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Need to Know
SEPTEMBER 04, 2013
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6 gut checks before the stock
market's opening bell
By Shawn Langlois
Good
morning.
Several pundits have been shrugging off the potential missile strike in
Syria, predicting that the impact on markets around the world will be
minimal and the conflict merely fleeting. But that's not what Tuesday's
action told us.
Things were all peachy until John Boehner's support for military action
served as a not-so-gentle reminder that stocks are extremely vulnerable to
whatever twists and turns the story in the Middle East takes (see chart of
the day).
But there's more to the immediate fate of markets than a few bombs dropping
safely thousands of miles away. "Rising rates are an anathema to the
economy and, ultimately, the stock market," warned Lance Roberts of Street Talk Live .
"Rising rates impact borrowers, consumption, capital expenditures and
housing."
Roberts was echoing some thoughts thrown out there by Josh Brown, who a day
earlier called higher interest rates "the number-one threat to the market
."
Tim Knight of the Slope of Hope blog hit the point even harder when he said if
interest rates cut above their trendline, "all holy hell is going to
break loose. Because if Bernanke can't beat interest rates down with his
bottomless checkbook, then he has finally lost control of the market, and
ruin will rain down upon his bald head."
It's not raining yet, but there's some drizzle out there in the wee hours.
Key market gauges: Whether it's the rate stuff or Syria,
markets are having a tough time getting started this morning. Asia
bounced off lows but ended up closing mostly lower. Europe
isn't doing much better while futures on the Dow and the
S&P are down a tiny bit ahead of the opening bell. Gold
is edging lower, as well, floating along with the wave of uncertainty
that's washing over just about everywhere this morning.
The economy:The Fed's latest Beige Book will be released late
in the day and could touch on whether rising interest rates are taking a
toll on growth. Before that, we'll see what monthly auto sales, which have
been on the increase over the past year, are telling us about the economy.
Some think an annual sales rate of 16 million is within reach because
of easier lending terms and aggressive discounts last month. The industry
hasn't broken a 16-million rate since 2007. At 8:30 a.m. Eastern, the
government is expected to report the U.S. trade deficit widened. Read: Spotlight on the economy .
The buzz:LinkedIn shares are meandering south premarket
after the networking company announced plans for a secondary offering of
shares. Hain Celestial and H&R Block are also losing
ground.
Guidewire Software shares are rallying in the wake of an
upbeat quarterly earnings report . The stock,
which IPO'd last year, was up 56% so far this year.
Word out of Fukushima isn't getting any better
, and Tokyo Electric Power Co. is paying the price, trading
down more than 4% in Tokyo.
The chart of the day:This is what happens when the men in
power put down their iPhone poker games and start to agree that
bomb-dropping is the appropriate course of action. Everything was looking
good there for awhile.
The
call of the day: Get ready for a
"grinding" and "exhausting" and "painful"
drop of as much as 10% before we reach mid-October, ConvergEx's Nick Colas
told CNBC. He pinned the blame on lingering interest-rate
volatility, ETF outflows and falling earnings estimates.
"We're not going to get any one-day event that really pushes us down.
It's going to be a slow grind, which feels very painful when it's
happening." Read more from the interview and check out the
full video from late yesterday.
Random reads:The outrageously multitalented Kate Upton wins
"model of the year." Here are some of the shots that made it all
possible.
It's hard out there for a pimp ... and Terrence Howard. Because when times
get tough for the star of "The Butler", he breaks stuff, busts
out the X-Acto and becomes the Antichrist bent on vengeance upon humanity . Or so
his wife says he says.
Apparently, being held captive didn't sit well with Ariel Castro.
The "controversial and subversive" Facehawk project .
After "adding about five pounds of illegal weight to their 3,086-pound
boat," Oracle is hit with the harshest penalty ever handed down in
the America's Cup.
Truth is stranger than ... the Onion. Busted: John McCain playing poker on his phone during a
pivotal hearing on Syria. The Twitter fallout has been fast and furious . Laugh it off, big guy
-- this war stuff can be tedious.
Scandal! Caught playing iPhone game at 3+ hour Senate hearing -- worst
of all I lost!
— John McCain (@SenJohnMcCain) September 3, 2013
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