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Need to Know
SEPTEMBER 12, 2013
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6 gut checks before the stock
market's opening bell
By Barbara Kollmeyer
Good
morning.
Markets are looking rather uninspired, but on the geopolitical front, jaws
are hitting the floor.
None other than Russia's Putin himself has an op/ed in the New York Times on Thursday
warning that any strike on Syria will backfire badly. He also wags a finger
at Obama for telling the American people that they are exceptional. Putin,
that old devil, was perhaps looking to spice things up ahead of some horse-trading with Kerry in Geneva later.
Speaking of unexceptional, billionaire investor Stanley Druckenmiller told Bloomberg in a lengthy TV interview
that his positions are the smallest they've ever been. Reasons for a
"sitting and waiting" Druck? His attention is clearly fixed on
the naming of the next Fed chairman (which he says will matter more than
markets think), what that chairman's new attitude will be towards reducing
QE, and potential Syria complications.
"I like to be patient and when I see something, go little bit crazy. I
just don't see anything right now," he says, admitting to being a
little "lost" right now.
Does Druckenmiller think a bear market is at hand? As long as the Fed is
printing money, no. But investors still need to face up to the fact that QE
has subsidized all asset prices, and when you remove that, the market will
go down. And anyone who isn't thinking that will happen is, in Druck's
words, just "silly." Quack, quack.
On to what is exceptional. BTIG's Dan Greenhaus notes that the S&P 500
has gained for seven straight sessions, which has happened just over 1% of
occasions dating back to the 1960s. If S&P makes it eight on Thursday,
that'll be the longest run since July 15, 2013. It'll also be telling to
see if the Nasdaq can pull out of its Apple-induced slump as well.
Key market gauges: Asia stocks closed mostly up,
though Japan lagged. Europe is taking its inspiration from stock
futures, which isn't saying much. Futures on the Nasdaq 100 ,
the Dow and the S&P are drifting south.
Gold and silver , meanwhile, are getting creamed. Fading expectations
of a U.S.-led Syria strike and jitters ahead of the Fed meeting next week
are culprits.
The buzz:While Wall Street was busy punishing Apple for
its not-as-cheap-as-we-wanted-for-China iPhone on Wednesday, one big
contrarian investor has been piling in. Investing in Apple is a
"no-brainer," Carl Icahn said on CNBC Wednesday . Icahn says
he's bullish on the company and has been buying shares in recent days
because they're cheap. He told us back in August he had built up a
"large position" in the iPhone maker. Shares of Apple are up a
touch in premarket.
Facebook is doing a little premarket creep up. Speculation that the
social-networking mammoth could be eyeing a China expansion sent shares flying to new
highs on Wednesday. CEO Zuckerberg told the TechCrunch Disrupt audience that 40% of
revenue is now mobile-focused, but says he's the last person to ask for IPO
advice.
Qualcomm shares could get a lift after the board OK'd a $5 billion share buyback program .
Earnings: Shares of Lululemon Athletica ,
affectionately known to some as "see-thru Lululemon" are tanking
in premarket after the company cut guidance for the year.
Also getting taken to the cleaners, shares of Men's Wearhouse are
slumping in premarket after posting a 28% drop in profit and cutting its
full-year forecasts late Wednesday.
The economy: Not a whole lot out there, but weekly jobless
claims at 8:30 a.m. Eastern are likely to draw a little attention.
Import prices are out at the same time. Check out our preview .
Indonesia, whose rupiah is down 16% against the dollar so far this year, hiked interest rates by a quarter
percentage point.
The chart of the day: The government is not doing its
part when it comes to the jobs market. Cullen Roche over at Pragmatic Capitalism points out that
the U.S. shed 8.6 million jobs from peak to trough of the financial crisis,
and has recovered about 6.7 million. The private sector has clawed back 7.4
million of those jobs all by itself. But the government? It's actually shed
700,000 jobs since the 2008 peak. Roche points out that this almost never
happens during a recovery as one of the biggest automatic stabilizers in
the economy is the government workforce.
"If the government had done what it normally does and employed more
people during the recovery then the unemployment rate would be a lot lower,
we'd be above our all-time highs in non-farm payrolls and there'd be a lot
less talk about Food Stamps and how miserable the recovery has been,"
he says.
The
call of the day: Since the stock market
bottomed in March 2009, safe, reliable, dividend-paying blue chips have
been the place to be, says Mitchell Clark over at Profit Confidential . And 3M
fits that profile perfectly, he says. While 3M is as mature an enterprise
as they come, it's been doing well on the stock market even though its top-
and bottom-line growth is anemic. 3M also boosted its annual dividend by
7.3% earlier this year, its 55th straight year of increases, and Clark says
it's highly likely the company will do something similar this year. He says
the market will keep bidding up shares of companies like 3M and the outlook
for increased dividends remains "very favorable."
Random reads: "If people get past the point I make,
and you actually look at me, you can tell I look more broken than even the
song sounds." Deep thoughts from Miley on her new
video. But hey, at least she's retiring the tongue .
A seemingly pregnant Canadian en route to Columbia was not exactly carrying
a bundle of joy .
Steam is curling up from North Korea's
Yongbyon nuclear reactor. With all the focus on Syria right now, maybe they
figure no one is looking.
Two million Vodafone clients in Germany are likely not too happy
right now, knowing that hackers gained access to their personal info
.
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