Sunday, October 18, 2009

Weekly Stock Market Commentary

U.S. Stocks ended the week with some losses on Friday, but closed the week out with gains compared to the previous week. Earnings were the primarily driver of stock prices to the upside throughout the week, but the market reacted negatively to IBM's earnings report on Friday. As a result, the week ended with modest gains within a very narrow trading range.

It is notable that the Nasdaq, Nasdaq 100 and Russell 2000 are finding some resistance at the September highs, while the Dow and S&P 500 have blown through there highs relatively easily. I also noted higher weekly volume compared to the previous week in the Dow and S&P 500, while this was not the case for the Nasdaq. This suggests that much of the recent strength has been in the financials.

Among the top industry groups, the oil and gas equipment services industry appears to be making a solid move, closing strongly to the upside this week, while many leading industry groups simply consolidated gains.

In other markets, the Dollar continued its slide, with another down week, but held steady on Friday. Crude oil broke out of a four month basis and surged to close over $78 for the week. $80 crude oil seems to be a foregone conclusion. If there is one lesson we need to remember from 2008 is that $100 crude oil definitely has a negative economic impact. A continued surge in crude oil will only result in more pressure on businesses and families already struggling to pay bills.

Gold closed a bit lower on Friday and finished somewhat unchanged on the week, but is still a bit above nearby support levels at around $1,020. Expect to see another leg up after some consolidation.

For the next week, expect earnings reports to continue to drive stock prices. Many of the important economic reports are out of the way for October. As such, the focus will be on earnings, unless there is a more significant drop in the Dollar, or a big surge in oil prices. Keep in mind that the S&P 500 is somewhat heavily weighted with oil stocks, so higher prices may continue to help with that average. On the other hand, you might see more erratic stock price behavior in the Nasdaq and Russell 2000.

With all this in mind, I would continue to exercise caution due to economic headwinds that face the market in the longer run. This rally has priced in a good bit of stability of the next 12 months, but until we see significant improvement in job creation, I don't see how the consumer based U.S. economy performs very well. Traders and investors might do a lot better to continue focusing on overseas businesses.

Scott Cole www.bestdaytradingstocks.com

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