Stocks Trending Down in Morning Session
Stocks are down as of press time, 12:00 P.M. Eastern. The Dow is down 17.08 points at 9,263.89; the Nasdaq is at 1,979.74 and quickly retreating from it's Tuesday closing high of 2,009.40; and the S&P 500 is down below 998.82.
Most active small-cap decliners in the morning session include Orthovita (Nasdaq:
Small-caps bucking the trend and actively rising include a former SmallCapInvestor.com PRO holding, SXC Health Solutions (Nasdaq:SXCI) up 28% on reporting Q2 2009 EPS numbers 41% higher than the year ago period and raising guidance for 2009 with an EPS of $1.70, up from $1.62.
Other small-cap gainers in the morning session include Home Inns & Hotels Management (Nasdaq:HMIN) up 25% and Ambac Financial Group (NYSE:
*****Yesterday, the Challenger jobs report showed more jobs were lost in July than expected. It wasn't a big miss, but it was a miss. And after buyers stepped in early, the market's reaction wasn't a big one, either. By the end of the day, the Dow Industrials lost 30-some points.
I've been pointing out how the market just doesn't seem to have much downside. Yesterday's job loss news wasn't a disaster, but it wasn't good. But investors stepped in and pushed stocks well off their lows.
The Fed has made money cheap, and it's going into the stock market. There's been a lot of talk that there's a stock market bubble in
This is the "false trend" I was referring to with the George Soros quote from the other day. We should understand that this trend will most likely be proved false at some point. The question is, when?
*****Today, jobless claims came in lower than expected. That's going to put stocks on better footing. Of course, continuing claims rose. But investors are having the sense that the
In my Recovery Portfolio, I'm about to lock in a virtually risk-free 14% gain on drug maker Wyeth (NYSE:WYE). Pfizer (NYSE:
If you'd like to learn about the "aggressive approach to conservative investing" that's driving my Recovery Portfolio, please click here.
*****Cisco (Nasdaq:
In a nutshell, the last quarter was pretty good for Cisco, but the company still faces challenges. His advice is valid for all investors. Just check the retail sales data out this morning. The economy may be stabilizing, but retail is experiencing challenges. Sales were down around 5% across the board. And that trend has been in place for months.
Let's not get too far ahead of ourselves.
******Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner claims the government made a 23% profit on its bailout of Goldman Sachs (NYSE:GS). Now, Morgan Stanley is about to buy back a warrant it sold the government for $950 million.
There's no word what the government's profit is on this, but there should be no doubt that there is one. And that's how it should be, so far as I'm concerned.
If these banks need money, the government shouldn't be a lender of last resort. It's an investor, and should be rewarded. And don't forget, favorable government policies are allowing banks to profit. So again, the government should be rewarded for the risk it takes.
*****Yesterday, my first monthly column appeared in The Burlington Free Press, the daily newspaper in the state of
*****The Managed
Ian Wyatt
Editor
Daily Profit
P.S. Don't forget that with tomorrow's edition we'll once again bring back Jason Cimpl, lead technical analyst from TradeMaster Daily Stock Alerts to give you his assessment on the market and his call for next week's trades. You can catch a replay of last Friday's video: click here.


















