I like Monday’s because I am a Market Junkie and there is little else to do while I hang out in the Shawshank Lodge with my friends. I also find the summer trading to be the most difficult and I like to watch my com-padre market watchers stay befuddled.
So I asked around the group this morning why they thought the summer was so difficult to trade. The collective response were that stocks always go up in the summer and climb the…. Wall of Worry…. and everyone we talk to seems to think they should be going down…so lets watch as Two Thirds of S&P500 companies report this week. This action all seems like short covering to me versus a rush to own long-side names other than APPL, CME, GOOG and the other usual suspects.
Stocks fluctuated Monday after FedEx Corp. (NYSE:FDX) raised its forecast for the current quarter and said it expected a moderate recovery in the global economy. FedEx’s outlook was the latest piece of upbeat earnings news that have lifted stocks in recent days. The Dow Jones industrial average rose 6 points in early morning trading. If it closes up just 4 points for the day it would move back into positive territory for the year.
FedEx (NYSE:FDX) raised its earnings prediction for its first fiscal quarter and said it had better than expected growth in its overnight and ground delivery services. Like UPS Inc.(NYSEUPS), FedEx is seen as an economic bellwether. If companies and consumers are shipping more, that points to a strengthening economy.
European markets traded in a tight range as investors had their first chance to react to a series of tests that assessed the health of the continent’s big banks. Regulators said only seven of the 91 banks tested would struggle if the European economy and government debt problems worsened. U.S. investors were able to trade after the results were released Friday afternoon and sent stocks higher.
The market was awaiting the government’s report on new home sales during June. It is expected that sales edged higher from record lows in May as the housing market recovery remains erratic. Stocks surged last week as mostly strong corporate earnings and outlooks, as well as the results of the European bank tests, added to hopes that the global economy is recovering. The Dow Jones industrial average jumped 3.2 percent last week.
An earnings report due out Tuesday from oil company BP PLC (NYSE:BP) will likely be closely watched because of reports that embattled CEO Tony Hayward will step down and the company could take a big charge to cover costs of cleaning up the oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico. In early trading, the Dow rose 5.75, or 0.1 percent, at 10,430.45. The Standard & Poor’s 500 index rose 0.72, or 0.1 percent, to 1,103.38, while the Nasdaq composite index fell 2.95, or 0.1 percent, to 2,266.52.
The Commerce Department was expected to report that sales of new homes rose 6.7 percent in June to an annual rate of 320,000, according to economists polled by Thomson Reuters. The housing market, which helped push the economy into recession, remains sluggish. There was a sharp drop in sales after a government tax credit for home buyers expired at the end of April. There has been concern that the market was being propped up by that credit and it will continue to struggle to recover now that there are fewer incentives for buyers.
Any improvement in new home sales could provide some relief to investors because May’s figures fell to the lowest level since records began being kept in 1963. A smaller than expected drop in sales of previously occupied homes contributed to stocks’ rally Thursday.
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