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The jobless rate topped 10% last month, a sign this year's bull market isn't justified and a recovery may be a long way off.

Posted by TheStreet.com Staff on Friday, November 6, 2009 1:09 PM

TheStreet.comBy David MacDougall, TheStreet.com

 

As far as so-called psychological barriers go, unemployment rising to more than 10% is a big one.

 

A couple weeks ago, as "Dow 10,000" hats began circulating on trading floors, investors' mood was upbeat. Now as the Dow Jones Industrial Average struggles to hang on to that level, anxiety prevails. The latest picture of employment in America suggests that the bull market was premature, and the recovery may unfold more slowly than originally thought.

 

The unemployment tally swelled by 190,000 in October, and the jobless rate jumped to 10.2%, a 26-year high. As joblessness continues to rise, the longer it will take the economy to return to normal. The severity of the losses may be decreasing, but until companies add jobs, the situation won't improve. This is yet another case of less bad not equaling good.

 

Bing: More on Unemployment

Still up for the month but some weakness this week

Posted by Jim Van Meerten on Saturday, November 21, 2009 11:55 AM
On Financial Tides I always try to give a weekly analysis of the status of the stock market. Sometimes the press about the market reminds me of an impressionist painting. You can stand too close and all you see are brush strokes and patches of color. It's hard to tell what the painting is about. You've got to back up and view the painting from a wider perspective and then all those brush strokes and patches of color start to make sense and your mind now translates the chaos into a wonderful image you can appreciate.

The market reports were like that this week. Market up and down, gold, oil and the dollar sometimes going up together then reversing sometimes traveling independently and all the time the headlines on different news sites interpreting things differently. There were times when the headlines in different articles on the same page had the market going in different directions.

Let's step back across the room and try to make sense of all the different brush strokes, textures and blotches of color. As always I go to BarChart to find my data and start with the Value Line Index. I use that index because it contains 1700 stocks not just the 30 of the Dow or the 500 of the S&P 500.

Value Line Index -- 1700 stocks -- down .65% for the week but still up 4.38% month to date.

Each week I scour the investment landscape looking for thoughts and insights from the best and brightest minds in the market.

Posted by John Reese on Saturday, November 21, 2009 7:56 AM

The investment world is filled with new theories about how best to make money. But over the years, I've found that the best way to produce solid, market-beating returns is to take advantage of the wisdom of history's best investors. That's why I created my Guru Strategy computer models, and it's why each week I take a look at what some of the gurus I keep an eye on are saying.

 

This week, a number of the gurus I follow weighed in. In general, most are finding opportunities in the market. But where they are finding those opportunities varies pretty widely.

 

For example, take two of the most successful investment gurus in the world: hedge fund manager John Paulson and the great Warren Buffett. Earlier this week, The Wall Street Journal reported that Paulson is making a big move into gold, launching a new fund that focuses on shares of gold miners and other gold-related shares and gold derivatives. This comes in addition to Paulson's already significant gold-related holdings.

 

Buffett, on the other hand, doesn't seem too keen on gold -- despite his belief that major inflation is coming. 

Out of the dark and murky world of sovereign credit protection, a warning light flashes red

Posted by Anthony Mirhaydari on Friday, November 20, 2009 7:03 PM

MirhaydariGovernments around the world unleashed Keynesian-style stimulus in an effort to kick start their economies. And as expected, tax revenues plummeted while fiscal deficits soared.

 

Here in the United States, the deficit for fiscal 2009 came in at $1.4 trillion or 9.9% of GDP -- the highest since 1945. Among the OECD nations, the deficit is expected to peak at 8.2% of GDP in 2010. President Obama tried to head off  criticism this week by recognizing that indiscriminately adding to the national debt could undermine the nascent recovery.

 

It was always a race against time: Borrow and spend to get the economy growing again before the vigilantes in the bond market revolt, drive up interest rates, and force a cut in spending and an increase in taxes. For awhile, it worked. Interest rates fell. Government funds bolstered the economy via "cash-for-clunkers" and the homeowner tax rebate.

 

But now, unfortunately, it appears the bond rebellion has begun.

The third in a 3-part series on the steroidization of our economy.

Posted by V.N. Katsenelson on Friday, November 20, 2009 6:21 PM

By Vitaliy N. Katsenelson, CFA

 

This presentation covers the main concepts discussed in the series and shows how we are positioning for this very different economy. 

 

The stock market’s recent rally followed a typical, by-the-book, coming out of recession trajectory – it was cyclical.  The stocks most sensitive to the economy appreciating the most. 

 

 Let me demonstrate what is priced into cyclical stocks by looking at Caterpillar (CAT) – your typical American blue chip industrial, cyclical stock – one that in theory should prosper during global economic recovery.  

 

 Third-quarter sales were down 44% from last year. China was its brightest spot as sales there dropped (only) 26%.  The stock is around $60, more than double its low in March and not far from $85, its all-time high, reached in 2008 when global growth was its oyster.  The company expects to earn around $2 this year (excluding recurring nonrecurring charges) and expects sales to grow in teens next year from this year’s base.  But even if CAT were to earn $3 next year, investors are not paying for next year’s earnings, as they’d paying 20 times next year’s earnings. 

 

 This cyclical stock is not worth that; investors are paying for what happens beyond 2010. 

Coach is a well-known fashion brand, but the company lives and breathes production and infrastructure.

Posted by Jim J. Jubak on Friday, November 20, 2009 4:26 PM

Jim JubakListening to the management team at Coach (COH) talk about the company's business is an odd experience.


This “fashion” company spends a lot of time talking about “engineering” its products and building production and distribution “infrastructure.” (Want to hear a sample of Coach-speak? Tune into the company's presentation at the Morgan Stanley Global Consumer and Retail Conference here).


And that's a major reason I like Coach shares in the current tough environment for luxury goods. 

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Fund data provided by Morningstar, Inc. © 2009. All rights reserved.
StockScouter data provided by Gradient Analytics, Inc.
Quotes supplied by Interactive Data.
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