DJIA tops 10,000 for first time in a year

October 14, 2009

The Bull charged north today and the DJIA sliced into the psychological resistance at 10,000 for the 1st time since last October, as hailed the strong reports from Intel Corp. and & Co. The DJIA gained 134.45 pts, or 1.36%, to close at 10,005.51, the S&P 500 added 17.35 pts, or 1.62%, to end the session at 1,090.52, and the NAS tallied up + 27.97 pts, or 1.31%, to end the break thru day at 2,165.01. , (covered in Stock Talk today) is the 1st major bank to report Q-3 , the report announced profit in Q-3 climbed to US$3.59B, beating analysts’ estimates by almost 7 times. Intel, (covered in Stock Talk yesterday) the world’s largest computer-chip maker, reported a smaller-than-expected decline in profit and sales after the Bell on Tuesday’s closing bell. It also exceeded analysts’ estimates and guided higher into 2010. Read more

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Goldman and JP Morgan Chase dominate post-bailout Wall Street

July 24, 2009

and Co. have emerged two bellwethers of the US finance sector in the post-bailout , leading the surge of optimism with their strong in the Y 2009 Q-2. Six major US banks have reported their second-quarter in the past two weeks, vastly beating analyst predictions. The of Goldman has little to do with common , its quarterly of more than US$3.4B posted were buoyed by record results in its and underwriting . According to the quarterly report, the giant generated a record US$6.8B in from fixed income, and during the quarter. from underwriting jumped to US$736M form UD$ 48M in the first quarter compared with US$616M last year. JP Morgan Chase, the largest US bank by market value, posted a US$2.72B , and made its mainly from investment-banking services including bond and , and underwriting debt to help companies issue and , not commercial loans and consumption .

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The S&P 500 should continue North

June 25, 2009

The benchmark S&P 500 should move back to its October 2007 record high above 1,500 by the end of 2012, provided the US economy sees a V-shaped recovery, JPMorgan Chase Chief U.S. Strategist said last Wednesday. “The global economy is in the midst of a synchronized recovery,” Lee said at the Investment Outlook Summit “If we end up with a V-shaped recovery, we could go back to our record high of 1,500 in 2011-2012,” he added, referring to the S&P 500. Lee also reiterated his year end 2009 target of 1,100 for the S&P 500, saying the United States will likely come out of its recession some time this summer, followed by the rest of the developed world. In October 2007, the S&P 500 hit a record closing high of 1,565.15, before falling back. In March of this year, it slumped to a 12-year closing low, but has rebounded by about 35% on hopes the recession that begun in December 2007 was moderating. Lee added that a market correction in the wake of the recent run-up would be “healthy,” and could lure back who opted to sit out the recent rally. “This rally has left many uninvested or underinvested. The pullback is the entry point to really see more meaningful money put to work,” said Lee, who has been named a top in Institutional Investor magazine’s annual all-star poll. He favors the financials, industrials, technology and consumer discretionaries sectors, in that order, saying the sectors would be the biggest beneficiaries of an economic recovery. Within financials, he favors asset managers. The S&P financial index .GSPF is up 84 percent since the broader market’s 12-year low on March 9, 2009

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JPMorgan Sees Even More Reason for Stock Market Optimism

May 13, 2009


One of ’s most optimistic strategists told clients that the S&P 500 may rise even more than he expected this year. “There is actually upside risk,” & Co.’s Thomas Lee wrote in a report on Thursday and that he expects the S&P 500 to end the year at 1,100, or 21% higher than Thursday’s close. Stable retail sales, a pickup in pending home sales, and other indicators signal the recession may hit bottom by midyear, leading to higher share prices, the report said. The S&P 500 rose 34+% from its March 9 low through Thursday’s close. “We want to become ‘slow buyers’ of stocks,” he wrote, citing the likelihood that prices will drop below their March lows before rising anew. This so-called retest would serve as a trigger to buy “in a larger way.”

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