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2009-12-28

Three Micro-Cap ETFs Worth Considering

Do you remember the childhood wonder of looking at all the colorfully wrapped packages under the Christmas tree, trying to guess what fun was inside? If you were like me, your eyes were drawn to the biggest presents. And if they were too big to wrap, sometimes Santa would just leave them out in the open for us to find in the morning.

After awhile, I figured out that some of the best gifts came in small packages, nestled among the big boxes.

Exchange traded funds (ETFs) are the same way: Sometimes the best funds are unobtrusive, waiting to be noticed and enjoyed.

I’m talking about micro-cap ETFs.

You know that stocks are categorized by their size, or market capitalization (the dollar value of a company’s outstanding shares). Most often you hear about large-cap, mid-cap and small-cap stocks.

Last week I told you about mega-caps, the largest of the large caps. Today we’ll look at the other end of the scale: The smallest of the small-caps. We call them micro-caps.

As with other divisions, the line between small-cap and micro-cap can be fuzzy. Most analysts would peg it somewhere around $300 million to $500 million in market cap.

Any company can slip above or below that line at any time due to market action. Index providers like Dow Jones and Frank Russell compile lists and categorize stocks, making periodic adjustments.

What Can Micro-Caps Do For You?

The dream, of course, is that the stock you pick as a micro-cap grows up and becomes a small-cap, then a mid-cap, and finally a large-cap - multiplying your gains along the way.

When this happens, the rewards can be astronomical - thousands of percentage points! Realistically, though, your chances of picking just the right stock and then holding it all the way up are pretty slim.

This is where ETFs come in … micro-cap ETFs give you broad exposure to the whole category. If only a few of the stocks take off, they’ll pull up the indexes, and your ETF’s value can soar.

With a micro-cap ETF you’re losing some of the upside potential of the individual stocks, but you’re gaining diversification and thus reducing your risk. I think the trade-off is worth it. Plus, when the stock market takes off, micro-cap ETFs have the potential to go much farther and faster than large-cap or even small-cap ETFs.

Three Micro-Cap ETFs Worth Considering …

While several ETFs cover the micro-cap space, iShares Russell Micro-Cap Index Fund (IWC: 39.30 0.00 0.00%) is by far the most popular. With net assets over $300 million, IWC is the most widely-used way to gain diversified exposure to U.S. micro-cap stocks.

IWC tracks the Russell Microcap Index, which consists of 2,000 stocks. These include the bottom of the well-known Russell 2000 Small-Cap index along with 1,000 smaller stocks. IWC omits some of these stocks from its portfolio but still does a good job tracking the index results, especially considering how illiquid some of the component stocks can be.

Currently, IWC holds about half of its assets in three sectors: Financial services, technology, and health care. These sector weightings are similar to the broad stock market.

Two less popular ETFs also cover the micro-cap space.

  • First Trust Dow Jones Select Micro-Cap ETF (FDM: 17.8892 0.00 0.00%)
  • PowerShares Zacks Micro Cap Portfolio (PZI: 9.81 0.00 0.00%)

Either of these funds can also be a good choice, but IWC is much larger and more liquid.

Be Careful!

There’s a reason micro-caps have so much potential for outsized gains: They also have a big potential for losses. The daily volatility can be enormous. In fact, it’s not unusual to see these stocks swing twice the daily percentage of S&P 500 stocks. So timing your trades can be crucial.

Even though the micro-cap indexes include thousands of stocks, they only make up about three percent of U.S. market’s total capitalization. This makes it easy for unwary investors to become over weighted in these stocks. Therefore, micro-cap ETFs are best used for only a small percentage of your ETF portfolio.

Consider giving them a tiny slice and in time you may get a nice reward.

 

Two Reasons Why Gold Is Set To Decline!

As expected, the gold bugs were out in force, giving me a lot of heat regarding my prediction that gold will retreat to $1,000 in the near-term.

Thanks for all of your comments. There were some strong opinions as to why my thesis was incorrect. So allow me to offer my rebuttal and show you why I’m still right!

To quickly refresh your memory… my belief that gold is heading back to $1,000 is based on two arguments: technical and behavioral, let me explain…

Two Reasons Why Gold is Set to Decline

  • Technical: The technical argument includes the fact that gold was +2 standard deviations above its 200-day moving average - something that only occurs 5% of the time. Additionally, put options are now more expensive than calls for the first time in two months. That tells me that the smart money expects gold to head lower. Check out my original column on why you should take profits on gold for a more detailed explanation.
  • Behavioral: In this case, I mentioned that with the mainstream media covering gold ad nauseam, this is a sign of a top. Additionally, hedge fund manager John Paulson (with his enormous win betting against the housing market still in mind) has placed some huge wagers on gold going considerably higher.

It stirred up quite a debate on Investment U. The quotes below are taken directly from readers’ comments left on the page where my column appeared. As always, I invite you to leave yours here, too.

You Write… And I Respond

  • Argument #1:Comparing it to the 2000 stock bubble is ridiculous. The market was at absurd valuations back then, while gold would have to rise to over $2,000 just to reach an equivalent inflation-adjusted value compared to its 1980 high.

My rebuttal: I’m not saying that the valuations are the same from 2000… just that we’ve seen a meteoric rise and now everyone is talking about it. When the “morning zoo” radio jocks are talking about gold instead of Tiger Woods’ latest escapades, that’s a strong hint we’re at a top. Even in stock markets, valuations at the top are often different, but the behavior of investors is usually the same.

  • Argument #2:It’s also evidence of your bias to be talking about Paulson being a ‘top-ticker’ on gold. Of course, you would never say anything like that if he made a stock sector bet of the same amount. You’d be talking about what a brilliant investor he is, and what a great track record he has.

My rebuttal: If Paulson placed a huge bet on biotech, CNBC had a biotech index ticker running on its screen, and mainstream media that never cover financial news started talking about monoclonal antibodies, I’d say the same thing about biotech as I’m saying about gold.

On the other hand, if Paulson was buying an out-of-favor stock sector, you’re right, I’d say he’s brilliant.

Note that I never said a word about Warren Buffett’s huge play on transportation. That’s because no one is talking about transportation stocks and I have no reason to believe that from a behavioral finance standpoint, transportation stocks are overbought.

  • Argument # 3:Complete tripe! Gold’s not going up, printed money is declining in value due to QE (Ed Note: quantitative easing). You can’t print more gold and it’s a good hedge against the activities of rouge banks and gangster governments!

My rebuttal: I have no problem with the fundamental reasons why gold should go higher. But my argument is based on gold being overbought, not the macro reasons behind the value of the metal.

  • Argument #4:I would suggest that if healthcare is your specialty, you should stick with that. You can ’sharpen the saw’ on fine tuning your skills in that area. Leave the gold market to the experienced. I think it’s unfair when somebody as yourself gets to use the public as a sounding board when they don’t have all their ducks lined up. I would further recommend that you get your analysis out BEFORE a correction if you really want to assist people with better entry points. When I picked up your piece, gold spot stood @ $1,121.

My rebuttal: While I’m not a gold expert, I am pretty good with technical analysis and understanding market psychology. Those are useful tools for spotting trends and potential turning points in any market.

As for as the timing of the piece, I wrote it just as gold fell from its high and about 24 hours before we published the article. Unfortunately, the decline didn’t stop for our publication schedule and before you read the column. But if gold hits my $1,000 target, I think getting people out before a $121 correction is still plenty valuable.

  • Argument #5:Watching CNBC and reading most newsletters is a waste. It’s primarily about selling advertising and mining for the uninitiated subscriber that motivates these opinions, IMHO.

My rebuttal: I actually agree with this statement. Do we want you to sign up for one of our products? Absolutely. Do we add a tremendous amount of value and help investors increase their returns from the stock market? I know we do.

But you don’t have to take my word for it. Take it from the tens of thousands of subscribers who receive first-class research and moneymaking recommendations from The Oxford Club and The White Cap Research Group every day.

Alexander Green is a sensational stock picker. Louis Basenese has nerves of steel and has proven to be one of Wall Street’s utmost contrarians. Karim Rahemtulla and Lee Lowell are the two best options strategists I’ve encountered in my 14-year career. And I’ll put my track record up against any one of them.

I’m extremely proud to be associated with this group of people. And I can tell you this: Not one opinion or investment idea is produced with the purpose of selling a subscription. The only goal is to make our subscribers money. If we don’t do that, or perform well for our subscribers, we wouldn’t be in business very long.

See you at $1,000.

Goldman Sachs Files To Create ETFs That Track Market Indexes

Goldman Sachs Group Inc. (GS: 163.97 0.00 0.00%) is seeking regulatory clearance to create exchange-traded funds, a fast- growing segment of the money-management business. The company filed an application today with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission to establish ETFs that track market indexes. The initial fund will seek to replicate an index based on the Brazilian, Chinese, Indian and Korean stock markets, according to the New York-based company’s application,” Miles Weiss Reports From Bloomberg.

“Unlike traditional mutual funds, which are priced at the end of each day and report their holdings quarterly, ETFs trade on an exchange and are required to reveal the securities they own on a daily basis. ETF assets grew 64 percent to $783 billion at the end of November from $478 billion a year earlier, according to the Investment Company Institute in Washington,” Weiss Reports.

“The index for Goldman Sachs’s initial ETF will track the top 85 percent of companies by market value in China, Korea, Brazil and India, the filing said. A company not affiliated with Goldman Sachs will create the index, the filing said,” Weiss Reports.

 

Obama Passing A Blank Cheque To Fannie And Freddie

While Americans across the country hustled and bustled for last minute gifts and holiday preparations, our wizards in Washington tied a big red ribbon on a blank check made out to Freddie Mac (FRE: 1.26 0.00 0.00%) and Fannie Mae (FNM: 1.05 0.00 0.00%). In the process, a future of socialized housing finance has been increasingly solidified.

Why would the Obama administration pass this blank check under the cover of darkness on December 24th? In hopes that America had just settled down for its long winter’s nap and would miss this act of pillage and plunder. The Wall Street Journal highlights this ‘blank check’ in writing, U.S. Move to Cover Fannie, Freddie Losses Stirs Controversy:

The Obama administration’s decision to cover an unlimited amount of losses at the mortgage-finance giants Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac over the next three years stirred controversy over the holiday.

The Treasury announced Thursday it was removing the caps that limited the amount of available capital to the companies to $200 billion each.

Unlimited access to bailout funds through 2012 was “necessary for preserving the continued strength and stability of the mortgage market,” the Treasury said. Fannie and Freddie purchase or guarantee most U.S. home mortgages and have run up huge losses stemming from the worst wave of defaults since the 1930s.

“The timing of this executive order giving Fannie and Freddie a blank check is no coincidence,” said Rep. Spencer Bachus of Alabama, the ranking Republican on the House Financial Services Committee. He said the Christmas Eve announcement was designed “to prevent the general public from taking note.”

Let’s take note. Let’s ponder this development. What exactly does a blank check and unlimited access to bailout funds truly mean? I envision the following:

1. A total lack of discipline and accountability in the distribution of taxpayer funds.

2. A full government takeover of the U.S. housing finance industry.

3. A socialized housing policy and accompanying programs.

If those developments do not revile you enough, the blank check is also a confirmation of the following:

1. A failed housing policy developed and promoted over the last twenty years.

2. The true legacy of those who fed from the Freddie and Fannie trough during the last two decades. Which legislative leaders piled their plates the highest with Freddie’s and Fannie’s payoffs? John Kerry (D-MA), Chris Dodd (D-CT), and Barack Obama.

Are you sick yet?

Blank checks are no way to run a country!! Capitalism has been under assault all year long and this year end shot is the ultimate kick in the balls.

These bums must be thrown out.

 

Ideas For High Yield Investment-Worthy Securities

For 2010, I believe that we will experience one of those years where the markets move sideways. Certainly there will be individual security and sector exceptions, but this article will focus upon a few random investment-worthy securities that you may wish to consider to obtain a high yield.

Here they are:

Alpine Global Dynamic Dividend Fund (AGD: 10.15 0.00 0.00%). Slaughtered in 2008 through most of 2009, this CEF appears back on its feet and presents an excellent monthly distribution with capital gain potential. AGD is also a modest hedge against a weak greenback. Trading at $10.15 with a market cap of $240m, AGD holds approximately 45% in U.S. securities and 55% in ROW. The fund at present pays a 13% yield.

Petroleum and Resources Corporation, a CEF, has been producing yield and total return since 1934. PEO fails to make headlines and talking head touts, but this well-run, conservative ETF annually throws out a total distribution between 7-12%. Trading at $24.02, PEO has a $570.4m market cap. It is presently trading at an almost 12% discount, so this may be a great time to consider PEO for your 2010 portfolio.

Barclays Convertible/SPDR Bond ETF
(CWB). This ETF deserves more respect. This ETF tracks the >$500m Barclays U.S. Cnvertible Bond Index. CWB trades at $38.23 with a market cap of $237m. I like the holdings in this ETF, which may provide modest capital appreciation in addition to the nice yield, which is 5.67%.

IShares Preferred Stock Index ETF (PFF: 36.85 0.00 0.00%) tracks the S&P Preferred Stock Index. Trading at $36.85 this $3.1b fund yields 8.72%. It is by nature heavy into financials, but I do not believe that the integrity of PFF or its juicy yield are threatened. This is my favorite preferred ETF amongst the several available.

IShares iBoxx Corporate Grade Bond ETF (LQD: 104.58 0.00 0.00%) follows the iBOXX Liquid Investment Grade Index. Trading at $104.57, this $12.9b market cap ETF yields 5.24%. LQD is wildly popular, but there is a risk due to the lower investment grade ratings of holdings. That said, diversification and size does make this concern a small one.

I enjoy the hunt for juicy hybrid preferred stocks. Although some of the characteristics can be complex, if successfully researched, one can find high yields that appear to be mispriced based upon the underlying asset mix. A few examples:

Archer Daniels Midland 6.25% (ADMpfA) trades at $43.65 and yields 7.16%. Par is $50.00 if it is called.

Bank of America Preferrred Series J (BACpfJ) trades at $22.32 and yields 8.12%. Par is $25.00 if it is called.

National City Bank 6.625% (NCCpfA) trades at $22.29 and yields 7.43%. Par is $25.00 if it is called.

I do not want to create the impression that one should only invest for yield. Commodity ETFs such as DBC, foreign bond ETFs such s BWX, inflation-protected security ETFs such as TIP and a dose of precious metals and wisely purchased real estate should tendered as a portion of the well-rounded portfolio.

The author will not take an additional position, if any, on the above securities for seven trading days beginning December 26th, 2009.

 

Take Note Of The Santa Claus Rally And Other Year-End/New-Year Indicators

If Santa has not yet made his way to your investment portfolio, don’t despair. According to Jeffrey Hirsch (Stock Trader’s Almanac), the “Santa Claus Rally” normally occurs during the last five trading days of a year and the ensuing first two trading sessions of the new year. During this seven-day period stocks historically tend to advance (by 1.5% on average since 1950), but when recording a loss, they frequently trade much lower in the new year. Well, yesterday marked the official beginning of the Santa Claus Rally period, with the Dow Jones Industrial Index off to a 0.5% start.

Another old stock market saw tells us the first five trading days of January sets the course for January (known as the “First Five Days Early Warning System”), and if the month of January is higher, there is a good chance the year will end higher, i.e. the so-called “January Barometer”. Every down January since 1950 has been followed by a new or continuing bear market or a flat year. “As January goes, so goes the year,” said Hirsch.

Lastly, according to Hirsch, the “December Low Indicator says that should the Dow Jones Industrial Index close below its December low anytime during the first quarter, it is frequently an excellent warning sign of lower levels ahead. The number to watch is the low of 10,286 recorded by the Dow on December 8.

Time will tell whether the year-end/new-year indicators play out according to the historical pattern. Meanwhile, we’ll have some fun tracking how it pans out.

 

Positive Factors For Aerospace & Defense ETFs

The past year has kept the aerospace and defense sector subdued, but increases in spending and other global factors may make this sector’s exchange traded funds (ETFs) a top gun.

In the past month, the aerospace and defense sector has seen some gains in performance and more analysts are feeling bullish on the sector, according to Spade Index. Scott Sacknoff, the index provider for Spade Indexes, which is the underlying index for the PowerShares Aerospace and Defense (PPA: 17.225 0.00 0.00%), points out that the sector has been tracking the S&P 500 closely for most of this year. “Things that move the market move the defense sector.”

Some positive factors going for it include:

  • Troops in Afghanistan. President Barack Obama is sending an additional 30,000 U.S. troops to Afghanistan to combat the growing threat of hard-core insurgents and Taliban foot soldiers, reports Al Pessin for VOANews.
  • War Tax. Congress is flirting with the idea of a special tax on high-income Americans to help pay for the war efforts.
  • Boeing’s 787 Dreamliner. The Boeing Co.’s (BA: 55.48 0.00 0.00%) 787 passenger jet “Dreamliner” made its maiden test flight on Tuesday, reports William Hennigan for The Los Angeles Times. The company promises that the Dreamliner will burn less fuel and last longer than other flying aircrafts. Airlines have already ordered 840 Dreamliners worth $140 billion, which made this aircraft the fastest-selling new commercial jetliner in history.
  • Growing threats. Conflict doesn’t magically disappear and there will be a need to combat new threats by increasing offensive weapons.
  • Economic expansion. Improvements in the economy will lead to job creation, economic growth and improved tax revenue that would help defense spending.

Sacknoff says that there are plenty of differences between perception and reality when it comes to the aerospace and defense sector. Sacknoff says that people tend to compare defense sector cycles alongside the U.S. economy. “The problem with making comparisons is that people tend to think we’re in a safer environment, and the world is not necessarily a safer place.”

A few cases in point: More troops are going to Afghanistan and a pullout, which could take awhile, isn’t expected to begin until 2012. We’re also still in Iraq. Iran seems unwilling to listen to the United States’ warnings, there are computer hackers working day and night to get into the government’s computers. “There’s still a lot of risk in the world,” he says.

Even after 2012, Sacknoff says, defense spending may not abate much as the government uses much of its defense budget to replace things left behind in the wars. That includes bullets, tanks and other equipment.

Many defense companies also benefit from diversification, Sacknoff points out. Many of them have their hands in commercial projects, cyber security and even clean energy. These companies are well aware of the cycles and have positioned themselves to cope as defense spending ebbs and flows.

  • PowerShares Aerospace and Defense (PPA: 17.225 0.00 0.00%): up 22.8% year-to-date; Boeing is 6.4%

  • iShares Dow Jones US Aerospace (ITA: 51.62 0.00 0.00%): up 25.8% year-to-date; Boeing is 7.4%

2009-12-06

Where To Look In A World Starved For Yield

The Federal Reserve’s policy of pegging interest rates to the floor is having a slew of consequences. It’s driving down the dollar. It’s helping fuel new asset bubbles. It’s leading to the misallocation of economic resources.

And perhaps most importantly for you, it’s punishing savers. By cutting the federal funds rate to a range of zero percent to 0.25 percent, the Fed has forced rates on short-term Treasuries, short-term certificates of deposit, and money market accounts into the gutter. You can’t earn squat on these safe, cash-like investments.

So where can you turn for the income you need to pay your bills … support your family … and maybe someday help put your grandkids through college?

You know I don’t like long-term Treasuries because Washington is torpedoing this nation’s balance sheet. And I’m not a big fan of most longer-term U.S. debt, including corporate and junk bonds. They’ve rallied so far, so fast that they’re looking dramatically overvalued.

Instead, I have three alternatives that are worth considering. Let’s talk about them now …

Income Alternative #1: MLPs Offer a Nice Way to Hunt For Yield in the Energy Sector

We’ve seen a sharp rally in the price of all kinds of energy products. Crude oil prices have surged 139 percent from last December. Gasoline is up 157 percent. Heating oil costs almost twice what it did last winter. Even lowly natural gas has climbed from around $2.40 per million British Thermal Units to around $4.50 now.

MLPs can make money regardless of what happens to  the price of oil.
MLPs can make money regardless of what happens to the price of oil.

But let’s be honest … the business of exploring for, producing, and trading energy is relatively high risk. You can spend years - and hundreds of millions of dollars - drilling for oil and gas. If the price tanks somewhere along the line, your investment can blow up in your face!

Yet consumers and businesses never completely STOP using energy, regardless of the cost. That means the industry still needs to store and transport gas, oil, and other petroleum-based products around the country each and every day.

That’s where energy Master Limited Partnerships, or MLPs, come in. These companies own many of the storage and distribution networks that energy companies use to get their products to market.

They get paid whether energy prices rise or fall. And because of how they’re organized (in the corporate sense), they spin off handsome dividends. It’s not unusual to see yields of 5 percent, 6 percent, 7 percent, or more in the sector.

Don’t get me wrong: MLPs still trade like stocks. So there’s definitely price risk involved. But I believe they’re a solid alternative for yield-starved investors.

Income Alternative #2: Utilities Spinning Off More Income Than Any U.S. Treasury

Another sector that offers juicy yields: Utilities. That includes natural gas providers, electric companies, and even telecommunications firms.

Businesses need electricity, even during a recession.
Businesses need electricity, even during a recession.

These businesses clearly aren’t recession proof. When the economy tanks, so does demand for power and telecommunications services. But the swings are typically much less severe than what you see in housing, technology, or manufacturing. And even during the worst downturns, those core businesses still tend to spin off healthy amounts of cash.

Again, you don’t have to look very hard to find handsome dividend yields in the sector. Many leading utilities yield at least 5 percent or 6 percent. That’s better than you can get anywhere on the Treasury curve, considering that even 30-year bonds yield just 4.31 percent.

That’s not all, either. I’m seeing a heck of a lot of healthy stock charts in the sector, with breakouts all over the place. Buy the right stock at the right time and you can earn a juicy yield AND rack up some capital gains.

Income Alternative #3: Go West … East … South - Anywhere but Here!

Of course, you don’t have to keep all your fixed income money in the U.S. if you don’t want to. In fact, you probably shouldn’t!

A falling dollar can give foreign bonds an extra  boost.
A falling dollar can give foreign bonds an extra boost.

Why? The dollar has been falling virtually nonstop for months now. That hurts foreign owners of our debt. But the process works in REVERSE for U.S.-based investors.

If you buy a foreign, fixed income security, and the dollar falls, the dollar value of your holdings RISES. Any principal and interest payments you receive in the foreign currency translate back into more dollars when you repatriate the money.

On top of that, foreign yields are much more attractive than those offered here in the U.S. Two-year Treasuries yield just 0.77 percent here in the U.S. But the same maturity security yields 1.16 percent in Canada … 1.35 percent in Germany … and 1.65 percent in Spain. In New Zealand, you’re looking at 4.03 percent. In Australia, 4.32 percent. In Indonesia, 5.2 percent.

Bottom line: You can earn higher yields AND get a currency “kicker” by investing in foreign, fixed income securities. Foreign dividend-paying stocks are another alternative. Many yield much more than their U.S. counterparts.

Is Wall Street Getting A Reprieve From The Capital Constraints Of FASB 166 & 167? - So That They Can Pay More Bonuses

Is Wall Street getting a reprieve from the capital constraints that would be effected by the implementation of FASB 166 and 167? I first broached this topic a month ago in writing, “12th Street Capital Reviews FASB 166 and 167 and Tells Us Why Wall Street Will Need More Capital”:

In brief, FASB 166 and 167 will require hundreds of billions in assets to be moved from off-balance sheet vehicles onto the balance sheets of the financial institutions. As those assets, which are embedded in an array of securitization transactions, come on balance sheet, the banks and non-banks alike will have to raise more capital to support the growth in their balance sheets. Best guesstimate is that the institutions will need to raise capital in the tens of billions.

12th Street Capital provides us updated developments on this very important topic with the following release:

A bit of good news for banks today. In a Bloomberg interview, FDIC Chairman Sheila Bair said that she is in favor of giving banks “some breathing room” to raise the additional capital that will be required to support the hundreds of billions of dollars of securitized assets that will be consolidated onto their balance sheets as as result of the implementation of FASB Statements 166 and 167. Bair said she hopes to have the matter voted on at the December 15 meeting of the FDIC’s board.

Bair noted in the interview that there is not yet agreement among the banking regulators on the question of “breathing room.” The background is that FASB Statements 166 and 167 change the GAAP sale rules for securitizations and will require most off-balance sheet deals to be consolidated back onto their sponsor’s balance sheets (assuming that the sponsor retained an interest in the deal and control). The Statements are effective beginning January 1 for calendar year companies.

In September, the FDIC, Fed, OCC and OTC jointly issued proposed rules that would require banks to comply with their leverage and risk-based capital requirements with no grace period or “breathing room” to accomodate their grossed up balance sheets. The comment period on the proposed rules ended October 15. Final rules have not yet been published.

Why are FASB 166 and 167 being implemented? So that a true measure of integrity can be effected in assessing banks’ books and balance sheets. Clearly, the integrity of operations within the SIVs (structured investment vehicles) housed off-balance sheets were massively violated by the banks.

Pardon my cynicism and sarcasm, but I wonder if the capital needed by the banks to comply with FASB 166 and 167 has already been committed to the bonus pools of the banks. Who takes the risk? Taxpayers. Who takes the money? Wall Street.

The joke continues.

IBM’s Servers Win New Business

International Business Machines (IBM: 127.25 -0.30 -0.24%) announced that Iskon, a leading Croatian Telco services provider in the alternative broadband market has chosen IBM’s blade server and storage virtualization platform to optimize its data backup and archive platform. By deploying energy-efficient IBM blade servers in a BladeCenter chassis, Iskon’s infrastructure will improve.

Iskon has also selected IBM’s Storage System DS5300 and San Volume Controller for the storage, back-up and archiving of data. Iskon has replaced the previously installed Hewlett-Packard’s (HPQ: 49.79 +0.83 +1.70%) server line with IBM’s new blade server and storage virtualization platform. The new servers from IBM will help Iskon streamline internal processes, reduce uncertainty and help ensure continuous service for customers.

IBM’s system will also support Iskon’s business growth, enabling it to introduce new services. IBM is the leader in the server market. According to Interactive Data Corporation (IDC: 25.51 +0.17 +0.67%), IBM had the strongest performance in the third quarter of 2009 followed by Hewlett-Packard (HPQ: 49.79 +0.83 +1.70%). IDC also said that both IBM and Hewlett-Packard are taking away share from Dell Inc. (DELL: 13.46 0.00 0.00%) and Sun Microsystems Inc. (JAVA: 8.44 +0.21 +2.55%) in the server market.

IBM grew its revenue market share to 31.8%, although sales declined 12.9% to $3.3 billion. That was slightly better than HP, whose market share inched up to 30.9%, as revenue declined 16.8%. IBM’s Systems and Technology segment has also been growing.

The company is currently focusing its investments on differentiating technologies with high growth potential including POWER6, BladeCenter QS22, BladeCenter-S, Systems z10, high-performance computing, virtualization and energy efficiency as part of its long-term target for 2010. In 2009, IBM unveiled a new generation of Intel Xeon processor 5500 series-based System x servers and launched a new generation of x86 System x Racks, Blades, iDataPlex Technology and Management Software.

According to IDC’s new data, server sales continued to fall in the third quarter but was better than expected, boosted by stronger demand for x86 servers as companies begin to substitute aging IT hardware. IBM’s continued expansion in the server business will extend the company’s leadership in energy efficiency, security and resiliency. This should also give IBM a competitive advantage over Hewlett Packard.

We maintain our Neutral rating on IBM.

Why Politicians Enjoy Bashing Bernanke

We had a couple of bullies in my small high school, but I’m told that they grew up into pretty good citizens. Time seems to cure that ugly disease in most people. The main exception is our elected representatives. Something happens to them when they climb up on the dias and see the red light on the TV cameras. Senator Jeckle becomes senator Hyde. They get to show their constituents how tough they are. I don’t watch bull fights, dog fights, or rooster fights, and it’s getting harder to watch congressional hearings.

What I don’t understand is why politicians think their deviant behavior is so appealing back home. They apparently don’t have a very high regard for the home folks, especially those in Kentucky and Vermont. My guess is that those folks are better than their Senators give them credit for. Surely blue grass and autumn leaves have some calming effect.

To my way of thinking, Chairman Bernanke (and Secretary Paulson) deserve the highest praise for saving our financial system and avoiding another great depression. I’ve defended Bernanke in blogs, speeches and TV appearances (see previous post). So have wise people like Warren Buffett. But our way of thinking, apparently, is not making any headway.

I heard yesterday that a major poll showed a majority against Bernanke’s reappointment. I guess that shows the power of financial TV and its guests who compete with each other in outrageousness hoping to be invited back.

When I heard those poll results, I thought of my forty something years making speeches to audiences who had no idea what the Fed is and how it works. That these people now have a negative opinion of Ben Bernanke just doesn’t compute.

Maybe they think of him as a “pointy-headed bureaucrat” to use a populist label popularized by George Wallace many years ago, since everyone seems to be scrambling to be a populist these days. Of course, neither term fits, but “round-headed academic” hasn’t been invented yet.

I sat next to Chairman Bernanke at FOMC meetings during most of his approximately three years as a Fed Governor before he left to become Chairman of the Council of Economic Advisors. My favorite and most memorable whispered conversation with him during lulls and breaks had nothing to do with inflation targeting or crisis management. It was when I was playing small-town Georgia country boy and he informed me that he grew up in a small town in South Carolina not all that far from where I grew up in north Georgia. My shock turned into amazement when he added that he waited tables at “South of the Border,” a place you have to see to believe. Google described it with understatement as “a classic freeway tourist trap, pyrotechnics bonanza, and vacation theme world.” I seem to remember snakes in cages, but I may be misremembering. Anyway, that exit on Interstate 95 has been named after the Chairman. Cool.

Ben’s shocking revelation didn’t necessarily make him a regular guy, but it helped. He is still burdened by having attended a college that didn’t have a good football team.

With NBC Deal Done, Comcast Becomes The New Cable Juggernaut

Comcast Corp. (GE: 16.20 +0.20 +1.25%) NBC Universal Inc. for $13.75 billion in cash and assets, giving the cable giant lucrative cable channels including SyFy, Bravo and the USA Network, as well as Universal Pictures and its related theme parks in California, Florida and Japan.

But for GE, the deal is a precursor to and eventual exit from the media business.

This isn’t just one of the biggest media deals, this is arguably one of the biggest M&A deals in years,” Wunderlich Securities Inc. analyst Matthew Harrigan, who recommends buying Comcast shares, told Bloomberg News.

In a move to assure investors this isn’t another AOL-Time Warner (TWX: 31.42 +0.31 +1.00%) merger, Comcast increased its dividend by 40% and will finish its $3.6 billion stock repurchase program in the next three years. The company’s shares were up 6.49% in trading, closing at $15.91 per share yesterday.

This is not expansionism a la conglomerates of the past in media,” media mogul and IAC/InterActiveCorp (IACI: 19.07 +0.07 +0.37%) Chairman and Chief Executive Officer Barry Diller said at the Reuters Global Media Summit on Wednesday. “This is a very disciplined, very smart group with huge resources in their cable, telephony, data businesses that is doing this with an absolute sense of strategy.”

NBC’s cable channels have been the main drivers behind its profitability this year, helping it post an operating income of $1.7 billion with sales of $11.2 billion in the first nine months of the year, despite weakness at its fourth-place broadcast network, movie studio and theme parks.

“If [Comcast is] able to turn NBCU around creatively, put a tight collar on the studio and the broadcast network and the ad market improves, this could be a pretty good transaction,” Wunderlich’s Harrigan told Bloomberg.

Providing the Wires Wasn’t Enough…

As Money Morning reported in an analysis last month, the deal gives Comcast a hedge against increasing competition for its television subscribers. The cable giant enjoyed decades of practically no competition until the mid-1990s, when satellite operators like The DirecTV Group (DTV: 32.66 +0.76 +2.38%) started chipping away at Comcast’s tens of millions of subscribers. Then in the middle of this decade, fiber optic-based carriers such as Verizon Communications Inc. (VZ: 32.70 +0.01 +0.03%) came on to the scene, exacerbating a nagging problem Comcast already had with DirecTV.

With NBC in the fold, Comcast will expand its still-tiny advertising take via NBC’s cable lineup, which currently accounts for just 3.6% of sales. Several of these channels include well-performing original shows, which pundits say NBC doesn’t have enough of on its broadcast network.

NBC’s over-the-air network telecasts numerous reality shows like “The Biggest Loser” and programs such as “The Jay Leno Show” in the 10 p.m. hour five days a week, which, despite its low cost, is losing big in the ratings to the likes of crime dramas like “CSI: Miami.”

Comcast will also gain from the sales of programming to the very rivals it competes with. Still, don’t expect it to leverage its position with competitors; Comcast will likely have to make concessions to appease regulators, such as sharing its Philadelphia regional sports programming.

As the United States’ largest cable provider, Comcast anticipates high regulatory hurdles and is taking a proactive stance. In an open letter, the company said it would make a number of public interest commitments in its filing with the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) and other government bodies.

One such commitment is to keep the over-the-air NBC network free, scotching pre-deal fears to the contrary.

“Notwithstanding the turbulence in the current media marketplace and the ongoing threats to the business model of a national broadcast network, the combined company remains committed to continuing to provide free over-the-air television through its O&O [owned and operated] stations and through local broadcast affiliates across the nation,” wrote David L. Cohen, an executive vice president at Comcast.

Despite the expected vigorous questions for Comcast and GE officials by regulators, antitrust experts expect the deal to pass.

A Better Environment for GE?

For GE, the deal will take it one step closer to returning to its core business of making heavy equipment such as electricity-generating turbines, and a better cash position, including the $8 billion Comcast will pay it when the deal closes.

The company is also expected to exercise its option to cash in its remaining 49% stake over seven years.

“Having (cash) sit on the balance sheet, given all of the uncertainty in the economic environment, is not a bad thing,” said Steven Winoker, an analyst at Bernstein Research told Reuters. “Right now it pays to be conservative given all the economic uncertainty that’s hanging out there.”

GE tried unsuccessfully last year to divest its appliance and credit card businesses, and with the ink dry on the NBC deal and the environment for mergers & acquisitions (M&A) improving, the company could try again to unload the units, but executives say there’s no plans to do so.

“I would really look at the portfolio today as being very stable,” after the deal closes and the company completes its restructuring of GE Capital, Chairman and CEO Jeffrey Immelt said in a conference call yesterday.

Still, Bernstein’s Winoker didn’t rule out another try at selling additional units.

“That’s what you have to say at this point in time, until you have another exit path,” he said. “Arguably it’s no more attractive as a business today than it was a year ago.”

GE will get almost $6.5 billion from Comcast between signing and closing, and contribute its programming businesses and certain other properties valued at $7.25 billion. NBC will borrow $9.1 billion to give to GE, which will pay $2 billion for 38% of Vivendi SA’s NBC stake if the merger isn’t closed by September.

Immelt expects to get regulatory approval for the deal within nine to 12 months, making it likely the conglomerate will pay for the Vivendi stake. Shares of GE fell 0.44% yesterday, closing at $16.00 per share.

Why Transportation ETFs Matter

The transportation sector is an indicator of our economic health. This means that as the United States and others rebuilt, this sector’s exchange traded funds (ETFs) could have a nice boost in store.

Industries that make up the transportation sector include airlines, railways, package carriers, even oil and gas pipelines. Transportation is actually the most important sector we have, says David Fessler for Investment U. Why? Growth or contraction here serves as a proxy for both U.S. and global economic growth. Transportation accounts for 3% of national GDP.

Warren Buffett seems to agree: the rail sector is one on which he’s bullish.

The industry is highly correlated to consumers: as they buy more, there’s a need to transport more.

Changes are taking place, though:

  • Intermodal shipping, which combines highways and rails, has become popular because it reduces fuel costs. Intermodal volumes have been flat, to slightly up, since June.
  • Domestic container volumes are up slightly, by 1.3% in the third quarter.
  • iShares Dow Jones Transportation Sector (IYT: 73.78 +1.48 +2.05%): up 16.7% year-to-date

  • Claymore/NYSEArca Airline (FAA: 28.88 +1.43 +5.21%): up 21% in the last three months

  • Claymore Delta Global Shipping (SEA: 13.64 +0.05 +0.37%): up 32% year-to-date

  • PowerShares Global Progressive Transport (PTRP: 27.17 -0.08 -0.29%): up 48.9% year-to-date

Stocks To Watch Friday 4 December

Speculative plays

JDSU - JDS Uniphase could be a takeover target according to many analysts. Chart looks bullish in all time frames.
CRIS - Curis - Watching for a close above $3.09
DRYS - DryShips, Inc. - Watching for a close above $6.50
LVLT - Level 3 Communications Inc. - Watching for a close above $1.46
AMD - Advanced Micro Devices Inc. - Keep an eye for a possible breakout over $8.06
RMBS - Rambus had a great day on Thursday. $22.20 is the next resistance level that if broken, could send shares back to retest $26.41
OSIR - Osiris has broken an Inverted & Shoulders pattern. Target $8.

List of stocks where MA 13 crossed below the MA 50 ( Bearish Cross ) on Thursday

LVS - LAS VEGAS SANDS CP
NWSA - News Corp Ltd pf
WU - Western Union
SCHW - CHARLES SCHWAB CORP
SNPS - Synopsys, Inc.
PLCE - The Children’s Plac
CMI - CUMMINS ENGINE CO INC
CNX - CONSOL Energy Inc
IVZ - INVESCO LTD
CPWR - Compuware Corporation
APA - APACHE CORP
BCRX - BioCryst Pharmaceutical
BLL - BALL CORP
PLL - PALL CORP
BWLD - BUFFALO WILD WINGS INC
LHO - LASALLE HOTEL PROPE
BWA - BorgWarner Inc
OIS - Oil States International
ARST - ARCSIGHT INC
EMS - EMERGENCY MEDICAL S
OWW - Orbitz Worldwide Inc
KOOL - THERMOGENESIS Corp.
APTD - Alpha Trade.com
MCZ - Mad Catz Interactive
XTEX - Crosstex Energy LP
DARA - Point Therapeutics Inc
BRY - BERRY PETROLEUM CO
AM - AMERICAN GREETINGS
AIN - ALBANY INTERNATIONAL
QSII - Quality Systems, Inc.
WZE - Wizzard Software Corp
LQMT - Liquidmetal Technology
RWX - SPDR DJ WILSHRE
ABMC - American Bio Medical
DRW - WisdomTree Intrntnl
CSSV - Caspian Services
DIVX - DivX Inc
ACPW - Active Power, Inc.

List of stocks where MA 13 crossed above the MA 50 ( Bullish Cross ) on Thursday

ETFC - E*Trade Financial Inc
RF - REGIONS FINANCIAL CORP
CTIC - Cell Therapeutics
RFMD - RF Micro Devices, Inc.
ICOC - ICO, Inc.
CSE - CAPITALSOURCE INC
KRE - SPDR KBW RGL BK
PEIX - PACIFICETHANOLINC
MTU - Mitsubishi Tokyo Fi
UTIW - UTI Worldwide Inc
CPST - Capstone Turbine Co
ANDS - ANADYS PHARMACEUTICAL
NUAN - Nuance Communications
GSIT - GSI Technology
ELN - ELAN CORP P L C
NMR - NOMURA HOLDINGS
RGNC - REGENCY ENERGY
ACH - ALUMINUM CORP OF CH
PKG - PACKAGING CORP
RAH - RALCORP HOLDINGS INC
TM - TOYOTA MOTOR CORP
CMIN - Nordic Nickel Ltd
GIL - GILDAN ACTIVEWEAR INC
PFCB - P.F.Chang’s China B
ALXN - Alexion Pharmaceutical
CYN - CITY NATIONAL CORP
IRF - INTERNATIONAL RECTI
NTLS - NTELOS HOLDINGS CORP
UTEK - Ultratech Stepper
OMCL - Omnicell, Inc.
AIS - Antares Pharma Inc
WFD - WESTFIELD FINANCIAL
PNY - PIEDMONT NAT GAS CO
TRST - TrustCo Bank Corp NY
BWAV - GOFISH CORPORATION
CAVM - Cavium Networks Inc
NCZ - NICHOLAS APPLEGATE
RVTI - RIVAL TECHNOLOGIES INC
TAN - Claymore MAC Global
PAWEF - Pacific North West
NWSB - Northwest Bancorp
TRS - Trimas Corp
ESD - Western Asset Emerg
VBR - VANGUARD SM CAP VAL
MLNK - CMGI, Inc.
LG - LACLEDE GAS CO
RMG - RiskMetrics Group Inc
ISCA - International Speed

List of stocks where MA 50 crossed below the MA 200 ( Dead Cross ) on Thursday

BK - Bank Ny Mellon
STEC - STEC Inc
TSO - Tesoro Corp
CSR - CHINA SECURITY & SU
VRGY - Verigy
SGMS - Scientific Games Corp
FBC - FLAGSTAR BANCORP INC
MRNA - Nastech Pharmaceutical
SUF - SULPHCO INC
PSPF - PURCHASE POINT MEDI
GNV - GSC INVESTMENT CORP
DIVX - DivX Inc

List of stocks where MA 50 crossed above the MA 200 ( Golden Cross ) on Thursday

BSBR - Banco Santander Bra
BLUD - Immucor, Inc.
SCU - Scana Corp

List of stocks where the chart is displaying a cup and handle formation

ORCL - Oracle Corporation
UNH - UNITEDHEALTH GROUP INC
WU - Western Union
NLY - Annaly Capital Mana
HON - HONEYWELL INTERNATIONAL
XL - XL CAPITAL LTD
NYB - New York Community
TEVA - Teva Pharmaceutical
PCAR - PACCAR Inc
VNO - VORNADO REALTY TRUST
VNQ - VANGUARD SPEC FDS R
WLP - Wellpoint Inc
PGR - PROGRESSIVE CORP
WSM - WILLIAMS SONOMA INC
BKS - BARNES & NOBLE INC
SSRI - Silver Standard Res
PCL - PLUM CREEK TIMBER CO
GTI - GrafTech International
GNK - GENCO SHIPPING & TR
DRH - DIAMONDROCK HOSPITAL
PSEC - Prospect Cptl Cp
CVH - COVENTRY HEALTH CAR
SHLD - KMart Corp
ETR - ENTERGY CORP HLDG CO
WPI - WATSON PHARMACEUTICALS
SNY - SANOFI-AVENTIS ADS
BMR - BIOMED REALTY TR INC
RGC - Regal Entertainment
OHI - OMEGA HEALTHCARE IN
EV - EATON VANCE CORP
NU - NORTHEAST UTILITIES
THOR - Thoratec Laboratories
AMSC - American Supercondutor
SBH - Sally Beauty Holdings
BWLD - BUFFALO WILD WINGS INC
BRE - B R E PROPERTIES IN
AEL - AMER EQUITY INV LIF
NAK - NORTHERN DYNASTY MI
TECD - Tech Data Corporation
RWR - SPDR DJ WS REIT
WEC - WISCONSIN ENERGY CORP
OCR - OMNICARE INC
ACC - AMER CAMPUS COMMUNI
MIN - M F S INTERMEDIATE
TK - Teekay Co
TTMI - TTM Technologies Inc
KTC - KOREA TELECOM CORP
SFY - SWIFT ENERGY CO
MICC - Millicom International
PCH - POTLATCH CORP
GAB - GABELLI EQUITY TRUS
APL - Atlas Pipeline Part
TRP - Transcanada Corp
AWH - ALLIED WORLD ASSURA
PNY - PIEDMONT NAT GAS CO
GMT - G A T X CORP
THS - TREEHOUSE FOODS INC
MNTA - MOMENTA PHARMACEUTICAL .
HRC - Hil-Rom Holdings
SVR - SYNIVERSE HOLDINGS INC
MEOH - Methanex Corporation
BRC - BRADY CORP
CVO - MAIL WELL INC
EQY - Equity One Inc
IFN - INDIA FUND INC
CRNT - Ceragon Network

List of stocks where the chart is displaying an ascending triangle

CSCO - Cisco Systems, Inc.
MOT - MOTOROLA INC
ORCL - Oracle Corporation
FDO - FAMILY DOLLAR STORE.
TSN - TYSON FOODS INC CL A
YGE - Yingli Green Energy
HCP - HCP Inc
GFI - GOLD FIELDS LTD
MAR - MARRIOTT INTL INC NEW
DVN - Devon Energy Cp
DAN - Dana Corp
WIN - VALOR COMMUNICATION
ERIC - LM Ericsson Telepho
CNP - CenterPoint Energy Inc
PCAR - PACCAR Inc
TTWO - Take-Two Interactiv
EQR - EQUITY RESIDNTL PRO
DDR - Developers Diversif
PAYX - Paychex, Inc.
SPG - SIMON PROPERTY GROU
BJ - BJ’S WHOLESALE CLUB.
AMB - AMB Property Corp
TXT - TEXTRON INC
TWC - Time Warner Cable Inc
TNE - Tele Norte Leste Pa
CAG - CONAGRA INC
TIE - TITANIUM METALS CORP
SLG - SL Green Realty Corp
BEAV - BE Aerospace, Inc.
PSEC - Prospect Cptl Cp
BMC - BMC Software Inc
DLR - DIGITAL REALTY TRUS
DNDN - Dendreon Corporation
FNFG - First Niagara Finan
SANM - Sanmina Corporation
JNK - SPDR Lehman High Yi
SI - SIEMENS A G ADR
CS - CREDIT SUISSE GROUP
EFX - EQUIFAX INC
AZSEY - ALLIANZ Se
RHT - Red Hat, Inc.
EPD - ENTERPRISE PRODUCTS
EV - EATON VANCE CORP
PVH - PHILLIPS VAN HEUSEN
ACS - AFFILIATED COMPUTER
TRN - TRINITY INDUSTRIES INC
INFA - Informatica Corp
PKI - PERKINELMER INC
FMC - F M C CORP
NAL - NEW ALLIANCE BANCSH
EZU - ISHARES MSCI EMU ID
JLL - JONES LANG LASALLE INC
HAIN - The Hain Celestial
POL - PolyOne Corp
HYG - iShares iBoxx $ Hig
SIAL - Sigma-Aldrich Corpo
QGEN - Qiagen N.V.
ARE - ALEXANDRIA R E EQTY
MTZ - MASTEC INC
ETP - HERITAGE PROPANE PT.
IDXX - IDEXX Laboratories
AWF - Alliancebernst Global
EPR - ENTERTAINMENT PROP
ECLP - Eclipsys Corporation
SON - SONOCO PRODUCTS CO
PWRD - Perfect World Co Ltd
HME - Home Properties Inc
WBSN - Websense, Inc.
JQC - Nuveen Ml St Fund
MASI - Masimo Corp

Oversold stocks - RSI has been below 30 in the last 5 days

ING - Ing Groep NV ADR
JEC - JACOBS ENGR GROUP INC
NITE - Knight Capital Inc
DZZ - DB Gold Double Short
HOTT - Hot Topic, Inc.
ADTN - ADTRAN, Inc.
ITG - INVESTMENT TECHNOLO
BEBE - bebe stores, inc.
SMSI - Smith Micro Softwar
LAD - LITHIA MOTORS INC
RAIL - FREIGHTCAR AMERICA
CONN - CONN’S INC

Overbought stocks - RSI has been above 70 in the last 5 days

DTV - Directv A
FTR - Citizens Communicat
BNI - BURLINGTON NORTHERN
RX - IMS HEALTH INC
CPB - CAMPBELL SOUP CO
CYTX - CYTORI THERAPEUTICS
HNT - Health Net Inc
STAR - Starent Networks Corp
SJM - Smucker JM Co
MDVN - Orion Acquisition C
IWA - IOWA TELECOMMUN SVC
SMTL - Semitool, Inc.
CAAS - CHINA AUTOMOTIVE SY
LSTZA - Liberty Media Corp
AVCT - Avocent Corporation
IAU - ISHARES COMEX GOLD
REV - Revlon Inc
RHB - REHABCARE GROUP INC
EW - EDWARDS LIFESCIENCE
FIF - FINANCIAL FEDERAL CORP
KNDI - Kandi Tech Corp

New 52-week High stocks

AMD - ADVANCED MICRO DVCS
MSFT - Microsoft Corporation
VALE - Vale S A ADR
GLW - CORNING INC
AMZN - Amazon.com, Inc.
TXN - TEXAS INSTRUMENTS INC
MRVL - Marvell Technology
PBR - PETROLEO BRASILEIRO SA
JNJ - JOHNSON & JOHNSON
SMH - Semiconductors HOLD
ITUB - Itau Unibnco Adr
HUN - HUNTSMAN CORPORATION
RMBS - Rambus, Inc.
DIS - DISNEY CO WALT HLDG CO
POT - POTASH CORP SASKATC
DUK - DUKE ENERGY CORP
BBY - BEST BUY CO INC
MOS - Mosaic Co
MDT - MEDTRONIC INC
PBR.A - PETROLEO BRASILEIRO
NG - NOVAGOLD RESOURCES INC
ICOC - ICO, Inc.
HCP - HCP Inc
PSS - Collective brands
CTSH - Cognizant Technolog
GGWPQ - GENERAL GROWTH PROP
DAN - Dana Corp
NTAP - NetApp Inc
DD - DUPONT E I DE NEMOU
ADI - ANALOG DEVICES INC
WIN - VALOR COMMUNICATION
XL - XL CAPITAL LTD
AEP - AMERICAN ELEC PWR C
ED - CONSOLIDATED EDISON.
VNO - VORNADO REALTY TRUST
ACN - Accenture Plc
WY - WEYERHAEUSER CO
A - Agilent Technologie
CI - C I G N A CORP
FDX - FedEx Corporation
VIV - Telesp Celular Part.
D - DOMINION RESOURCES
PBG - PEPSI BOTTLING GROUP
SPG - SIMON PROPERTY GROUP
RCL - ROYAL CARIBBEAN CRU
SYK - STRYKER CORP
PGN - Progress Energy Inc
ASIA - AsiaInfo Holdings
CIG - CEMIG COMPANIA ENER.
EL - ESTEE LAUDER COMPANIES
BNI - BURLINGTON NORTHERN
STD - BANCO SANTANDER CEN
CGA - China Green Agricul
AGU - AGRIUM INC
OSK - Oshkosh Corp
NVS - NOVARTIS A G
DGP - DB Gold Double Long
MVL - Marvel Entertainmen
TE - TECO ENERGY INC
CREE - Cree, Inc.
EIX - EDISON INTERNATIONAL
DOX - AMDOCS LTD
WFSL - Washington Federal
NI - NISOURCE INC
XEL - XCEL ENERGY INC
TOT - Total Sa
CEG - Constellation Energ
GES - GUESS INC
PCG - P G & E CORP HLDG CO
GSIC - GSI Commerce, Inc.
BDX - Becton Dickinson
WLL - WHITING PETROLEUM CP
VTR - Ventas Inc
CSIQ - Canadian Solar Inc
SLG - SL Green Realty Corp
BEAV - BE Aerospace, Inc.
WCRX - Wrner Chil Plc A
UN - UNILEVER N V
ASML - ASM Lithography Holdings
CE - CELANESE CORPORATION
SRE - SEMPRA ENERGY
PCLN - priceline.com Incoration
HCN - Health Care REIT Inc
VISN - VisionChina Media Inc
DLR - DIGITAL REALTY TRUS
CBE - Cooper Inds Plc
MOO - Mk Vector Agribs
XEC - Cimarex Energy Co
DVA - DaVita Inc
TPX - TEMPUR-PEDIC INTL INC
MWV - MEADWESTVACO CORP
VECO - Veeco Instruments Inc.
SBAC - SBA Communications
DTE - D T E ENERGY CO
GOL - GOL LINHAS AEREAS I
ATHN - athenahealth Inc
VTI - Vanguard Total Stocks
CYTX - CYTORI THERAPEUTICS
TSL - Trina Solar Ltd
HAS - HASBRO INC
LIWA - Lihua International
EFX - EQUIFAX INC
DWA - DreamWorks Animation
HNT - Health Net Inc
NHP - NATIONWIDE HLTH PRO
ATHR - ATHEROS COMMUN INC
RPM - R P M INC
MELI - MercadoLibre Inc
ROSE - ROSETTA RESOURCES
MED - Medifast Inc
CTRP - CTRIP.COM INTL LTD ADS
FMX - FOMENTO ECONOMICO M
SJM - Smucker JM Co
MDVN - Orion Acquisition C
DPL - D P L INC
TSTC - Milestone Capital Inc
RSG - REPUBLIC SERVICES INC
SHO - SUNSTONE HOTEL INVE
HSP - HOSPIRA INC
COL - ROCKWELL COLLINS INC
EBR - Centrais Eletricas
PNW - PINNACLE WEST CAP CORP
FBR - Votorantim Adr
HEW - Hewitt Associates Inc
AVT - AVNET INC
IWA - IOWA TELECOMMUN SVC
TAM - TAM S.A.
HLS - HEALTHSOUTH Corp.
SFL - SHIP FINANCE INTL LTD
APH - AMPHENOL CORP
IOC - Interoil Cp
HMC - HONDA MOTOR CO LTD
TII - Telmex Internaciona
YSI - U-STORE-IT TRUST
EEB - Claymore BNY BRIC
EQIX - Equinix, Inc.
CSC - COMPUTER SCIENCES CORP
LL - Lumber Liquidators Inc
PCP - PRECISION CASTPARTS
JAG - JAGUAR MINING INC
ISRG - Intuitive Surgical
VPRT - Vistaprint Nv
SPR - Spirit Aerosystems
CNK - Cinemark Holdings Inc
NLC - NALCO HOLDING CO
POL - PolyOne Corp
ZGEN - ZymoGenetics, Inc.
PHG - Koninklijke Philips
CNH - CNH GLOBAL NV
WCG - WELLCARE HEALTH
CM - CANADIAN IMPERIAL B.
MPW - Medical Props TR
OKE - ONEOK INC
HRBN - HARBIN ELECTRIC INC
SUG - SOUTHERN UNION CO
SRCL - Stericycle, Inc.
DFT - Dupont Fabros Techn
KSU - Kansas City Souther
EPAY - Bottomline Technolo
SDXC - Switch & Data Facil
REV - Revlon Inc
IPXL - Impav labs Inc
TEF - TELEFONICA SA
CIB - BANCOLOMBIA S A
MDU - M D U RESOURCES GRO
OGE - O G E ENERGY CORP
CBT - CABOT CORP
BRF - Market Vector Brazil
INP - Barclays ipath MSCI
RMD - RESMED INC
RHB - REHABCARE GROUP INC
AWF - Alliancebernst Global

Stock Market News: Bank Of America Raises $19bln, Smith & Wesson, Big Lots Beat Estimates

  • Bank of America (BAC: 16.28 +0.52 +3.30%) said it raised $19.3 billion through the sale of 1.286 billion common-equivalent shares at $15 each, as it plans to repay government TARP borrowings of $45 billion
  • Human Genome Sciences (HGSI: 28.16 +0.15 +0.54%) announced it priced a planned offering of 15.5 million common shares at $26.75 a share, expected to close on December 8
  • Ford (F: 8.94 0.00 0.00%) announced plans to launch its new subcompact, the Fiesta, at a starting price of $13,995. The new model is due out next year
  • Take-Two (TTWO: 7.74 -3.18 -29.12%) said its fiscal fourth quarter results are likely to fall short of its prior outlook. The company now sees adjusted earnings of 5-10 cents. For 2010, the firm expects a loss of 40-60 cents on revenues of $1-1.2 billion, versus estimates of $0.64-$1.24 billion
  • Smith & Wesson (SWHC: 4.45 -0.82 -15.56%) reported fiscal second quarter earnings of 10 cents a share, one cent above estimates, on revenues of $108.8 million, a 49% increase from last year and ahead of analyst estimates of $104.9 million
  • Big Lots (BIG: 28.08 +4.54 +19.29%) reported adjusted fiscal third quarter earnings of 27 cents a share, 9 cents above analyst estimates, on revenues of $1.04 billion, which topped estimates of $1.02 billion. The firm lifted its fourth quarter guidance to $1.09-$1.14, and fiscal 2009 to $2.15-$2.20, ahead of estimates of $1.04 and $2.10, respectively. The company’s board also authorized a $150 million share repurchase program
  • Oppenheimer initiated coverage of Visa (V: 80.27 +0.24 +0.30%) and MasterCard (MA: 241.33 +5.17 +2.19%) with “outperform,” with price targets of $95 and $290, respectively
  • Bank of America (BAC: 16.28 +0.52 +3.30%) initiated coverage of ratings firms: Moody’s (MCO: 25.36 +1.82 +7.73%) and McGraw-Hill (MHP: 31.93 +1.87 +6.22%), both at “buy” ratings. Price targets were set for Moody’s at $28 and McGraw-Hill at $38

Japanese Canaries In A US Economic Coal Mine

Yesterday I told you how the overnight markets were selling dollars, and the NY traders were buying them, causing these swings in the currencies. The trading ranges aren’t huge in any sense of the imagination, but, they do cross significant levels each time… For instance, the euro (EUR) has crossed back and forth through the 1.51 level four times this week, and the Swiss franc (CHF) has crossed back and forth through parity a few times this week.

Yesterday was no different than the trading theme we’ve seen this week… When I signed off yesterday morning, it was a “full on” risk day… But the NY traders saw differently, and took profits. In the overnight markets, the commodity currencies have rebounded.

The main event today is the Jobs Jamboree… The forecasters are pretty adamant that the job losses will show that they are dwindling… And the media will be all over that like a cheap suit… But what they will fail to see is the fact that there probably aren’t that many jobs left that can be cut! Not without the US having soup lines… So, it won’t be as if things are getting better as the media will try to shove down our throats… Instead it will be simply a rearranging of the deck chairs on the Titanic. We’ve gone from 600,000 job loss months to 125,000 job loss months… When did 125,000 job loss months bring about parades and confetti? Expect the jobless rate to remain at 10.2%, and that should tell you all you need to know.

If the trading theme remains in place that has sent the dollar to the woodshed whenever there is good data, because it tells traders and investors that the global recovery is on better terra firma, and that the paltry yields in the US should be thrown to the side of the road, and higher yields found in countries like Australia, Brazil, New Zealand, Norway, etc.

Wait, I started a thought there, and went off on a tangent… If the trading theme remains in place, and the Jobs Jamboree prints as expected, and the media begins throwing confetti, the dollar will end the week getting sold… But that all remains to be seen.

I told you yesterday that the markets were waiting for European Central Bank (ECB) President Trichet’s, statement following the rate announcement. It was thought that Trichet would keep rates unchanged and then announce that stimulus was being removed from the economy, Which, in essence is about the same as a rate hike, for it will slow the economy, just the same…

Well, Trichet did leave rates unchanged, and then went about discussing the end of the long-term emergency loans and tighten the terms of its final 12-month tender… Let me explain that… You see, the ECB had fixed the 12-month loan rate at 1%… But now the rate will go back to being tied to the ECB’s key interest rate… So… When rates do begin to rise in the Eurozone, the 12-month loan rate will rise too.

I think this is the groundwork for tighter rates in the Eurozone… But, as a prudent central banker would do… Trichet will take it one step at a time, and see what the affects of this move have on the economy, before the key interest rate gets moved upward. Providing price stability… Wouldn’t that be nice to have a central bank that provided price stability? I mean if a central bank isn’t going to provide price stability, what good are they?

I had better stop there, I get going on the Fed Reserve, and you never know what might come out of my head!

You know how I always chastise the US officials for blaming China for the global imbalances? Well, China has begun to fight back… They have in previous statements told the US to fix their own problems and leave China alone… But now, a Chinese newspaper ran an article that quoted Chinese officials claiming that the US dollar and not the renminbi (CNY) is to blame for the global imbalances, saying that sustained US dollar weakness was to a considerable extent, holding back the recovery, and policy adjustment of other countries.

WOW! That’s an arrow right to the heart of the problem, folks! But what else can the US do? They know all too well that the deficit spending requires a cheap dollar, so it provides a discount for foreign purchasers of Treasuries with those paltry yields!

When you spend what you don’t have, you have to finance the spending… I’m reminded of a book that’s titled: Debt is Slavery: and 9 Other Things I Wish My Dad Had Taught Me… A great quick read, and one that every young person should have to read!

But… The US government? Well, they’re Big Boys; they don’t need no stinkin’ book to tell them that spending what they don’t have causes problems!

Gold took a hit yesterday, falling about $10… But it remains above $1,200, so no wink and nod from me… Remember, the dips below $1,200 should be looked at as buying opportunities… Of course we could very well see a “correction” at any time, which could knock off 20% of gold’s price, but Shoot Rudy, you could get old, and gray waiting for that correction! But it will come one day… Will it come when the god gets to $1,300 or $1,400? Or will it come now? That’s the question you have to sort out for yourself… I can’t help you with that one!

Oh! By the way, I just came up with the $1,300 and $1,400 figures; I have no idea if gold is going that high. It should… But, that remains to be seen also!

Once again, a writer is pointing a finger in the wrong direction… The Wall Street Journal printed an article by a writer that claims the deficits in the Eurozone countries like Greece, Italy, and Belgium are dangerously close to causing the Eurozone recovery to fail… Yes… That’s true… But…

Ahem… Have you looked in your own backyard? How about the deficits in California? They ARE THE 8th LARGEST ECONOMY IN THE WORLD! But we have New York, Illinois, and others that are far bigger than Greece and Belgium for crying out loud! Why isn’t someone other than me, writing about this?

Big Ben Bernanke is groveling on Capital Hill this week, as he tries to show lawmakers that he did in fact “save the world” and that the “financial crisis would have been worse without the Fed”… I guess that’s to each person’s opinion… I know that I get letters slamming me whenever I say that if the Fed weren’t around we would have been in bad shape, which we were, but we would have reached a bottom and recovered without running our national debt to the brink of bankruptcy… But that’s OK… That’s my opinion, and in no way, shape, or form will you get me to change it, especially when you attack me for that position! I’m pretty stubborn… Ask my beautiful bride, who won’t admit it, but is even more stubborn then me!

Are you following the stories around the emails that the scientists sent back and forth to each other that basically rips the global warming idea apart? Pretty amazing stuff… And to think we’ve spent billions on this, and the President is going to Copenhagen to still discuss this what we now call “Climate Change”… They dropped the global warming title, because, well… Oh, never mind… The point I was trying to make is that once again, billions of taxpayer money was spent on this.

OK.. Back to the task at hand… For about seven years now, I’ve been telling you about how the US seems to be following Japan… I’ve told you about the stimulus and deficit spending that Japan instituted in the ’90s to get their economy “back on track”, with no positive results to date. The yield curve moves through time almost mirror each other between Japan and the US and so on…

This came from an article written by the famous Ambrose Evans-Pritchard… “Miners used to keep canaries in coal mines as an early warning device. If the air was so bad that it killed the canary, the miners would soon be next. Japan may be the canary for the out-of-control deficit spending policies now being pursued in the United States and the United Kingdom.”

Yes… That’s so true… And… I’ve been telling readers that for seven years!

To recap… The Jobs Jamboree holds all the cards today… If it plays out like I think it will, then the dollar will end the week getting sold. The commodity currencies have rebounded overnight from the US session selling yesterday. And China is turning the blame finger around to the US for the global imbalances.

ETF Investors: Who Are They, Exactly?

Exchange traded funds (ETFs) are luring new assets left and right, catching on with small investors, financial advisors and institutional investors alike. But who’s holding most of them?

Institutions held about half of all ETF assets at the end of last year, according to a study. To be sure, everyday individual investors have taken a liking to ETFs, but hedge funds and pension funds held about $250 billion of the $497 billion in U.S. ETFs at the end of December 2008, according to a study by Barclays Global Investors.

A study last year done by Financial Research Corp., however, projected that ETFs will represent 6.8% of the total assets held in retail investments by 2012. It would overshadow mutual funds in market share for the first time.

In the United States, many still view ETFs as a retail product, or “mutual funds with extra bells and whistles,” Barclays analyst Deborah Fuhr says.

But it’s not so simple - there are some very key differences, reports Ian Salisbury for The Wall Street Journal. They include:

  • ETFs cost less, on average, than mutual funds do. That’s because most ETFs don’t pay an active manager to pick stocks.
  • ETFs trade throughout the day like a stock at prices that match their underlying values, combining features of conventional open- and closed-end funds.

Although ETFs initially caught on with institutional investors such as hedge funds and day traders, they are not far from being staples in the portfolios of all types of investors.

Six Impossible Things Before Breakfast

More and more these days, the financial world resembles Alice in Wonderland. With apologies to Lewis Carroll, today Justice brings you three out of six “impossible things” that are actually true.

With each passing day, the world of global finance bears more resemblance to Alice in Wonderland.

The distorting hand of government has turned the so-called “free market” into a series of funhouse mirrors… Tweedle-Dee and Tweedle-Dum have taken over the Fed and Treasury… and Wall Street looks on grinning like a contented Cheshire Cat.

At some point, the Mad Hatter’s tea party will morph into a bad acid trip. When this happens, prices (rather than walls) will begin to melt… and many investors will find themselves shocked and awed, yet again, by a hair-raising (hare-raising?) turn of events that really should merit no surprise whatsoever.

It all brings to mind a classic passage:

“I can’t believe that!” said Alice.

“Can’t you?” the Queen said in a pitying tone. “Try again: draw a long breath, and shut your eyes.”

Alice laughed. “There’s no use trying,” she said. “One can’t believe impossible things.”

“I daresay you haven’t had much practice,” said the Queen. “When I was your age, I always did it for half-an-hour a day. Why, sometimes I’ve believed as many as six impossible things before breakfast.”

And so, with apologies to Lewis Carroll, today and Monday Taipan Daily brings you six “impossible things” that are actually true. The first three will hopefully prove amusing; the second three, far less so.

1. Ben Bernanke, Top Global Thinker

The first dash of madness comes from Foreign Policy magazine - a rather snooty rag your humble editor is now embarrassed to admit subscribing to.

In its most recent issue, Foreign Policy revealed with great fanfare its list of “FP Top 100 Global Thinkers”… Ben S. Bernanke having been dubbed the No. 1 “global thinker” of them all.

“The Zen-like chairman of the U.S. Federal Reserve might not have topped the list solely for turning his superb academic career into a blueprint for action, for single-handedly reinventing the role of a central bank, or for preventing the collapse of the U.S. economy,” FP breathlessly opines. “But to have done all of these within the span of a few months is certainly one of the greatest intellectual feats of recent years.”

Wow. Just… wow. Where to begin? One practically needs a mop and bucket.

We’ll go the shorter route by paraphrasing George Orwell: “Some ideas are so stupid only an intellectual could believe them.” Here’s looking at you, Foreign Policy.

2. Yo-Ho-Ho and an IPO

For your next petit four of the strange and bizarre, we head to the lawless country of Somalia, where enterprising hijackers have set up - are you ready for this? - a pirate stock exchange.

“Four months ago, during the monsoon rains, we decided to set up this stock exchange,” a wealthy former pirate named Mohammed told Reuters. “We started with 15 ‘maritime companies’ and now we are hosting 72. Ten of them have so far been successful at hijacking.”

As it turns out, the piracy business is quite lucrative - so much so that a number of old hands have been able to retire with tens of millions. Haradheere, a fishing village 250 miles northeast of Mogadishu, has become the Somali pirate version of Greenwich, Conn. (the hedge fund capital of the world).

Some might find this development unsettling. But on the bright side, these pirates are upstanding local citizens. Not only do they support their community, they even pay a sort of property tax. A fixed percentage of pirate booty (i.e ransom money) goes directly towards Haradheere public infrastructure - hospitals, schools and so on.

Hey, you can’t knock progress, right? In implementing their version of free market capitalism, the pirates are simply emulating the “best practices” they see employed to such lucrative effect on Wall Street. And as they become more like us, our system repays the honor in kind (by becoming more like theirs)…

3. Goldie’s Got a Gun

Moving on, it seems the top execs at Goldman Sachs (GS: 167.24 +2.94 +1.79%) are nervous about all the bad publicity they are getting. So nervous, in fact, that they have decided to pack heat.

Alice Schroeder, the ex-Wall Streeter best known for her exhaustive biography of Warren Buffett, gave the inside scoop in a recent Bloomberg column. According to a friend of Schroeder’s - who in turn heard it from a banker - “senior Goldman people have loaded up on firearms and are now equipped to defend themselves if there is a populist uprising against the bank.”

Schroeder called Lucas Van Praag, the official spokesman for Goldman Sachs, to confirm the truth or falsehood of the rumors. The Goldman spokesman never called back. Meanwhile the NYPD (New York Police Department) acknowledged, in a roundabout way, that certain Goldman execs may indeed have license to carry.

In some ways this story is not very funny. But in other ways it’s amusing as all get out.

In fear that the 500-million-dollar bribe didn’t work, we now apparently have a gaggle of arugula-salad-eating, hermes-tie-wearing white-collar types running around like Dirty Harry, in fear that the greatest Wall Street moneymaking machine ever created (next to the printing press) is in danger of being sacked by a torch- and pitchfork-wielding mob.

Let’s just hope no one gets shot…

On Monday we’ll dive into the other three “impossible” selections (of a slightly more serious variety).

Did The Gold Bubble Burst Today? If So, It’s Likely To Regain Its Footing

At the time of writing gold is heading for its largest drop in almost a year. Could this be the first sign of a gold bubble popping?

At least one blog, The Mess That Greenspan Made, believes that if gold is in a bubble that can pop, it’s one that will reinflate again afterward. In order to explain, it compares the last three upward movements in the price of gold to its current trend:

“… some quick math reveals that the 2005-2006 move from just over $400 an ounce to $725 was a gain of some 70 percent and this occurred during a relatively calm period when central banks were still selling their gold reserves as fast as they could and the entire world still thought it was getting rich due to rising asset prices.

“The 2007-2008 jaunt from the high $600 range to just over $1,000 was a surge of about 50 percent which took a few months less to accomplish than the prior move. This occurred when there was growing fear of inflation but the sustainability of the global financial and monetary system was not being widely challenged as it is today.

“Depending upon how you measure it, the most recent move only amounts to about 30 percent, though you can surely get a larger number if you start the measurement in late-2008 when the entire financial world looked like it was in the process of imploding…”

The commentariat is riled up because gold is making new highs in nominal terms. However, compared to previous upward movements the current gold “bubble” hasn’t yet had a huge swing to the upside on a percentage basis.

The article also looks at how the gold “bubble” behaves when compared to other bubbles:

“Normally, after a bubble reaches its maximum point of inflation and pops, it stays popped and doesn’t begin to inflate again for many years or even decades - think Nikkei stocks in 1989, Nasdaq stocks in 2000, and housing in 2005. None of these bubbles show any real sign of inflating again…”

This second point is that the gold price has consistently regained its footing over the past decade even after it pulls back from a relatively quick run up in price. This characteristic makes it very much unlike other previous asset bubbles.

According to the post, “If this is a gold bubble, it’s unlike any other bubble that I’ve ever come across because it keeps happening over and over.”

More details, and four very insightful charts, are available from The Mess That Greenspan Made in its post on the recurring gold bubble.

Bank Of America Raises $19.3B To Exit TARP

Bank of America Corporation (BAC: 16.28 +0.52 +3.30%) has raised $19.29 billion by selling 1.286 billion common equivalent securities at $15 each, almost 5% below the company’s closing share price on Thursday. The company took this step as part of its plan to pay back $45 billion it received under the government’s Troubled Assets Relief Program (TARP).

Earlier this week, BofA announced that it will repay TARP funds using $26.2 billion in available cash and $18.8 billion in proceeds from the sale of the common equivalent securities. However, the proceeds raised from the securities are 2.6% more than $18.8 billion the company had originally planned.

Initially, BofA received $25 billion under TARP. The bank then received an additional $20 billion in January 2009 after its acquisition of Merrill Lynch, which had billions of dollars in losses unanticipated to BofA.

The move will free the bank from government involvement in its affairs and pay restrictions, even though the Treasury will hold BofA warrants. Also, the TARP repayment will make it easier for the bank to recruit a new chief executive to replace outgoing CEO Ken Lewis.

BofA’s third quarter 2009 loss came in at 26 cents per share, substantially worse than the Zacks Consensus estimated loss of 10 cents. This compares unfavorably with earnings of 15 cents in the prior-year quarter.

Results were hurt primarily by continued weakness in the overall economy as well as stress on the consumers, resulting in high credit costs and loan loss. Though earnings benefited from the profit generated by its wealth management business, the company experienced continued net interest yield compression and credit quality deterioration.

Additionally, the company is facing problems over new CEO appointment and litigation issues over the Merrill Lynch acquisition. Revenues are also expected to be negatively affected by the new credit card regulation. However, we anticipate continued synergies from the company’s large scale operation and balance sheet restructuring.

 

As The Bulls Run Wild… Here Are Three Ways To Protect Your Profits

Like a dog getting out of the ocean, the market’s current reaction to bad news is to simply shake it off and run onto the next thing.

Dubai can’t pay its bills? No worries - the market immediately recoups its one-day losses.

Government spending set to increase even further to pay for healthcare reform and more troops in Afghanistan? The Dow tacks on another few hundred points.

Tiger Woods’ wife goes upside his head with a 5-iron? Tiger is the biggest celebrity endorser of Nike (NKE: 64.30 -0.37 -0.57%), yet the company’s shares remain unaffected.

Even weak companies have shuffled up to the trough and are getting fat… Take financial firm Zions Bancorp (ZION: 13.06 +0.47 +3.73%), for example, which has more than doubled since March. Same goes for shares of poorly run retailers like Sears Holdings Corp. (SHLD: 72.71 +0.50 +0.69%). Even Continental Airlines (CAL: 16.74 +0.82 +5.15%) and other beleaguered airlines, which are hemorrhaging money, have also posted 100%-plus gains from the lows.

The situation reminds me of the hobo fantasyland in Harry McClintock’s “Big Rock Candy Mountains” song. But instead of free hooch, food and handouts, the market is dishing out gains indiscriminately.

Here’s what you can do to participate in the upside, while also protecting yourself in case the party gets messy…

Will History Repeat Itself?

Every week, Investors Intelligence conducts a survey of advisory services. The last survey, taken on November 25, reported the highest level of bullishness in two years.

The survey’s results showed that 50.6% of advisory services were bullish, versus 17.6% that were bearish. There were 2.88 bulls for every bear. To put that in perspective, the 39-year average is 1.73 bulls for every bear.

The last time the reading was this high was October 17, 2007 - one week after the market topped out.

Back then, we were swimming along, aware of what dangers lay beneath the surface, but naively ignoring them. As long as we couldn’t see them, we couldn’t be hurt, many people thought.

Sound familiar?

Just two years later, after the housing and credit crisis reared their ugly heads and extracted many tons of flesh, it’s ludicrous to not at least acknowledge that we could be in for some trouble ahead.

Question is… How do you prepare for it?

Three Ways to Protect Gains and Grab Big Upside

Here are three ways to play defense and attack the market at the same time…

  • Tighten Your Trailing-Stops

When you’ve got gains of 78% on one stock and 37% in another, you’d be foolish to let them evaporate. So in Wednesday’s weekly portfolio update that my colleague Karim Rahemtulla and I send to our Xcelerated Profits Report members, I did just that with my recommendations.

All you do to avoid a winner turning into a loser is simply raise the trailing-stop level to protect your gains. But you should have stops set on all your positions. As I’ve said before, this will enable you to sell your stocks without letting emotions get involved.

If you have winning positions in your portfolio, be sure to place your stop level at least at your entry price, so you won’t lose money. And if you already have stops in place that are pretty generous, you might want to consider tightening them up, particularly if the stocks are not especially volatile.

  • Buy LEAP Options

LEAPS are options that have expiration dates of a year or more into the future. The great thing about LEAPS is that they allow you to control shares for a fraction of the price you’d pay if you bought the shares outright.

For example, let’s say you’re bullish on Apple (AAPL: 193.32 -3.16 -1.61%). At the current price, you’d have to shell out $19,700 (plus commissions) to buy 100 shares. Alternatively, you could buy a January 2011 call option with a strike price of $200 for $32.30. That means you can control those same 100 shares of AAPL for just $3,230 instead of $19,700.

The difference is that with the LEAPS, you only control those shares until January 2011, whereas if you buy the stock itself, you own them indefinitely. Just like a stock, if the price of AAPL rises, your LEAP options should, too. And if AAPL declines, so should your LEAPS.

My colleague Karim Rahemtulla is one of the best in the business at finding great LEAP options to play, so if you want a more in-depth rundown, check out this column.

  • Sell Put Options

Selling puts is an excellent strategy when you’re looking to own a stock, but want to do so at a lower price than it’s currently trading. By selling put options on the stock at a certain strike price, you’re selling the right for someone to “put” (or sell) the stock to you at that pre-determined price.

Let’s say you like Amazon.com (AMZN: 137.58 -3.59 -2.54%), but at $145, you think it’s too expensive. However, you’d be willing to buy it for $130.

In this case, you could sell the July 2010 $130 puts for $13.20. That means you’d receive $1,320 in your account for the right to have 100 AMZN shares sold to you for $130 by July expiration.

If the shares remain above $130, it’s very unlikely that you’ll have to buy the shares and you simply keep the $1,360. But if AMZN shares dip to $130 or below, you may have the stock sold to you at $130. But remember, you’ve already collected $13.60 per share from selling the put option contract, reducing your buy price to $116.40.

Selling puts is an excellent way to invest in any market - but particularly one that’s overheated. It reduces your risk by only getting you in the stocks that you want if the price falls to your chosen level. It also generates income while you’re waiting.

Lee Lowell is the best I’ve ever seen at this strategy. In fact, he’s got a whole advisory service dedicated to it called the Instant Money Trader - and you can learn more about it here.

I suspect that at some point in the not too distant future, we’re going to see a sizeable market correction. But that doesn’t mean you should sit on the sidelines and watch it happen. You can be proactive - and the three strategies above will reduce your risk, while still letting you participate and giving you the opportunity to make money.