Archive for August, 2011
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The Tuesday Rally
Eddy Elfenbein, August 26th, 2011 at 6:21 pmWhile the S&P 500 has performed poorly over the past few months, the damage hasn’t been spread evenly by day of the week.
The worst day has been Mondays, and Tuesdays are the big winners. In fact, if you had been in the market on Tuesdays alone, you’d be up nearly 12% over the last 23 weeks. The rest of the time, the market has been down sharply.
What’s going on? I think the political nature of the recent troubles has caused the market to suffer badly on Mondays due to whatever news was held until the weekend. Then on Tuesdays, the markets have staged a small relief rally only to lose it all during the rest of the week.
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Guess What A Plurality of Americans Say Is the Best Long-Term Investment?
Eddy Elfenbein, August 26th, 2011 at 1:36 pmGo on. Take a wild guess.
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Bernanke’s Jackson Hole Speech
Eddy Elfenbein, August 26th, 2011 at 10:48 amThe Near- and Longer-Term Prospects for the U.S. Economy
Good morning. As always, thanks are due to the Federal Reserve Bank of Kansas City for organizing this conference. This year’s topic, long-term economic growth, is indeed pertinent–as has so often been the case at this symposium in past years. In particular, the financial crisis and the subsequent slow recovery have caused some to question whether the United States, notwithstanding its long-term record of vigorous economic growth, might not now be facing a prolonged period of stagnation, regardless of its public policy choices. Might not the very slow pace of economic expansion of the past few years, not only in the United States but also in a number of other advanced economies, morph into something far more long-lasting?
I can certainly appreciate these concerns and am fully aware of the challenges that we face in restoring economic and financial conditions conducive to healthy growth, some of which I will comment on today. With respect to longer-run prospects, however, my own view is more optimistic. As I will discuss, although important problems certainly exist, the growth fundamentals of the United States do not appear to have been permanently altered by the shocks of the past four years. It may take some time, but we can reasonably expect to see a return to growth rates and employment levels consistent with those underlying fundamentals. In the interim, however, the challenges for U.S. economic policymakers are twofold: first, to help our economy further recover from the crisis and the ensuing recession, and second, to do so in a way that will allow the economy to realize its longer-term growth potential. Economic policies should be evaluated in light of both of those objectives.
This morning I will offer some thoughts on why the pace of recovery in the United States has, for the most part, proved disappointing thus far, and I will discuss the Federal Reserve’s policy response. I will then turn briefly to the longer-term prospects of our economy and the need for our country’s economic policies to be effective from both a shorter-term and longer-term perspective.
Near-Term Prospects for the Economy and Policy
In discussing the prospects for the economy and for policy in the near term, it bears recalling briefly how we got here. The financial crisis that gripped global markets in 2008 and 2009 was more severe than any since the Great Depression. Economic policymakers around the world saw the mounting risks of a global financial meltdown in the fall of 2008 and understood the extraordinarily dire economic consequences that such an event could have. As I have described in previous remarks at this forum, governments and central banks worked forcefully and in close coordination to avert the looming collapse. The actions to stabilize the financial system were accompanied, both in the United States and abroad, by substantial monetary and fiscal stimulus. But notwithstanding these strong and concerted efforts, severe damage to the global economy could not be avoided. The freezing of credit, the sharp drops in asset prices, dysfunction in financial markets, and the resulting blows to confidence sent global production and trade into free fall in late 2008 and early 2009.We meet here today almost exactly three years since the beginning of the most intense phase of the financial crisis and a bit more than two years since the National Bureau of Economic Research’s date for the start of the economic recovery. Where do we stand?
There have been some positive developments over the past few years, particularly when considered in the light of economic prospects as viewed at the depth of the crisis. Overall, the global economy has seen significant growth, led by the emerging-market economies. In the United States, a cyclical recovery, though a modest one by historical standards, is in its ninth quarter. In the financial sphere, the U.S. banking system is generally much healthier now, with banks holding substantially more capital. Credit availability from banks has improved, though it remains tight in categories–such as small business lending–in which the balance sheets of potential borrowers remain impaired. Companies with access to the public bond markets have had no difficulty obtaining credit on favorable terms. Importantly, structural reform is moving forward in the financial sector, with ambitious domestic and international efforts underway to enhance the capital and liquidity of banks, especially the most systemically important banks; to improve risk management and transparency; to strengthen market infrastructure; and to introduce a more systemic, or macroprudential, approach to financial regulation and supervision.
In the broader economy, manufacturing production in the United States has risen nearly 15 percent since its trough, driven substantially by growth in exports. Indeed, the U.S. trade deficit has been notably lower recently than it was before the crisis, reflecting in part the improved competitiveness of U.S. goods and services. Business investment in equipment and software has continued to expand, and productivity gains in some industries have been impressive, though new data have reduced estimates of overall productivity improvement in recent years. Households also have made some progress in repairing their balance sheets–saving more, borrowing less, and reducing their burdens of interest payments and debt. Commodity prices have come off their highs, which will reduce the cost pressures facing businesses and help increase household purchasing power.
Notwithstanding these more positive developments, however, it is clear that the recovery from the crisis has been much less robust than we had hoped. From the latest comprehensive revisions to the national accounts as well as the most recent estimates of growth in the first half of this year, we have learned that the recession was even deeper and the recovery even weaker than we had thought; indeed, aggregate output in the United States still has not returned to the level that it attained before the crisis. Importantly, economic growth has for the most part been at rates insufficient to achieve sustained reductions in unemployment, which has recently been fluctuating a bit above 9 percent. Temporary factors, including the effects of the run-up in commodity prices on consumer and business budgets and the effect of the Japanese disaster on global supply chains and production, were part of the reason for the weak performance of the economy in the first half of 2011; accordingly, growth in the second half looks likely to improve as their influence recedes. However, the incoming data suggest that other, more persistent factors also have been at work.
Why has the recovery from the crisis been so slow and erratic? Historically, recessions have typically sowed the seeds of their own recoveries as reduced spending on investment, housing, and consumer durables generates pent-up demand. As the business cycle bottoms out and confidence returns, this pent-up demand, often augmented by the effects of stimulative monetary and fiscal policies, is met through increased production and hiring. Increased production in turn boosts business revenues and household incomes and provides further impetus to business and household spending. Improving income prospects and balance sheets also make households and businesses more creditworthy, and financial institutions become more willing to lend. Normally, these developments create a virtuous circle of rising incomes and profits, more supportive financial and credit conditions, and lower uncertainty, allowing the process of recovery to develop momentum.
These restorative forces are at work today, and they will continue to promote recovery over time. Unfortunately, the recession, besides being extraordinarily severe as well as global in scope, was also unusual in being associated with both a very deep slump in the housing market and a historic financial crisis. These two features of the downturn, individually and in combination, have acted to slow the natural recovery process.
Notably, the housing sector has been a significant driver of recovery from most recessions in the United States since World War II, but this time–with an overhang of distressed and foreclosed properties, tight credit conditions for builders and potential homebuyers, and ongoing concerns by both potential borrowers and lenders about continued house price declines–the rate of new home construction has remained at less than one-third of its pre-crisis level. The low level of construction has implications not only for builders but for providers of a wide range of goods and services related to housing and homebuilding. Moreover, even as tight credit for some borrowers has been one of the factors restraining housing recovery, the weakness of the housing sector has in turn had adverse effects on financial markets and on the flow of credit. For example, the sharp declines in house prices in some areas have left many homeowners “underwater” on their mortgages, creating financial hardship for households and, through their effects on rates of mortgage delinquency and default, stress for financial institutions as well. Financial pressures on financial institutions and households have contributed, in turn, to greater caution in the extension of credit and to slower growth in consumer spending.
I have already noted the central role of the financial crisis of 2008 and 2009 in sparking the recession. As I also noted, a great deal has been done and is being done to address the causes and effects of the crisis, including a substantial program of financial reform, and conditions in the U.S. banking system and financial markets have improved significantly overall. Nevertheless, financial stress has been and continues to be a significant drag on the recovery, both here and abroad. Bouts of sharp volatility and risk aversion in markets have recently re-emerged in reaction to concerns about both European sovereign debts and developments related to the U.S. fiscal situation, including the recent downgrade of the U.S. long-term credit rating by one of the major rating agencies and the controversy concerning the raising of the U.S. federal debt ceiling. It is difficult to judge by how much these developments have affected economic activity thus far, but there seems little doubt that they have hurt household and business confidence and that they pose ongoing risks to growth. The Federal Reserve continues to monitor developments in financial markets and institutions closely and is in frequent contact with policymakers in Europe and elsewhere.
Monetary policy must be responsive to changes in the economy and, in particular, to the outlook for growth and inflation. As I mentioned earlier, the recent data have indicated that economic growth during the first half of this year was considerably slower than the Federal Open Market Committee had been expecting, and that temporary factors can account for only a portion of the economic weakness that we have observed. Consequently, although we expect a moderate recovery to continue and indeed to strengthen over time, the Committee has marked down its outlook for the likely pace of growth over coming quarters. With commodity prices and other import prices moderating and with longer-term inflation expectations remaining stable, we expect inflation to settle, over coming quarters, at levels at or below the rate of 2 percent, or a bit less, that most Committee participants view as being consistent with our dual mandate.
In light of its current outlook, the Committee recently decided to provide more specific forward guidance about its expectations for the future path of the federal funds rate. In particular, in the statement following our meeting earlier this month, we indicated that economic conditions–including low rates of resource utilization and a subdued outlook for inflation over the medium run–are likely to warrant exceptionally low levels for the federal funds rate at least through mid-2013. That is, in what the Committee judges to be the most likely scenarios for resource utilization and inflation in the medium term, the target for the federal funds rate would be held at its current low levels for at least two more years.
In addition to refining our forward guidance, the Federal Reserve has a range of tools that could be used to provide additional monetary stimulus. We discussed the relative merits and costs of such tools at our August meeting. We will continue to consider those and other pertinent issues, including of course economic and financial developments, at our meeting in September, which has been scheduled for two days (the 20th and the 21st) instead of one to allow a fuller discussion. The Committee will continue to assess the economic outlook in light of incoming information and is prepared to employ its tools as appropriate to promote a stronger economic recovery in a context of price stability.
Economic Policy and Longer-Term Growth in the United States
The financial crisis and its aftermath have posed severe challenges around the globe, particularly in the advanced industrial economies. Thus far I have reviewed some of those challenges, offered some diagnoses for the slow economic recovery in the United States, and briefly discussed the policy response by the Federal Reserve. However, this conference is focused on longer-run economic growth, and appropriately so, given the fundamental importance of long-term growth rates in the determination of living standards. In that spirit, let me turn now to a brief discussion of the longer-run prospects for the U.S. economy and the role of economic policy in shaping those prospects.Notwithstanding the severe difficulties we currently face, I do not expect the long-run growth potential of the U.S. economy to be materially affected by the crisis and the recession if–and I stress if–our country takes the necessary steps to secure that outcome. Over the medium term, housing activity will stabilize and begin to grow again, if for no other reason than that ongoing population growth and household formation will ultimately demand it. Good, proactive housing policies could help speed that process. Financial markets and institutions have already made considerable progress toward normalization, and I anticipate that the financial sector will continue to adapt to ongoing reforms while still performing its vital intermediation functions. Households will continue to strengthen their balance sheets, a process that will be sped up considerably if the recovery accelerates but that will move forward in any case. Businesses will continue to invest in new capital, adopt new technologies, and build on the productivity gains of the past several years. I have confidence that our European colleagues fully appreciate what is at stake in the difficult issues they are now confronting and that, over time, they will take all necessary and appropriate steps to address those issues effectively and comprehensively.
This economic healing will take a while, and there may be setbacks along the way. Moreover, we will need to remain alert to risks to the recovery, including financial risks. However, with one possible exception on which I will elaborate in a moment, the healing process should not leave major scars. Notwithstanding the trauma of the crisis and the recession, the U.S. economy remains the largest in the world, with a highly diverse mix of industries and a degree of international competitiveness that, if anything, has improved in recent years. Our economy retains its traditional advantages of a strong market orientation, a robust entrepreneurial culture, and flexible capital and labor markets. And our country remains a technological leader, with many of the world’s leading research universities and the highest spending on research and development of any nation.
Of course, the United States faces many growth challenges. Our population is aging, like those of many other advanced economies, and our society will have to adapt over time to an older workforce. Our K-12 educational system, despite considerable strengths, poorly serves a substantial portion of our population. The costs of health care in the United States are the highest in the world, without fully commensurate results in terms of health outcomes. But all of these long-term issues were well known before the crisis; efforts to address these problems have been ongoing, and these efforts will continue and, I hope, intensify.
The quality of economic policymaking in the United States will heavily influence the nation’s longer-term prospects. To allow the economy to grow at its full potential, policymakers must work to promote macroeconomic and financial stability; adopt effective tax, trade, and regulatory policies; foster the development of a skilled workforce; encourage productive investment, both private and public; and provide appropriate support for research and development and for the adoption of new technologies.
The Federal Reserve has a role in promoting the longer-term performance of the economy. Most importantly, monetary policy that ensures that inflation remains low and stable over time contributes to long-run macroeconomic and financial stability. Low and stable inflation improves the functioning of markets, making them more effective at allocating resources; and it allows households and businesses to plan for the future without having to be unduly concerned with unpredictable movements in the general level of prices. The Federal Reserve also fosters macroeconomic and financial stability in its role as a financial regulator, a monitor of overall financial stability, and a liquidity provider of last resort.
Normally, monetary or fiscal policies aimed primarily at promoting a faster pace of economic recovery in the near term would not be expected to significantly affect the longer-term performance of the economy. However, current circumstances may be an exception to that standard view–the exception to which I alluded earlier. Our economy is suffering today from an extraordinarily high level of long-term unemployment, with nearly half of the unemployed having been out of work for more than six months. Under these unusual circumstances, policies that promote a stronger recovery in the near term may serve longer-term objectives as well. In the short term, putting people back to work reduces the hardships inflicted by difficult economic times and helps ensure that our economy is producing at its full potential rather than leaving productive resources fallow. In the longer term, minimizing the duration of unemployment supports a healthy economy by avoiding some of the erosion of skills and loss of attachment to the labor force that is often associated with long-term unemployment.
Notwithstanding this observation, which adds urgency to the need to achieve a cyclical recovery in employment, most of the economic policies that support robust economic growth in the long run are outside the province of the central bank. We have heard a great deal lately about federal fiscal policy in the United States, so I will close with some thoughts on that topic, focusing on the role of fiscal policy in promoting stability and growth.
To achieve economic and financial stability, U.S. fiscal policy must be placed on a sustainable path that ensures that debt relative to national income is at least stable or, preferably, declining over time. As I have emphasized on previous occasions, without significant policy changes, the finances of the federal government will inevitably spiral out of control, risking severe economic and financial damage.1 The increasing fiscal burden that will be associated with the aging of the population and the ongoing rise in the costs of health care make prompt and decisive action in this area all the more critical.
Although the issue of fiscal sustainability must urgently be addressed, fiscal policymakers should not, as a consequence, disregard the fragility of the current economic recovery. Fortunately, the two goals of achieving fiscal sustainability–which is the result of responsible policies set in place for the longer term–and avoiding the creation of fiscal headwinds for the current recovery are not incompatible. Acting now to put in place a credible plan for reducing future deficits over the longer term, while being attentive to the implications of fiscal choices for the recovery in the near term, can help serve both objectives.
Fiscal policymakers can also promote stronger economic performance through the design of tax policies and spending programs. To the fullest extent possible, our nation’s tax and spending policies should increase incentives to work and to save, encourage investments in the skills of our workforce, stimulate private capital formation, promote research and development, and provide necessary public infrastructure. We cannot expect our economy to grow its way out of our fiscal imbalances, but a more productive economy will ease the tradeoffs that we face.
Finally, and perhaps most challenging, the country would be well served by a better process for making fiscal decisions. The negotiations that took place over the summer disrupted financial markets and probably the economy as well, and similar events in the future could, over time, seriously jeopardize the willingness of investors around the world to hold U.S. financial assets or to make direct investments in job-creating U.S. businesses. Although details would have to be negotiated, fiscal policymakers could consider developing a more effective process that sets clear and transparent budget goals, together with budget mechanisms to establish the credibility of those goals. Of course, formal budget goals and mechanisms do not replace the need for fiscal policymakers to make the difficult choices that are needed to put the country’s fiscal house in order, which means that public understanding of and support for the goals of fiscal policy are crucial.
Economic policymakers face a range of difficult decisions, relating to both the short-run and long-run challenges we face. I have no doubt, however, that those challenges can be met, and that the fundamental strengths of our economy will ultimately reassert themselves. The Federal Reserve will certainly do all that it can to help restore high rates of growth and employment in a context of price stability.
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There’s an Investing Lesson In Here Somewhere
Eddy Elfenbein, August 26th, 2011 at 10:30 am -
Revised Q2 GDP = 1.0%
Eddy Elfenbein, August 26th, 2011 at 8:33 amThe government just revised second-quarter GDP growth down to 1.0% from the initial estimate of 1.3%. Wall Street was actually afraid that it might be worse. I’ll remind you that the second quarter began four-and-a-half months ago and ended one-and-a-half months ago.
Over the last four years, the U.S. economy has grown by 0.66% in real terms. The economy has shrunk by 0.49% from its all-time peak in the fourth quarter of 2007. Over the last 11 years, the economy has grown by 17.88% (or 1.51% annualized) which is less than it grew in the four years prior to that.
Here’s a look at real GDP based on 2005 dollars. What’s most troubling is the last two data points.
By the way, what letter describes this…V-shaped? U-shaped? Maybe an N? I really don’t know anymore.
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CWS Market Review – August 26, 2011
Eddy Elfenbein, August 26th, 2011 at 6:48 am“Look at market fluctuations as your friend rather than your enemy; profit from folly rather than participate in it.” – Warren Buffett
Very true, Warren. Very true. Quietly, this past week has been a turning point for the stock market. The “Fear Trade” that gripped Wall Street this summer is slowly beginning to unravel. Specifically, the Fear Trade consisted of investors dumping cyclicals especially and crowding into gold and Treasury bonds. Starting on July 22nd, the Wall Street bears had been in complete command. Every rally was yet another opportunity to short. That is, until this week. After a staggering $2 trillion was shed by the S&P 500, the Fear Trade has finally gotten some (minor) pushback.
I’ll give you an example of what I mean: The S&P 500 made very similar closing lows on August 8th (1,119.46) and August 10th (1,120.76) and then again on August 19th (1,123.53) and August 22nd (1,123.82). Notice how close together those lows are. Yet the bears weren’t able to bring us any lower. That’s a telling sign.
It’s still too early to say if this is the beginning of a major leg up, but it probably signals that the worse of the Fear Trade is past us. On closer inspection, much of the negative news was vastly overhyped (I’m looking at you, S&P downgrade). We had some promising rallies on Tuesday and Wednesday, and Thursday looked to be a good day until the German market tanked. Still, I like the trend that I’m seeing.
The pushback isn’t just happening in the stock market; let’s look at what’s happening in Bondistan. Last Thursday, the yield on the ten-year Treasury dropped below 2% and the five-year plunged to an absurd 0.79%. The three-month LIBOR rate is actually less than the two-year Treasury yield. Dear Lord, I don’t know what to say about prices like that except that it shows us how much fear there was in the market. The short-term Treasuries even pulled a Blutarsky. In the CWS Market Review from three weeks ago, I wrote “All across the board, investors are dumping risk and hoarding security. Fear is giving greed a major beat-down.”
Well, greed is getting back on its feet. The five-year T-note recently broke above 1%. Of course, that’s far from normal, but the key is that people aren’t suddenly dumping bonds and hoarding stocks. Instead, they’re walking back from some of the fear that took hold of the markets this summer.
With the Fear Trade, the riskier an asset was (or was perceived to be), the worse it did. Junk bonds, for example, have been getting beaten like a rented step-mule. The Wall Street Journal recently wrote: “The spread on the Barclays Capital High Yield Index over Treasurys widened to 7.66 percentage points this week—the highest since November 2009—from 5.87 percentage points at the end of July.”
The clearest area where the Fear Trade is coming unglued is in the gold pits. On Wednesday, gold dropped $104 per ounce which is one of its biggest plunges ever. Earlier this week, gold peaked at $1,917 per ounce and it closed the day on Thursday at $1,775.20. As long as real rates are low, gold will do well; but the metal has gotten ahead of itself. Once the Fear Trade got going, investors headed into the only areas that were working. Soon that turned into a flood and everything else got left behind (AFLAC at $35?). I remember when the Nasdaq peaked 11 years ago and there were healthy REITs that were paying 12% dividend yields. Only in retrospect do we see how insane that was.
I’m writing this early Friday morning and the big news due later today is the Ben Bernanke speech at the Fed’s annual shindig in Jackson Hole, Wyoming. I don’t expect any news, but too many people who ought to know better think the Fed will announce another round of Quantitative Easing. That simply isn’t going to happen. As a result, many traders expect Wall Street to be disappointed if QE3 doesn’t come our way. Call me a doubter, but that may have weighed on the stock market on Thursday. If anything, some of the recent data takes pressure off of Bernanke and the Fed.
The other important item on Friday will be the first revision to second-quarter GDP growth. The initial report said that the economy grew by 1.3% during the second three months of the year. Wall Street expects that to be revised slightly and they’re probably right. Still, the second quarter is now well within our rear-view mirror. I’m more concerned with the rest of Q3 and Q4.
Now let’s look at what’s happening with our Buy List. We only had one earnings report this past week which was from Medtronic ($MDT). The company reported fiscal Q1 earnings of 79 cents per share which matched Wall Street’s estimate. I wasn’t expecting much of an earnings surprise or shortfall. Honestly, this company has some problems, but ultimately, I think they’re manageable. I’d really like to see Medtronic become a leaner and meaner outfit and I think the new CEO agrees.
The best news is that they reiterated their full-year guidance of $3.43 to $3.50 per share. As I’ve said before, never dismiss these “reiterations.” Hearing that things are still “on track” is news. If you recall, MDT slashed their full-year guidance several times last year.
Let’s run through some numbers here: Shares of MDT dropped from over $43 in May to nearly $30 this month. The shares rallied on the earnings report not because the news was good but probably because there wasn’t any bad news. You often see that in value investing when investors get so disgusted by a stock that they expect to be disappointed. As odd as it may sound, that’s often a good buying opportunity.
Even the low end of Medtronic’s range tells us that the stock is going for less than 10 times this year’s earnings estimate. That’s a good value. The stock currently yields 2.86% and the dividend has been raised for the last 34 years in a row. Medtronic is a good buy below $35 per share.
We only have one earnings report due next week and that’s from Jos. A. Bank Clothiers ($JOSB) on Monday. If you recall, JOSB got smacked hard in June when the company’s fiscal Q1 earnings came in two cents below consensus. That two-penny miss caused the stock to plunge more than 13% in one day.
For Monday, the Street expects earnings of 68 cents per share. Sales should rise about 11% to $210 million. I should warn you that since JOSB doesn’t provide guidance, the earnings can vary widely from consensus. Sixty-eight cents sounds slightly low but I’m afraid traders are very strongly biased to be disappointed by whatever JOSB says. My advice is to not be surprised by a pullback. If you don’t already own JOSB, hold on. If you don’t own it, don’t chase it. If JOSB’s earnings come in at 70 cents or more and the stock pulls back below, it will be a very good buying opportunity. I’ll have more on the earnings report on the blog.
I also want to highlight Oracle ($ORCL) which looks very good at this level. In seven weeks, the shares have dropped from $34 to $26 yet their business outlook remains unchanged. The next earnings report should be out in mid-September. Oracle is an excellent buy below $25.
That’s all for now. There’s some talk going around that the NYSE might be closed due to Hurricane Irene. I’ll let you know as soon as I do. Be sure to keep checking the blog for daily updates. I’ll have more market analysis for you in the next issue of CWS Market Review!
– Eddy
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Morning News: August 26, 2011
Eddy Elfenbein, August 26th, 2011 at 5:46 amShortage of Engineers Threatens German Automakers
Finland Committed to Greek Demands as Talks Over Collater Model Continue
Greece Sets Out Conditions for Bond Swap
Stock Futures Signal Gains; Bernanke Eyed
Gold Rises, Reducing Weekly Decline, as Lower Prices Fuel Investor Demand
The Weight of the World is on Bernanke’s Shoulders
For Some in G.O.P., a Tax Cut Not Worth Embracing
Buffett’s Bank of America Stake Is Viewed as a Seal of Approval
Pandora Gains on Subscriptions and Mobile Ads
Andrew Mason Fires Back At Groupon Critics
Bloomberg Agrees to Buy Bureau of National Affairs for About $990 Million
Manchester United IPO May Rely on Fan Support
Big Shoes at Apple, but Maybe Not Unfillable
James Altucher: 7 Things I Learned from the First Blogger
Brian Shannon: Things We Sometimes Forget As Traders
Be sure to follow me on Twitter.
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P/E Compression at Medtronic
Eddy Elfenbein, August 25th, 2011 at 3:12 pmA reader sent this in. I don’t have much to add, but notice how strongly Medtronic‘s ($MDT) Price/Earnings Ratio got squeezed over the past decade. The lesson is that price matters (not a new lesson, but an important one).
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The Slow Unraveling of the “Fear Trade”
Eddy Elfenbein, August 25th, 2011 at 2:01 pmIn less than one month, the S&P 500 lost $2 trillion in market value. That’s actually a lot of money. But let’s look at the past week: stocks are up, bonds and gold are down. In other words, investors are slowly tip-toeing out of the places that they madly rushed into over the past four weeks. I’m impressed that this is happening before Hurricanes Ben and Irene are scheduled to strike.
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The Financial Spyders ETF
Eddy Elfenbein, August 25th, 2011 at 11:47 amThe $XLF has crashed and burned recently. But just because it’s down doesn’t mean that it’s cheap. It’s just cheaper than it was. Expect another test of $12 soon.
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