It was the year of Social media frenzy IPO’s, regime change, European debt crisis beginning to unravel, US rating downgrade, and the year USA finally found Osama bin Laden. When the going gets tough, opportunities remain bountiful. 2011 has not exactly turned out the way many market pundits expected at the start of the year. The economy has slowed down to near-recession levels, the flight to safety has bond yields down to almost nothing, and most sectors remain under pressure. Still, there are almost always some stocks that manage to perform well despite the overall market. Wall Street Grand has evaluated the best performing stocks for 2011 based on year-to-date performance that fit within liquidity and size parameters and eliminating the mergers and acquisitions. Investors will be happy to put 2011 to bed. The markets had a choppy year to say the least. From Japan’s devastating earthquake to Europe’s worsening debt crisis to the ongoing bickering in Washington, stocks experienced some violent swings so it’s little wonder that investors are hoping for a quiet end to the year. Banks had the biggest drop among 19 industry groups this year, sliding 33 percent, on growing concern that the fiscal crisis will force at least one nation to default on its debt. Health-care and food stocks advanced as investors sought companies whose earnings are less tied to economic growth.    

If you missed the worst stocks of 2011 read here
 
 
Some investors might have guesses that Apple Inc. (NASDAQ: AAPL) is among those stocks that are up the most, especially after it hit yet another all-time high this week. But Apple and its 27% move this year  does not even come close. We screened out companies with market capitalization rates above $300million mark at some point this year and we put a $5.00 minimum share price in this screen as well. We also set an average daily volume of 500,000 shares.

New Governments

New governments took charge in Greece and Italy last month, raising optimism that the region’s two most-indebted nations will implement austerity measures. Greek Prime Minister Lucas Papademos won approval for the final 2012 budget designed to regain the confidence of creditors and secure resumption of international financing. 

Treasuries and Bonds Best Performer of 2011

Treasuries rose, poised for their biggest annual gain since 2008, as investors sought the relative safety of U.S. government bonds on concern the euro-region debt crisis will worsen. U.S. debt has returned 9.6 percent in 2011, according to Bank of America Merrill Lynch data, even after Standard & Poor’s cut the nation’s AAA rating on Aug. 5. German bunds also gained 9.6 percent, Japanese bonds advanced 2.1 percent and U.S. corporate debt rallied 7.3 percent. Treasuries are poised to beat stocks, commodities and the dollar for the year, even as reports indicate the U.S. economy is recovering. 

Stock Winners of 2011

2011 was the year of consolidation between competitors. In this portfolio review we have eliminated stocks that have been acquired or merged such as the likes VRUS and EP. We screened companies with market capitalization rates above $300million and we put a $5.00 minimum share price in this screen as well. We also set an average daily volume of 500,000 shares.    

Silicon Motion Technology Corp (SIMO) +392.24%    

Inhibitex, Inc (INHX) +308.46%    

Golar LNG Ltd (GLNG) +207.83%    

Medivation, Inc (MDVN) +207.05%    

Questcor Pharmaceuticals, Inc (QCOR) +185.68%    

Pharmacyclics Inc (PCYC) +147.70%    

Elan Corporation (ELN) +141.71%    

Select Comfort Corporation (SCSS) +141.07%    

Ariad Pharmaceuticals Inc (ARIA) +140.39%    

Oncothyreon Inc (ONTY) +133.44%    

Domino’s Pizza, Inc (DPZ) +115.55%    

Spectrum Pharmaceuticals, Inc (SPPI) +113.25%    

Richmont Mines Inc (RIC) +105.48%    

Cabot Oil & Gas Corporation (COG) +103.73%    

Jazz Pharmaceuticals (JAZZ) +95.07%    

Rounding the top 30 stocks is considered the BEST IPO stock of 2011    

GNC Holdings (GNC) +74.27%   

Best Sectors for 2011 (Utilities winner in 2011)

Utilities +13.47%   

Healthcare +10.04%   

Services +4.53%   

Consumer Goods +2.76%   

Conglomerates -3.39%   

Technology -3.40%   

Industrial Goods -4.46%   

Basic Materials -10.45%   

Financials -18.71%

Futures 2011 Performance YTD

Feeder Cattle +20.5%

30 YR Bond +18.6%

Heating Oil +15.3%

Pork Bellies +13.6%

Live Cattle +13.2%

Gold +11%

Crude Oil +8.9%

10 YR T-Notes +8.8%

DJIA +5.9%

USD +1.5%

Coffee -6.0%

Silver -8.7%

Nikkei 225 -17.5%

Platinum -21.1%

Copper -22.6%

Natural GAs -32.0%

Cotton -36.6%    

***Below is a live link feed of the futures from FINVIZ.COM

Worst Performing Stocks of 2011

Tuesday, December 27th, 2011

As we close out the year, 2011 had been an incredibly choppy year, the economy is flirting between snail-paced growth and recession, and many companies and entire sectors are experiencing some severe business pressures or their management teams have made severe missteps. In a year when Europe’s sovereign debt woes dominated headlines, it’s no surprise that financial stocks took a beating. Bank of America and Goldman Sachs did not go unscathed, as layoffs, an uproar over bank fees and management shakeups took their toll. We want to go over the worst of stocks of 2011 based upon year-to-date performance.This group was focused on companies that trade with a market capitalization of more than $300 million and we screened out the companies which are either not liquid of roughly 500,000 average shares a day. This information was gathered off the site FinViz.

Frontline Ltd. (FRO)  -83.23%  

The Governor and Company of The Bank of Ireland (IRE) -83.03%

E-Commerce China Dangdang Inc. (DANG) -82.93%   

Renren Inc. (RENN) -81.44%

ITT Corporation (ITT) -80.25%  

Central European Distribution Corp. (CEDC) -80.04%  

Dendreon Corp. (DNDN) -78.32%  

Research In Motion Limited (RIMM) -76.05%  

National Bank of Greece SA (NBG) -75.24%  

VanceInfo Technologies Inc. (VIT) -74.41%  

OfficeMax Incorporated (OMX) -73.67%  

First Solar, Inc. (FSLR) -73.34%   

Meritor, Inc. (MTOR) -71.83%  

Mechel OAO (MTL) -71.37%  

Suntech Power Holdings Co. Ltd. (STP) -71.06% 

Markets In Black After Technical Support

Thursday, December 15th, 2011
The Dow Jones Industrial Average gained 70.1 points, to 11,893, the S&P jumped 6.7 points, to 1,219. US Data lifts markets as Europe rumor grows silent. A report from the New York Federal Reserve on manufacturing in the New York region also easily topped expectations. The gauge hit 9.53 in December from an anemic 0.61 in November, and better than the reading of 3 economists had anticipated. The Philadelphia Federal Reserve’s manufacturing gauge climbed to 10.3 in December from 3.6 in November, easily topping estimates of a reading of 5. Traders who used to profit from price swings are struggling as record stock market volatility shows no signs of abating. All VIX futures expiring next year trade above 30, indicating that investors are betting that stock-market volatility will remain above average for the next eight months.
 
Hedge funds are on track to post their second-worst year on record, with managers such as John Paulson seeing bets undermined by Europe’s two-year sovereign-debt crisis and concerns over the U.S. economic recovery. Paulson, who is having the worst year of his career as bets on a U.S. economic recovery go awry, reduced risk at his firm after losing as much as 47 percent in the first nine months in one of his biggest funds.U.S. mutual funds are headed for their second-weakest year of deposits in two decades, and the top Wall Street banks posted their worst quarter in trading and investment banking since the depths of the 2008 financial crisis.

Smaller investors are also pulling back. U.S. mutual funds that invest in stocks and bonds attracted an estimated $42 billion through November, according to the Investment Company Institute, a Washington-based trade group. Funds have seen net withdrawals in every month since June, with redemptions reaching a peak in August. At the current rate, 2011 is on pace to be the second- weakest year in two decades, ICI data show. In 2008, the worst year, investors withdrew $225 billion.

Traders used to profit from volatility in the aftermath of events such as the 2008 bankruptcy of investment bank Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc. or the 1998 collapse of U.S. hedge fund Long-Term Capital Management LP. 

Three-month historic volatility for the gauge known as the VIX increased to a record 191.59 on Oct. 31, above the 92.56 median over the past decade and surpassing the prior peak of 190.44 from December 2008. The benchmark for U.S. options prices and expected stock-market swings surged the most in four years on Aug. 8 after S&P’s stripped the U.S. of its top credit rating for the first time. The Dow plunged 634.76 points the first trading day after the U.S. downgrade for the biggest drop in two years. Over the next three days it rebounded 429.92 points, plunged 519.83 points and rallied 423.37 points. Dow swings between intraday highs and lows averaged 126.49 points this year through July. Since Aug. 1 they averaged 261.22 points. The Dow is 245.97 points above where it ended last year.

The VIX closed at 26.04 yesterday, or 27 percent above the 20.56 average over its 21-year history. All VIX futures expiring next year trade above 30, indicating that investors are betting that stock-market volatility will remain above average for the next eight months. April futures trade at 31.70, which indicates that options traders expect the S&P 500 Index to make daily moves of about 2 percent.

How To Determine If A Stock Is Overvalued

Wednesday, November 16th, 2011

In the 1987 shareholder letter to GEICO stockholders, Lou Simpson, one of the most successful investors of all time, described what he looked for in a potential investment. They included “Think independently”, “Invest in high-return businesses run for shareholders,” “Pay only a reasonable price, even for an excellent business,” “Invest for the long-term,” and “Do not diversify excessively.” He also mentioned a concept that we have only briefly touched upon and that is the long-term treasury yield and how it has important implications in the valuation you should use to determine the relative attractive of a company.

Let’s first understand what Overvalued means:

A stock with a current price that is not justified by its earnings outlook or price/earnings (P/E) ratio and, therefore, is expected to drop in price. Overvaluation may result from an emotional buying spurt, which inflates the stock’s market price, or from a deterioration in a company’s financial strength. Potential investors do not want to overpay for a stock. A few factors they may look at is the price to earnings (P/E) ratio in comparison to the company’s peers, and the price to earnings growth (PEG) ratio to determine if a stock is overvalued. There are other factors as well that investors look at.

The P/E ratio (price-to-earnings ratio) of a stock (also called its “P/E”, or simply “multiple”) is a measure of the price paid for a share relative to the annual net income or profit earned by the firm per share. The P/E ratio can therefore alternatively be calculated by dividing the company’s market capitalization by its total annual earnings. Unlike the EV/EBITDA multiple which is capital structure-neutral, the price-to-earnings ratio reflects the capital structure of the company in question. The price-to-earnings ratio is a financial ratio used for valuation: a higher P/E ratio means that investors are paying more for each unit of net income, so the stock is more expensive compared to one with a lower P/E ratio. The P/E ratio can be seen as being expressed in years, in the sense that it shows the number of years of earnings which would be required to pay back purchase price, ignoring inflation and time value of money. The P/E ratio also shows current investor demand for a company share. The reciprocal of the P/E ratio is known as the earnings yield. The earnings yield is an estimate of the expected return from holding the stock if we accept certain restrictive assumptions.

The P/E ratio is defined as:

\mbox{P/E ratio}=\frac{\mbox{Market Price per Share}}{\mbox{Annual Earnings per Share}}

The price per share in the numerator is the market price of a single share of the stock. The earnings per share in the denominator depends on the type of P/E:

  • “Trailing P/E” or “P/E ttm”: Here earnings per share is the net income of the company for the most recent 12 month period, divided by the number of shares issued. This is the most common meaning of “P/E” if no other qualifier is specified. Monthly earning data for individual companies are not available, so the previous four quarterly earnings reports are used and earnings per share are updated quarterly. Note, each company chooses its own financial year so the timing of updates will vary from one to another.
  • “Trailing P/E from continued operations”: Instead of net income, this uses operating earnings, which exclude earnings from discontinued operations, extraordinary items (e.g. one-off windfalls and write-downs), or accounting changes. Note, longer-term P/E data, such as Shiller’s, use net earnings.
  • “Forward P/E”, “P/Ef”, or “estimated P/E”: Instead of net income, this uses estimated net earnings over next 12 months. Estimates are typically derived as the mean of a select group of analysts (note, selection criteria is rarely cited). In times of rapid economic dislocation, such estimates become less relevant as the situation changes (e.g. new economic data is published, and/or the basis of forecasts becomes obsolete) more quickly than analysts adjust their forecasts.

For example, if stock A is trading at $24 and the earnings per share for the most recent 12 month period is $3, then stock A has a P/E ratio of 24/3 or 8. Put another way, the purchaser of the stock is paying $8 for every dollar of earnings. Companies with losses (negative earnings) or no profit have an undefined P/E ratio (usually shown as Not applicable or “N/A”); sometimes, however, a negative P/E ratio may be shown.

By comparing price and earnings per share for a company, one can analyze the market’s stock valuation of a company and its shares relative to the income the company is actually generating. Stocks with higher (and/or more certain) forecast earnings growth will usually have a higher P/E, and those expected to have lower (and/or riskier) earnings growth will usually have a lower P/E. Investors can use the P/E ratio to compare the value of stocks: if one stock has a P/E twice that of another stock, all things being equal (especially the earnings growth rate), it is a less attractive investment. Companies are rarely equal, however, and comparisons between industries, companies, and time periods may be misleading.P/E ratio in general is useful for comparing valuation of peer companies in similar sector or group.

Since 1900, the average P/E ratio for the S&P 500 index has ranged from 4.78 in Dec 1920 to 44.20 in Dec 1999, with an average around 15.The average P/E of the market varies in relation with, among other factors, expected growth of earnings, expected stability of earnings, expected inflation, and yields of competing investments. For example, when US treasury bonds yield high returns, investors pay less for a given earnings per share and P/E’s fall.

Share prices in a publicly traded company are determined by market supply and demand, and thus depend upon the expectations of buyers and sellers. Among these are:

  • The company’s future and recent performance, including potential growth;
  • Perceived risk, including risk due to high leverage;
  • Prospects for companies of this type, the market sector.

By dividing the price of one share in a company by the profits earned by the company per share, you arrive at the P/E ratio. If earnings per share move proportionally with share prices the ratio stays the same. But if stock prices gain in value and earnings remain the same or go down, the P/E rises.

The earnings figure used is the most recently available, although this figure may be out of date and may not necessarily reflect the current position of the company. This is often referred to as a ‘trailing P/E’, because it involves taking earnings from the last four quarters.

AN EXAMPLE OF AN OVERVALUED COMPANY (NFLX) COURTESY OF F.A.S.T. GRAPHS

Graph Number One: Netflix’s Exceptional Earnings Growth

With our first graph, we plot Netflix’s earnings per share growth (orange line) since calendar year 2007.  At the bottom of the graph you will see that earnings grew from $.94 in 2007, to $1.43 in 2008, to $2.05 in 2009, to $3.06 in 2010, and earnings are estimated, based on management’s most recent guidance, to be approximately $4.03 by year-end 2011. To the right of the graph we learn that Netflix’s average earnings growth rate since 2007 was an exceptional 39.2% (see red circle).

Graph Number Two: Netflix with Price Correlated to Earnings

With graph number two we add two very important lines.  First, we add the normal price earnings ratio that the market had historically applied to Netflix.  The normal PE ratio for Netflix calculated out to be 29.6, which is almost twice the normal PE ratio of 15 which is applied to the average company. On the other hand, Netflix’s exceptional earnings growth justified this level of premium valuation.  Nevertheless, starting in March of 2010 the black price line began to move above the blue normal price earnings ratio line before peaking in late July.

We argued that this profitable enterprise had become dangerously overvalued. At the time of that writing Netflix was trading at $223.20 and it continued rising to over $304 by late July, effectively becoming more and more overvalued with each passing day. However, by the end of July the rubber began meeting the road and Netflix’s stock price was quickly reverting to the mean which it clearly reached on September 30, 2011.

However, recent earnings guidance of a few quarters worth of losses has dramatically altered expectations of future earnings. Consequently, the market is attempting to establish a new and lower mean.  Time will tell where this ends up, however, most likely Netflix will go much lower.

Avoiding the Obvious Mistake

Based on the undeniable relationship between earnings and market price, investing in Netflix when it was so massively overvalued, even when expectations about future earnings growth were still very high, represented an obvious mistake that could have, and should have been avoided. Mathematically, it should have been clear that Netflix’s earnings and cash flow did not support their lofty valuation.

Although it’s true that speculators and/or momentum investors could have bought Netflix in early 2011 and made a very high rate of return by summer, assuming of course that they then sold, that action cannot be properly described as investing. Later in this article we will discuss the difference between investing versus speculating more fully.

Here’s a ANOTHER great website to use for graph ratio’s named YCharts.com

Markets Drop 200 Pts; Banks Take Hit

Friday, September 2nd, 2011

After 4 days of phenomenal gains, markets remain volatile. Yesterday’s last 60 minute drop was led by a report that the US government was seeking billions from US banks did not stem the selling. The Dow Jones Industrial Average opened sharply lower, led by BofA down 220 points to 11270. Employment growth  or the lack of exacerbated the selling, grounded to a halt in August as non-farm payrolls were unchanged, according to the Labor Department—the weakest reading since last September. Despite the lack of employment growth, the jobless rate held steady at 9.1 percent. So as long we stay above that 1270, markets can possibly regroup and come back. Anything below 1270, will signal a sell.

A lawsuit is being prepared against the big U.S. banks by the Federal Housing Finance Agency. Separately, the Fed has asked Bank of America (NYSE:BAC) to show what measures it could take if business conditions worsen, adding to the bank’s sharp decline. The federal agency that oversees the mortgage giants Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac is set to file suits against more than a dozen big banks, accusing them of misrepresenting the quality of mortgage securities they assembled and sold at the height of the housing bubble, and seeking billions of dollars in compensation.

The Federal Housing Finance Agency suits, which are expected to be filed in the coming days in federal court, are aimed at Bank of America, JPMorgan Chase, Goldman Sachs, and Deutsche Bank. The suits will argue the banks, which assembled the mortgages and marketed them as securities to investors, failed to perform the due diligence required under securities law and missed evidence that borrowers’ incomes were inflated or falsified. When many borrowers were unable to pay their mortgages, the securities backed by the mortgages quickly lost value. Fannie and Freddie lost more than $30 billion, in part as a result of the deals, losses that were borne mostly by taxpayers.

Last month, the insurance giant American International Group filed a $10 billion suit against Bank of America, accusing the bank and its Countrywide Financial and Merrill Lynch units of misrepresenting the quality of mortgages that backed the securities A.I.G. bought.

Greek Drama

Meanwhile, Greece and its international lenders said that the country will miss its budget deficit target this year, adding to concerns that the region’s sovereign debt crisis may worsen. Greece’s 2011 budget deficit will be higher than originally thought. Just how high remains a point of disagreement between the Greek government and officials from the IMF and EU, as talks over handing over the next tranche of aid to the ailing euro zone member continue in Athens.

The IMF and EU now see the deficit hitting 8.6 percent of gross domestic product while the Greek government put the number closer to 8 percent, blaming a deeper than expected recession. The IMF and EU, while aware of the recessionary impact, are reported to believe failure to implement medium-term fiscal plans are behind the higher than expected shortfall.

To add further to the insult talks between Greece and international inspectors on whether it has met conditions for a new aid tranche have been put on hold, officials said on Friday, after disagreements over why and by how much its deficit cuts program has fallen behind schedule. Finance Minister Evangelos Venizelos said the talks had been suspended and would resume on Sept 14, after technical experts had had a chance to study relevant data. The first cycle of negotiations is completed. The inspectors will return in 10 days to see the budget plan for 2012 and conclude the procedure.

There are no Greek government bonds maturing before March next year, which means the country will not be at immediate risk of default even if it does not get this month’s 8 billion euro tranche from the rescue package as planned. But the country is continuing to generate large deficits and could at some point face cash shortages. An official close to the inspectors said on Thursday the 2011 budget deficit will be at least 8.6 percent of GDP compared to a target of 7.6 percent.

On Tap Next Week:

MONDAY: Labor Day Holiady—All Markets Closed
TUESDAY: ISM non-mfg index, Fed’s Kocherlakota speaks; Earnings from PepBoys
WEDNESDAY: Weekly mortgage applications, Beige Book; Earnings from Hovnanian
THURSDAY: BoE announcement, ECB announcement, international trade, jobless claims, quarterly services survey, oil inventories, Bernanke speaks, consumer cerdit, TI mid-quarter update, OECD’s global economic outlook, Obama talks jobs/economy; Earnings from Smithfield Foods
FRIDAY: McDonald’s August Sales, wholesale trade, G7 finance ministers meet; Earnings from Kroger, Lululemon Athletica

Buffet Invests $5billion In BofA (NYSE:BAC)

Thursday, August 25th, 2011

PHOTO: Warren Buffett, chairman and chief executive officer of Berkshire Hathaway Inc. attends the Allen & Co. Media and Technology Conference in Sun Valley, Idaho in this July 7, 2011 file photo.

BofA

Warren Buffett’s Berkshire Hathaway will invest $5 billion in Bank of America (NYSE:BAC), stepping in to shore up the company in the same way he helped prop up Goldman Sachs during the financial crisis. Bank of America shares rose 24 percent to $8.65 in early trading, erasing a large part of the stock’s August losses. This helps with the credibility gap that I think has existed in the minds of some shareholders. It reiterates the point that the balance sheet is healthy. They needed an endorsement in the market and they got it.

Bank of America will sell Berkshire // 50,000 shares of cumulative perpetual preferred stock with a 6 percent annual dividend, it said in a statement Thursday. Bank of America can buy back the investment at any time by paying Buffett a 5 percent premium. Berkshire also will get warrants to buy 700 million Bank of America shares at an exercise price of just over $7.14 a share, with the ability to exercise any time in the next 10 years. It is virtually a mirror of the deal Berkshire did with Goldman Sachs (NYSE:GS) in the depths of the crisis in fall 2008, except in this case the dividend is less. The Goldman deal paid Berkshire $15 a second in dividends until Goldman bought Buffett out earlier this year.

Europe

The three major rating agencies Fitch, Moody’s and S&P reaffirmed Germany’s rating and outlook on Thursday, after the country’s main stock index fell sharply on market speculation that a downgrade was on the cards. The markets were awash with speculation throughout the afternoon, with German regulator BaFin earlier denying earlier rumors that a ban on short selling will be implemented for the DAX. We are not planning any changes of the short selling rules which are already in place, BaFin representatives said. US stocks dropped around 1 percent, tracking earlier weakness in the DAX and Europe.

Gold Correction

 Gold prices fell for the third day as stronger equities and hopes of more monetary stimulus emboldened traders to seek riskier investments. Gold prices have slumped 11% peak to trough, putting them firmly in correction territory, as fears about a U.S. recession and the spread of Europe’s sovereign-debt problems take a back seat to renewed risk appetite. Investors have been willing to pay higher and higher prices for gold, which soared to a record $1,917.90 a troy ounce, as growing uncertainty about the global economy stirred demand for a sound store of value. Gold has been the only safe haven for a while there but some trades are concerned that gold has been going parabolic, we’ve been going up since the middle of July with no meaningful pullback. 

The recent 10% correction in benchmark U.S. stock indexes has some investors searching for bargains and selling profitable gold positions to pay for stocks. There’s a sense that maybe this equity selloff has been over done,” while gold’s ascent has been too much, too fast. A speech by Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke scheduled for Friday is further clouding the outlook for gold. Bernanke is due to address an economic symposium at Jackson Hole, Wyo., and many traders are hoping the Fed Chairman will hint at a third round of monetary stimulus. Dashing these hopes could damp the outlook for stocks and renew concerns about a U.S. recession, which would boost demand for gold as a haven. Yet, without such stimulus, inflation another driver of gold demand is unlikely to resurface. A lack of fresh easing signals by Bernanke on Friday could send gold down to $1,580

Gold on the Comex division of the New York Mercantile Exchange fell further on Thursday morning due to heavy liquidation after CME Group said it would raise margin requirements another 27 percent. As of the close of business tonight, speculators in Comex gold will be required to make an initial deposit of $9,450, up from $7,425 previously, to hold a benchmark 100-ounce gold contract overnight. The maintenance margin requirement for speculative traders and the margin for hedge accounts will rise to $7,000 from $5,500. By raising the margins, CME aims to rein in speculation by making it more expensive to hold the same amount of gold. This places short-term downward pressure on prices because smaller investors will be forced to liquidate positions to meet the higher margins.
“[But] while this might have placed a dampener on gold, and will probably continue to weigh on prices today, we don’t view this as overly bearish for gold.

But many in the market suspect that this is only the second in a series four or five margin increases. When silver approached $50 per ounce earlier this year, CME increased margins four times over a three-week period. “Proper margining would seem to be closer to $15,000 per contract, for given the volatility that exists presently the exchange needs to protect itself and its clients from the possibility that a large speculator or two or three cannot put the exchange into jeopardy.

Furthermore, exchange-traded fund (ETF) investors are currently taking profits after the record-breaking price rally and are shifting money to other investments such as equities, broker Commerzbank said in a note. For example, SPDR Gold Trust, the world largest ETF, registered outflows of more than 27 tonnes yesterday and 58.5 tonnes in total this week. “Although the price fall may to continue for a while, the lower price level could be used for greater physical gold buying, especially in Asia, and this is likely to prevent the price from dropping much further,” Commerzbank added. Another factor in gold’s slide has been the strong performance of the global share markets over the past several sessions. There is a feeling among market participants that equities had been oversold, while gold was overbought.

US Market Swings +423

Thursday, August 11th, 2011
Prices
Date Open High Low Close Volume Points Up/Down
Aug 11, 2011 10,729.85 11,286.39 10,729.85 11,143.31 3,685,050,000 423.71
Aug 10, 2011 11,227.92 11,227.92 10,662.04 10,719.94 5,018,070,000 -519.83
Aug 9, 2011 10,810.91 11,251.08 10,588.55 11,239.77 2,366,660,000 429.92
Aug 8, 2011 11,433.93 11,433.93 10,779.05 10,809.85 2,615,150,000 -634.76
Aug 5, 2011 11,384.29 11,634.04 11,126.32 11,444.61 5,454,590,000 60.93
Aug 4, 2011 11,893.79 11,893.79 11,365.74 11,383.68 4,266,530,000 -512.76
Aug 3, 2011 11,863.89 12,152.96 11,857.91 11,896.44 6,446,940,000 29.82
Aug 2, 2011 12,130.22 12,152.96 11,857.91 11,866.62 1,674,180,000 -265.87
Aug 1, 2011 12,144.30 12,320.94 11,978.55 12,132.49 4,967,390,000 -10.75
Jul 29, 2011 12,239.28 12,262.74 12,044.21 12,143.24 5,061,190,000 -96.87
Jul 28, 2011 12,301.95 12,412.48 12,200.99 12,240.11 4,951,800,000 -62.44

The Dow Jones Industrial Average (DJIA – 11,143.31) recovered most of Wednesday’s losses, adding 423.4 points, or nearly 4%, to reclaim the 11,000 level. For the second time this week, all the DJIA finished higher. The S&P (SPX – 1,172.64) reversed yesterday’s deficit, almost exactlY, advancing 51.9 points, or 4.6%. Markets have become bipolar as of late with triple digit swings. The VIX dropped 9.28% or 3.99 to close $39. The last three session in the VIX has been making higher lows. Volatility remains extremely high as if it has reached its high or has been stalling. There were 2 stories that drove the markets higher if you don’t count the modest job gains. Both were related to Europe. The European Union’s financial market regulator ESMA said on Thursday that Belgium, France, Italy and Spain announced new bans on short selling or short positions would take effect from August 12. French President Nicolas Sarkozy and German Chancellor Angela Merkel will meet next week as concerns over the spread of the euro-area debt crisis rattled French markets.

Europe News

France and three other European countries are banning short selling, with the moves coming after weeks of wild swings in global equity markets, reflecting investor worries about slowing growth, debt burdens and credit downgrades. Belgium, Italy and Spain round out the other countries that will impose or extend existing short-selling bans beginning Friday morning. As you recall, the ban on short sales on order by the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission in September 2008 that prohibited short sales of 799 financial stocks through October of that year. That didn’t help much as markets continued to fall further, 4000 to be exact in the DJIA. Short sales are bets that a stock price will decline over time. In a regular short sale, the seller borrows a stock and sells it, understanding that the loan must be repaid by buying the stock. The authorities in the respective countries have decided to impose the bans “either to restrict the benefits that can be achieved from spreading false rumors or to achieve a regulatory level playing field, given the close inter-linkage between some E.U. markets. The French ban will prevent creating a short position or increasing any net-short position in French securities in the financial sector, according to French regulator AMF in a statement. The order covers 11 entities, including BNP Paribas, Crédit Agricole and Société Générale. Shares of French banks were rocked this week, in part on fears that France could lose its AAA credit rating, though surges on Thursday helped limit losses toward week’s end. The shares faced weekly losses ranging from 12% to 16%.

French President Nicolas Sarkozy and German Chancellor Angela Merkel will meet next week as concerns over the spread of the euro-area debt crisis rattled French markets. The leaders of Europe’s two biggest economies will discuss economic governance of the 17-nation euro region in Paris on Aug. 16, according to separate statements issued today by Sarkozy and Merkel’s offices. Sarkozy and Merkel have called for their parliaments to approve measures by the end of September to strengthen the euro- area bailout fund as agreed on by European leaders on July 21. They have also backed a European Central Bank role in determining when bond buying is needed to stop contagion. Both leaders said at the July summit that “they would formulate joint recommendations aimed at strengthening political and economic governance in the euro area before the end of the summer,” the statement issued by the Chancellery in Berlin said. The proposals will feed into steps drawn up by European President Herman Van Rompuy on “improved working methods and a better crisis management in the euro area.” The leaders meet amid market turmoil that prompted France to speed up completion of its 2012 budget. The French government’s commitment to its deficit goals is “untouchable,” Sarkozy said in a statement after interrupting his vacation to chair an emergency meeting in Paris yesterday.

Market Swings & Day Traders

The Dow industrials have traded in a range of 400 points every day in the last five days as seen in the above chart, while the CBOE Volatility index has more than doubled from a recent closing low on July 22. Fear has increased alongside signs of slowing growth and an unprecedented downgrade of the U.S. credit rating by Standard & Poor’s. But swings have gone both ways: the S&P recently posted not only its worst day since 2008, but also its best. Day-traders are making a killing, taking advantage of wild market swings that have scared off even strong-stomached investors. Many of the day-traders including myself are not holding positions overnight due to uncertainty the next day and several hundred point swings. Too much risk to hold over night in this volatile markets. Daytraders take a short-term outlook on the market, holding positions for less than a day. They often sell securities short to profit from both upward and downward movements, bringing the chance of big wins, or equally large losses. Primary stocks have been the double and triple the daily performance of Indexes or sectors bull/up or bear/down direction. The velocity of the changes in market direction means traders who are not nimble can get caught on the wrong side of a trade, exposing themselves to massive losses. The last four trading days have seen a 2000 point swing with the bears having a 300 point advantage.

Thrashing On Wall Street; US Markets Erase Yesterday’s Gain

Thursday, August 11th, 2011

The Dow Jones industrial average (DJIA) lost 520 points, or 4.6%, to 10,720. The index ended the day near session lows. The S&P 500 (SPX) fell 52 points, or 4.4%, to 1,121. 1120 in the S&P remains a key factor of support. Stocks were led lower by the financial sector. On Wednesday afternoon CEO of embattled Bank of America (NYSE:BAC) Brian Moynihan tried to reassure investors that conditions at the bank and in the country are much better than they were four years ago when the financial crisis hit. BofA has fallen nearly 50% so far this year. On Wednesday, shares of French bank Societe Generale tumbled 15% on the Paris stock exchange amid speculation that France, Europe’s second-largest economy after Germany, may be first to face a rating cut. European banking shares also fell sharply. Deutsche Bank’s (NYSE:DB) stock dropped 12% while Spanish bank Banco Santander (NYSE:STD) dropped 9.5%. Even though the major rating agencies have reiterated France’s AAA rating, there’s growing concern that France could get downgraded, which caused the markets to drop further. Ahead of the opening bell Wednesday, the New York Stock Exchange invoked Rule 48, which gives the exchange the right to pause trading in the event of extreme volatility. The NYSE typically invokes the rule several times each year. Wall Street’s most widely cited measure of volatility and fear in the market, the VIX, surged almost 22% to 43. A reading higher than 30 is considered a sign that investors are getting worried, but the VIX is still way below the peak level of almost 90 hit in October 2008 — after Lehman Brothers collapsed.

Gold

Gold futures kept the winning streak alive today, tagging another record high. Tuesday’s decision by the Federal Reserve to keep interest rates extremely low, coupled with uncertainty about the fate of France’s credit rating, only strengthened the commodity’s “safe haven” allure. Against this backdrop, gold for December delivery added $41.30, or 2.4%, to close at $1,784.30 an ounce. Earlier in the session, the contract topped out at an all-time best of $1,801 an ounce. Gold, which doesn’t pay dividends or interest and costs money to store, has become more attractive amid low interest rates. A rise in real interest rates is one of the drawbacks of gold investing, as it encourages investors to sell the metal rather than missing out on higher-yielding assets. Worries about weak global growth and currency debasement have also driven gold higher, especially in recent days amid turmoil following the Standard & Poor’s downgrade of U.S. debt and a string of disappointing economic data. The “opportunity costs of holding gold remain extremely low. Furthermore, there is also a risk of inflation rising further should the Fed actually loosen the monetary policy even more.

Soro’s To Return Investors Money

Tuesday, July 26th, 2011

Global financier George Soros, best known for breaking the Bank of England, is ending his career as a hedge fund manager and returning money to outside investors in his $25.5 billion firm. He will return roughly $1 billion to outside investors and turn Soros Fund Management into a family office.

Keith Anderson, who has been Soros’ chief investment officer since 2008, will leave the firm. In a letter to investors, Soros’ two sons cited impending industry regulation as a reason for returning the money the fund still oversaw for outsiders, which is a relatively small percentage of the roughly $25 billion Soros oversees. They made the decision because new financial regulations would have made it necessary for the firm to register with the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) by March 2012 if it continued to manage money for outsiders. Hedge funds with more than $150 million in assets will be required under the new law to report information about their investors and employees, the assets they manage, potential conflicts of interest, and their activities outside of fund advising. The firm would also be subject to inspections by the SEC.

Because the firm has overseen mostly family assets since 2000, when outside money accounted for about $4 billion, the sons decided made more sense to run the firm as a family business.

At a time where many men of his age have retired, Soros, who will soon be 81, joins a growing list of wealthy and well-established fund managers to reconfigure the business. Carl Icahn another long-time fund manager recently also returned money to outsiders. But there is also a growing number of younger fund managers who are preferring to closing up shops to manage only their own money as new regulations threaten to dramatically change the $2 trillion hedge fund industry. Stanley Druckenmiller, Soros’ long-time deputy who helped engineer Soros’ winning bet against the British pound in 1992, closed up his shop as did Chris Shumway, who was mentored by another industry great, Julian Robertson.