Enter Symbol
Enter Search String
More Strong Bank Earnings Boost Market
By: Jordan Kahn   Thursday, July 17, 2008 12:53 PM
Sectors: Basic Materials , Computer and Technology , Finance , Retail/Wholesale
Symbols: JPM, NOK, NUE, YUM
Join Blog Network
Alerts by Email
Research Articles
Stock Ranking Changes
Related RSS Feeds

JPM Headline Feed

JPM Feed Add to Google: JPM Feed Add to Yahoo: JPM Feed

NOK Headline Feed

NOK Feed Add to Google: NOK Feed Add to Yahoo: NOK Feed

NUE Headline Feed

NUE Feed Add to Google: NUE Feed Add to Yahoo: NUE Feed

YUM Headline Feed

YUM Feed Add to Google: YUM Feed Add to Yahoo: YUM Feed

All Symbols

JPM,NOK,NUE,YUM, Feed Add to Google: JPM,NOK,NUE,YUM, Feed Add to Yahoo: JPM,NOK,NUE,YUM, Feed

Sector Feeds:

submit article


The market got another boost from a large financial firm, this time JP Morgan (JPM). The company reported better-than-expected earnings, and it stock gapped +10% higher. This helped boost the financials and the broader market as well. Fannie and Freddie are also higher, on a confirmed credit rating.

There were other solid earnings reports from Nokia (NOK), Yum Brands (YUM), and Nucor (NUE). While the overall market was higher in early trading, it is fading as of this post. Given how every big rally seems to be completely reversed the next day, I think bulls will be happy if we can finish anywhere near flat today.

In economic news, housing starts for June were better than expected, and weekly jobless claims were below consensus estimates. Those two positive datapoints were offset a little by a weaker than expected Philly Fed report, but this index has been weak for a while.

Asian markets were higher overnight, and the dollar is mixed today. Oil and gold are both higher, with the former moving back above $136 after a sharp 2-day drop. The 10-year yield is higher at 3.96%.

The bull/bear spread in today's AAII survey was -33%, the 6th consecutive week that bears have outnumber bulls. Additionally, in yesterday's Investor's Intelligence report, bears came in at 49%, their highest showing since January 1995. The negativity bubble is alive and well.

 

 
Rate :  Rate this Commentary  


 Number of Comments (0) Post Comment
 
  
Good Rating(+1)    Bad Rating(-1)
No Data Found

 
 
  Home | Login |Research | Earnings | Scans | Chat Rooms | Charts | Submit Article | Join Blog Network | Contributors | Subscribe to RSS

copryright 2008 all rights reserved