Posts Tagged ‘ Jobless Claims ’

Weekly Spectrum: Bill Gross, the “New Normal” Economy

Jun 7th, 2010 | By Rob
Weekly Spectrum: Bill Gross, the “New Normal” Economy

This week will likely begin with some relief for the Euro, on G20 plans to cut costs in Euro states, while the hangover from Friday’s U.S. Jobs data could continue into a “no news” Monday trading session. Look for pops to add to shorts early in the week, but keep stops tight leading into Jobless claims and Friday’s data.



Weekly Spectrum: Manufacturing to Hold, Housing and Employment to pop?

May 2nd, 2010 | By Rob
Weekly Spectrum: Manufacturing to Hold, Housing and Employment to pop?

Greece, Greece, Greece… Is that Papa guy ever going to get his act together and accept a check from the EU? is it 45 billion or 100 billion Euros now? What’s the deal with these riots in Athens?

Chances are you have answers to these questions, and a few extra cents to contribute to the issue. Frankly, that’s what the comment box is for, and we won’t waste time on the issue beyond these next few words.



Stronger Market Faces Bernanke and Q1 GDP

Apr 26th, 2010 | By Rob
Stronger Market Faces Bernanke and Q1 GDP

U.S. stocks looked unusually strong on Friday as two major factors concerning short term risk in global markets changed dramatically. The stagnant housing market and uncertainty over a viable path to solvency in Greece, which have been weighing heavily on global markets, seem to be less threatening if Friday’s data were judge. Technicals remain extremely overbought in commodities and equities as markets now face Bernanke and Q1 GDP this week.



Goldman, Greece Kick Market Rally’s Tires

Apr 18th, 2010 | By Rob
Goldman, Greece Kick Market Rally’s Tires

If you ducked out of the office for a three day weekend and missed the news regarding Goldman Sachs and Greece on Friday, you may be rolling up your sleeves to a few surprises that will cast a dark shadow on the April 19 week’s market action.

Mainly, Goldman Sachs (GS) has been charged with fraud by the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC), linked to a Credit Default Swap (CDS) mechanism known as “Abacus”.



Weekly Spectrum: Short Week, Housing & Earnings Focus

Jan 18th, 2010 | By Rob

The January 18 – 22 business week will begin one day late, due to Martin Luther King Jr holiday, leaving only Tuesday to Friday for market action to be staged. The most notable economic data releases will be the Housing Market Index (HMI) and Housing Starts numbers; while Treasury International Capital data, the Producer's Price
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Weekly Spectrum: Life After -85k December Jobs Lost

Jan 11th, 2010 | By Rob

The January 11-15, 2009 week will be crucial to the movement of equities and commodities over the next month. This addition of the Weekly Spectrum will recap the December Employment report and explain which economic reports will affect U.S. financial markets in the week ahead. The December Non-Farm Payroll report dropped traders' jaws as if they
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Price Indexes, Fed Meeting, Quad Witching

Dec 14th, 2009 | By Rob

The last five days before the shortened Christmas week may bring tidings of inflation, Bernanke rhetoric, and volatile Friday trading as investors unwrap both producer price (PPI) and consumer price indexes (CPI), foreshadowing Bernanke language, and a "quad witching" day on friday. We will get a taste testing of government debt as the 4 week, 3
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Could The Dollar Be Stronger?

Dec 7th, 2009 | By Rob

As Bank of America (BAC) recently announced plans to repay it's $45 billion borrowed under the TARP program, simultaneously news broke covering the request for deferral of nearly $60 billion of borrowed funds by the Dubai World sovereign fund. One could deem the global financial arena murky at best, as anticipated economic data will cover
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SPX Technicals Waning Ahead of Stacked Econ Data

Nov 25th, 2009 | By Rob

The SPX (S&P 500 Large Cap Index) technicals are signalling weakness following the November 17th 52-week-high of 1110. Since that point the index has traded in a tight 20 point range ahead of a full stack of economic reports set for release this morning. Here we will address four key technical signals which could spell
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Confidence Shift Drags Down Stocks

May 16th, 2009 | By Rob

Equities gained upward momentum in U.S. markets Friday morning after headline econ data was reported in line with expectations. However, the S&P 500 and DJIA turned negative by noon EST as distress signals in the automobile industry and economic report autopsies pulled equities down. The Consumer Price Index (CPI) changed 0.0% from March to April,
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