Posts tagged banks
September 21, 2008
· Filed under business, economy, investing, money, politics, stock market · Tagged "Paulson's Monster", $11 trillion, $700 billion, ABK, ambac, bankruptcy, banks, Barclays, Berkshire Hathaway, bond insurer, economy, Google, hedge funds, Henry Paulson, investing, Lehman Brothers, MBI, MBIA, Moody's, SEC, Warren Buffett
“Paulson’s Monster”, as it’s being called, has now proposed the need for $700 billion of taxpayer dollars, raising the US debt limit to $11 trillion, to spin off the bad sectors of the financials into its own entity. Paulson claims his plan will “minimize” the cost to the taxpayer in the long run, but who can really be sure? As part of the plan, Paulson said that he was currently in talks with other countries for help. He wouldn’t disclose which countries.
Back in Ratings land, one ABK message boarder claimed that the Feds raided Moody’s on Friday looking for connections between the ratings company and hedge funds. No link was provided, and given that any Joe Schmo can go on a Google Finance board and post whatever he or she pleases, it could very well be completely fabricated. However, a Bloomberg article titled “Berkshire’s Bond Insurer, Moody’s Stake Face Probe”, reports that one such link may in fact come to light:
“Billionaire Warren Buffett’s Berkshire Hathaway Inc. faces a probe by Connecticut’s attorney general for possible conflicts created by owning almost 20 percent of credit ratings company Moody’s Corp. while also running a new municipal bond insurer.
Moody’s gave its top rating last week to Berkshire Hathaway Assurance Corp., created in December as existing bond insurers struggled to maintain their AAA ratings. A favorable rating for Berkshire by New York-based Moody’s, or a lower rating for competitors including MBIA Inc. and Ambac Financial Group Inc., may give Buffett’s company an advantage.”
So maybe there is truth in rumor.
In other news, Barclays is the proud new owner of Lehman Brothers’s investment banking and trading businesses. The $1.75 billion deal approved yesterday is a definite bargain as compared to the one Barclays would have had to strike last week for Lehman’s entire assets before bankruptcy.
September 21, 2008
· Filed under business, economy, investing, money, politics, stock market · Tagged ABK, AIG, ambac, banks, banned, Barclays, Ben Bernanke, Charles Schumer, economy, financials, Henry Paulson, investing, LEH, Lehman Brothers, LEHMQ, MBI, MBIA, Moody's, Moody's Ratings, short selling, stocks
Whoa mama. I was definitely wrong about the profit-taking. The US market rallied harder in the last two days than it has in 38 years- longer than I’ve been alive! Lehman Brothers, now on the OTC board as LEHMQ, gained 313% on rumors that it would sell parts of itself to foreign banks. Barclays is back in the running. In just the last two days of trading, I made up almost all of what I had lost in the last week and a half.
The SEC banned ALL short selling- regular and naked alike- of 799 financials for the next 10 days. The United Kingdom temporarily halted short selling yesterday, and the US did the same. This is a huge step from just banning naked shorting; this is a total ban on betting that stocks will lose value, essentially disqualifying half of the game. Hillary Clinton and Charles Schumer, both New York Senators, proposed the ban. Critics say this ban will warp the market, making it seem as if the financial stocks are worth more than they are. But when naked shorting was banned in July, the effect lasted long after the ban was lifted. In fact, it lasted right up until last week when AIG teetered and fell and dragged the entire sector along with it. So in a market that is so emotionally driven, a little banning may do the trick to snap the depression (no pun intended).
Henry Paulson, our Treasury Secretary, and Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke proposed the idea to spin all bad parts of financial institutions into its own entity- a black hole of badness. This idea reminds me of that story I had to read in high school about the utopian society that was only a utopia because of the little girl who lived in a cage in the basement of someone’s house. Remember that one? I was never big on reading, so titles slip my mind. I just remember the girl in the cage and the annual field trip every schoolkid would take to see the girl in the dirty dark cage dungeon as a reminder of why they lived as perfectly as they did. I wonder if part of the Paulson and Bernanke plan will have the American people visiting the dark entity once a year. Oh wait, now I get it. We will be visiting once a year- at tax time. Seems these two guys kept up on their high school reading.
Meanwhile in Ratings Land, Moody’s threatened to downgrade Ambac (ABK) and MBIA (MBI), which dropped ABK 42% and another 27% in afterhours, and MBI 8% and another 8% in afterhours. The ABK message boards caught fire, and it seems Moody’s may catch some of it by Monday, if not sooner.
Do you know the name of that book yet? Maybe it was a short story.
September 18, 2008
· Filed under business, economy, investing, money, politics, stock market · Tagged AIG, American International Group, bailout, banks, dow, economy, financials, first marblehead, FMB, naked short selling, rally, RDN, uptick rule, WaMu, Washington Mutual, WM
Since it had become a matter of market confidence, or really a lack thereof, confidence was bolstered today with the Fed’s announcement it would pump $180 billion into the world’s banking system and the implementation of the naked short ban. I read the news of the naked short selling ban wrong; I thought the ban went into place yesterday. So when yesterday’s market was a total sinker, I figured it was too late for the ban to do anything and that my experiment would soon go bust. I was very wrong. The ban actually went into effect TODAY, not yesterday, and it had a definite effect:
Centerline Holding (CHC): Up 3% to $1.72
Syncora Holdings (SCA): Up 13% to $2.25
Thornburg Mortgage (TMA): Up 13% to 34 cents
Merrill Lynch (MER): Up 14% to $22.06
Ambac (ABK): Up 15% to $6.67
Citigroup (C): Up 18% to $16.65
MBIA (MBI): Up 19% to $11.64
PMI Group (PMI): Up 22% to $2.57
National City(NCC): Up 24% to $4.40
Regions Financial (RF): Up 34% to $14.60
Radian Group (RDN): Up 35% to $5.00
Washington Mutual (WM): Up 48% to $2.99
First Marblehead (FMD): Up 67% to $4.75
MGIC Investment (MTG): Up 74% to $9.50
To be fair, most of the gains made today were only enough to erase just Wednesday’s huge losses, and the last week and a half of loss before today’s rally is still “on the books”. And, there will likely be a fair amount of profit-taking tomorrow. But who am I to complain? I made [up] $2,600 today, and most of that came in just the last hour of trading.
Even American International Group (AIG) had a double digit percentage gain today: up 31% to close at $2.69. The Dow closed up 410 points to $11,019. Oil gained 72 cents to close at $97.88. Today was Wall Street’s best day in six years.
September 17, 2008
· Filed under business, economy, investing, money, politics, stock market · Tagged AIG, banks, dow, economy, GLD, gold, naked short selling, offshore drilling, oil, oil futures, oil speculation, oil speculators, speculators, StreetTRACKS Gold, wall street, WaMu, Washington Mutual
The entire market was on a downward run the entire day. The impending restrictions on naked short selling did nothing to break the financials’ falls, and the bailout of AIG seemed to deepen the “crisis of confidence” in our economy. The dollar was down and oil and gold were suddenly trading way up.
A friend of mine brought up an interesting point yesterday: now that the banks are failing, the price of oil is also failing. In his email to me, he wrote:
“BTW, have you noticed the rapid decline in crude oil now that the banks have to focus on their books and capital? Could the banks have been speculating the price of crude??? Only the shadow knows. WAMU after hours trading closed at $2.55.”
As if the market heard his words directly, a CNNMoney.com article hit this morning titled “Oil rallies as Wall Street gets a lifeline: Crude futures rebound as the Fed steps in to lend insurer AIG much-needed capital, and ahead of the government’s weekly supply report”
Now that the big banks are being shored up, will oil bounce?
My Calculus 2 class starts tonight. Any free time I’ve had will now be absorbed into homework, studying, and stress. If it was possible to do so, I’d buy a few puts on my weight with a January 2009 expiration date so that I could rake in some money in time to buy myself a nice Valentine’s day gift. Calculus stresses me out. Anyway, it may put a damper on my writing. But I guess I said the same thing for when I went back to work, and that didn’t stick, so maybe I have no idea what I’m talking about.
The Dow almost had another -500 point day: it tumbled 449 to close the day at $10,609. Oil rose $6.01 to close at $97.16. The Associated Press chalked up the rise in oil to “an easing of worries that the insurance giant and other financial firms would liquidate commodities holdings to raise cash”. The dollar lost value because of the AIG bailout, too. Typing in “dollar” into Google News returned articles with titles like: “US dollar falls amid wary credit markets”, “Dollar falls vs. euro, yen despite AIG bailout”, “India’s rupee firms against dollar”, “Bonds soar, dollar sinks”, and Oil rallies as dollar weakens”. Seems my friend was right; the oil speculators are back. Time to get back into oil? God was way up, too. The ETF StreetTRACKS Gold (GLD) climbed 11% today.
The House of Representatives, with a democrat majority, passed a bill last night to lift the 26-year old ban on offshore drilling. But because the bill also added on tax credits for clean energy companies, President Bush’s advisors are asking that he veto the bill in its current form.
The ban on naked short selling will take effect tomorrow. We’ll see what happens.
September 16, 2008
· Filed under business, economy, investing, money, politics, stock market · Tagged $85 billion, AIG, bailout, bankruptcy, banks, Barclays, Christopher Cox, crude oil, economy, Enron, gasoline prices, Goldman Sachs, government bailout, GS, Hank Greenberg, interest rate, investing, Lehman, Lehman Brothers, MER, Merrill Lynch, Morgan Stanley, MS, naked short selling, real estate, SEC, uptick rule, WaMu, Washington Mutual, WM, WorldCom
Where to start? All these stories are unfolding all at the same time. Most people alive have never seen such things.
AIG no doubt drove the market today. Lehman was six times as big as Enron and WorldCom, and AIG is 50% bigger than Lehman. Yesterday when it became clear that Goldman Sachs (GS) and Morgan Stanley (MS) were last two independent investment banks left standing, the government asked the two giants to inject capital into AIG to keep it alive. When that didn’t go over so well, the fed went back to the drawing board and came up with a new idea, which was later captured in a Bloomberg article titled “Fed Said to Reverse Stance, Consider AIG Loan Package”. Originally the government said that it would absolutely not help AIG, but throughout the day AIG’s tentacles were measured and realized to stretch much further than previously thought. The news stories about AIG threw the stock all over the place today. As an example of just how turbulent the ride was, at 2:30PM the stock was trading at $2.76. At 3PM, the stock was trading at $5. That’s an 81% increase in 30 minutes. AIG is the world’s largest insurer, and unless it’s shored up, many institutions (including regional banks, as exposed by CNNMoney.com) will likely get knocked out.
Reuters released an odd article today about former chief executive of AIG Hank Greenberg leading a hoard of investors in a bid to take over AIG. I think I’ll let that one rest.
The Federal Reserve, against what everyone predicted, left interests rates alone today. The rate will stay at 2%.
When the market broke in 1937 signaling the Great Depression, the US Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) created the “uptick” rule, which essentially stopped people from betting against failing stocks. “Naked short selling” is what it’s called now, and is when a trader buys a put for an underlying amount of stock he or she would not be able to deliver. The SEC did not eliminate the uptick rule until July 6, 2007.
Our government tried to being back a sort of uptick rule this past July and it did, in fact, help the financials rebound. You can still see the ban reflected in most stock charts, not only the financials, from July 15 until the beginning weeks of August.
Now that banks are acting more like houses made of cards than they are the good old impenetrable banks we all grew up with, the government and some analysts have began buzzing about a possible reinstatement of the uptick rule. Back in August when the ban on naked short selling was lifted off the 19 financials it protected, the plan was to create “within a few months” a sweeping rule would eliminate excessive short selling. Some, like Alan Greenspan, think this is eliminating an important side of the market, but when a bet is sure, much like oil was six months ago, people will take and take advantage of it.
The head of the SEC, Christopher Cox, announced today that the “within a few months” will probably be this week (TheStreet.com) in light of what happened yesterday and the free lunch frenzy it caused among the traders who know how to sell short naked.
I’m not going to lie; In this economy, with oil going down yet gasoline refusing to budge, the price of food through the roof, the cost of electricity forcing me to cram foods into my toaster oven instead of firing up my electric stove, and clothing being so expensive I’m at least 3 seasons behind (if not many more), I’d naked short sell a few of the stocks I own if I knew how to. But just a few, not all day and not to the point I felt sick with guilt. I wonder if anyone feels guilty. Doubt it.
I bought long into Merrill Lynch (MER) today, and added to my positions of Citigroup (C) and Washington Mutual (WM). Washington Mutual is a real gamble, but MER should be one stock I won’t have to worry about.
The Dow crossed from red to green and back again 15 times today and really rallied in the last two hours of trading to close up 141 points to $11,059. My stocks that gained today included C, MBI, MER, MTG, RDN, RF, and WM, but it wasn’t enough to have me end the day in the green, and in fact, I’m now overall up just $2.08. But I’m keeping the faith that regulations will come this week and we’ll look back on this time as another bottom.
When the top stories are no longer about the banks, people are going to start asking questions about the price of gasoline. Crude oil slipped another $4.56 today to close at $91.15, so why is gas still over $3.50 a gallon? I smell “pissed off” coming.
In late-breaking news tonight, Barclays announced it put a bid in to buy Lehman Brothers for $2 billion, and the government decided to loan AIG $85 billion.
Also in tonight’s late-breaking news, an SEC spokesman told Reuters that “The American Bankers Association said many of its members have seen precipitous declines in their stock, high trading volumes and huge spikes in so-called failures to deliver [due to naked short sellers], leading them to conclude that their stock is being manipulated. The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission expects to issue new rules against abusive short selling within 24 hours.”
Within 24 hours. This is great news.
September 15, 2008
· Filed under business, economy, investing, money, politics, stock market · Tagged ABK, AIG, American International Group, BAC, Bank of America, bankruptcy, banks, CHC, fmd, Great Depression, Lehman Brothers, lending window, PMI, RDN, reform, short sellers, TMA, wall street, WaMu, Washington Mututal, WM
Exactly two months from the widely-believed bottom, “the biggest shakeup since the Great Depression” is what it’s being called. Today was the largest 1-day loss to the Dow in seven years. What a total mess. All this time, I’ve been sure no one knew what they were talking about the financials and that the bottom was already hit. Slowly though, I’m coming to ask myself, “what were you thinking??” Analysts had said the worst wasn’t over, but of course I didn’t believe them; I’m stubborn and always have been. Late last night and early this morning, former employees streamed out of Boston’s Lehman building, and all other Lehman locations, with boxes and resumes in hand. After last night’s negotiations failed, it was certain death for their jobs, and their stock, which was at 70 cents by 6:30AM, 45 cents by 7:30AM, and 18 cents at day’s close. In less than 24 hours, the 158 year old mainstay lost 94% of its value. Not only was the bankruptcy of Lehman Brothers the largest bankruptcy in United States history, it dwarfed all other bankruptcies in our country’s history. Along for the hellevator ride from par to the bottomless abyss went all the financials today. Even Merrill Lynch, which was up 30% in premarket trading because of being bought out last night for nearly twice its current value, closed the day up just 0.6% from its sorry close on Friday.
Articles and blog titles that ht today had some pretty colorful titles: “Jaw-dropping day for financial markets”, “A day of reckoning”, “Meltdown in US finance system pummels stock market”, “AIG fights for survival”, “Street’s nasty surprises keep experts guessing”, “Giants fall on judgment day”, “Stocks plummet on financial meltdown”, “It’s a morose Monday for Street’s employees”, “Goodbye to easy money”, and “Broken brothers” were just a sampling. The articles spanned all languages as today hit the entire world like a million tons of bricks.
So many questions arose out of today. What will happen to WaMu? What will happen to the mortgage insurers now that one of the banks they insured has evaporated? What will happen to AIG’s stock value now that the bank plans to head to the lending window? AIG had asked for $40 billion, but word on the street is that they’ll “only” get $20 billion. Following suit of its sibling ratings companies, Standard & Poor cut Washington Mutual’s rating to “junk” today.
Of the stocks I watch, here are today’s nearly unbelievable numbers:
Regions Financial (RF): Down 4% to $11.12
Community Bancorp (CBON): Down 4% to $4.53
Syncora Holdings (SCA): Down 6% to $2.39
Thornburg Mortgage (TMA): Down 7% to 35 cents
Triad Guarantee (TGIC): Down 9% to $2.1549
Financial Select Sector ETF (XLF): Down 9% to $19.15
MBIA (MBI): Down 11% to $11.45
National City (NCC): Down 11% to $4.28
First Marblehead (FMD): Down 14% to $2.67
Centerline Holding (CHC): Down 14% to $2.05
Radian Group (RDN): Down 14% to $3.90
Citigroup (C): Down 15% to $15.24
Ambac (ABK): Down 16% to $6.24
PMI Group (PMI): Down 17% to $2.57
Deerfield Capital (DFR): Down 18% to 60 cents
Bank of America (BAC): Down 21% to $26.55
MGIC Investment (MTG): Down 21% to $5.35
Washington Mutual (WM): Down 26% to $2.00
American International Group (AIG): Down 60% to $4.76
My friend works for AIG. I hope that if he loses his job it’ll be the kick in the pants he needs to get his ass to Hollywood.
The Dow plunged 504 points today to close below $11,000 to $10,917. A few days ago, an analyst on TV said that “it is possible we may see $100 oil within six months”. Within six months, buddy, how about within six days? Crude oil fell to a 7-month low today, losing $5.47 to close at $95.71 a barrel.
This experiment is going to be much longer-term than I previously thought. Luckily I have time to wait. I took another advance on my credit card to possibly take advantage of some of the week’s bargains, and will pay it back on Friday when my paycheck hits.
Later in the day, an article titled “Wall Street Losses Seen Spurring Regulatory Reform” hit CNNMoney.com. Some are calling for another ban on short-sellers. Alan Greenspan, in his interview this weekend, said that short-sellers are necessary to keep prices as a closer reflection of company values. But if Washington Mutual, for example is really trading at [now less than] 17% of its book value (MarketWatch, September 11), how real are the shorties really keeping things?
August 29, 2008
· Filed under money, stock market · Tagged banks, dollar best montly gain in 16 years, financial sector, financials, FRE, Gustav, investing, McCain, money, Palin, PMI, TMA, trading
Exactly three years since Katrina, President Bush declared a state of emergency for Louisiana. Gustav, now at hurricane status and predicted to morph into a category 3, is on its way. John McCain chose Governor Sarah Palin of Alaska as his running mate, which pretty much nailed his coffin shut. Maybe the thinking is that he’ll lasso in all the Hilary supporters who feel abandoned by their party, but I think the big companies already know Obama’s slated to win. Ford and Chrysler applied for, and will likely receive in January, $25 billion in government loans to transform their outdated factories into ones that can build alternatively fueled vehicles. This tells me that these two giants are already hedging the tax increases they know a Democrat will bring. Hey, if you know you’re going to have to pay more taxes, why not ask for some of the money back under the guise “green energy”? Democrats love everything green!
I’m too cheap to buy cable (and I’d end up watching The Hills reruns all day) so I never get to see Bloomberg on television. But today I spent some time at my Dad’s, who has every station imaginable, so I got to see the channel for the first time. Quotes stream along the bottom of the screen, as anyone who watches the station would know, and whereas yesterday would have been a stream of green speckled with red, today it was just the opposite. And the green speckles, with the exception of UnitedHealth Group (UNH), were all the financials. Although a far cry from yesterday, the financial sector held up today and the profit grabbing wasn’t nearly as rampant as I assumed it would be after yesterday’s major gains and right before a holiday weekend. The PMI Group (PMI) and Thornburg Mortgage (TMA) grew the most, while the tide finally caught up to Freddie Mac (FRE), which fell 13%.
The Dow lost 171 points today to close the week at $11,543, and oil also lost, closing down 13 cents to $115.46. The dollar reportedly had its best monthly gain since October 1992, which is an entire decade before its value began falling against other world currencies. The dollar is on its way back.
Because I go back to work on Tuesday, this may be my last entry for a while. It’s going to be hard making the transition from watching the market continuously to not at all, but work calls and I’m hardly in a position to quit. I like my job teaching math, and in fact, our math MCAS scores improved exponentially from two years ago to this past year. Fifteen percent of our students scored advanced or proficient in 2007 on the math portion of the exam, and this past year that percentage jumped to 45. Eighty percent of our students passed the math section, which is pretty good for an urban high school. Yeah, I’m looking forward to going back, and maybe even teaching my algebra kids a thing or two about the stock market. Who knows? Maybe one of them will be the next Warren Buffett!
August 12, 2008
· Filed under money, stock market · Tagged bank downgrades, banks, dow closed, downgrade, Fannie Mae, financials, FNM, Goldman Sachs, GS, money, Morgan Stanley, MS, naked short, oil closed, stocks, trading
Today was one of those days that made me wish I stayed in bed. Both the Dow and oil were down, gold was down, energy was way up, and unfortunately, the financials were way down. A lot of downgrades were handed out this week: Goldman Sachs (GS), Morgan Stanley (MS), and Fannie Mae (FNM) were all downgraded, and may have led to today’s march into the vortex. An email from a guy named Charles Payne popped into my inbox today, apparently from some stock market mailing list I inadvertently signed myself up for, that was titled “Tough Day to Decipher” and called today’s session “murky”. Loch Ness murky. Mid-Atlantic Ridge with no flashlight murky.
The downgrades of such big banks no doubt contributed to today’s dismalness; just the threat that Zion Bancorporation (ZION) may be downgraded sent the stock into a tailspin. But it may all be a ploy by the big guys to keep the naked shorts away. The ban on naked short selling was lifted today, and it’s hard to imagine there was no connection between its lift and the big downgrades. Once a stock is downgraded, it falls sharply, then begins to make a steady increase. No short money can be made on a stock going up.
I bought more SSBX in the morning, and it held at about where I bought it all day. I finally gave up on the dream that the fake OTC IndyMac (IDMC) was more than a fake OTC IndyMac and sold it at a pretty substantial loss. Looking forward, I can use those funds better investing in UCHB, MF, and/or Community Bancorp (CBON), the last of which weathered today’s storm pretty well, closing up 5%. A friend of mine says CBON is a good investment and points to the nice steady upward slope the stock has made since July 15. He thinks “Something must be going on with it.” I like his technical analysis. CHC held up pretty well today too.
The Dow closed down 139 to $11,642. Oil sank $1.44 to close at $13.01. Every stock in my portfolio, with the exception of CHC and TMA, closed in the red today, but several of the downers (and the Dow) had small rallies at the very end of the day. Hopefully it’s an indication of better days ahead.
August 11, 2008
· Filed under money, stock market · Tagged banks, CHC, dollar, dow closed, economy, FRE, freddie mac, investing, legg mason, michael phelps, money, naked short, oil closed, phelps, Radian, RDN, SCA, SSBX, stock market, stocks, Syncora, trading
The Financial Times called this week “crucial” for determining if the six-year downward trend of the dollar will finally end. One Euro now costs $1.4904, down almost 10 cents from about a month ago. If it does break free, economists are expecting a quick economic rebound. Fingers crossed.
Etrade pushed my funds through this morning so I was clear to buy. I picked up more shares of MBI and CHC, and then bought into ACA Capital Holdings (ACAH) before reading the news that hit Friday about the company writing no new business. So about 15 minutes later I sold ACAH at a loss. I also sold off TGIC today at a loss and for the same reason. No new business can never be a good thing, and I should have read up first before buying. Haven’t I learned this lesson already? Yes I have; the reason I sold TGIC the first time was due to a “no new business” declaration. I should have read up on ACAH before jumping in. I’ll never learn!
With the rest of my available funds, I was only able to buy 40 shares of Silver State Bancorp (SSBX), which I should have bought into first, and had written a note to myself to buy into first, but for whatever reason didn’t. It has a relatively low trading volume, but the tiny fraction created by dividing its 52-week high into where it’s currently trading was just too good to pass up. I’ll pick up more SSBX later in the week.
By 1PM I set up a plan for what to buy into next. UCBH Holdings (UCBH), MF Global (MF), AMCORE Financial (AMFI), and Corus Bankshares (CORS) all create tiny fractions when dividing the current price by the 52-week high, and UCBH and MF both reported some sort of second quarter gains. CORS and AMFI had unusual upward movement today, which could be a red flag, and also have much lower trading volumes than UCBH and MF. Because of all this, I decided my next two moves would be into UCHB and MF, as soon as Etrade clears the funds created from selling off TGIC and ACAH.
I’d like to take a second to scream how dope Michael Phelps is. MICHAEL PHELPS, YOU ROCK!! He doesn’t represent every boy whose dad was an ass; he represents what every person can be. Why Channel 7 shows soap operas over the Olympics I’ll never understand. Ok, back to stocks.
Radian Group (RDN) reported a loss of $392.50 million ($4.91 per share) this morning as opposed to a profit of $21.1 million ($0.26 per share) this time last year, causing its share value to drop in the morning, but the news was quickly forgotten RDN closed up 8% on the day. Reporting a profit these days is the anomaly, and even when a financial posts a profit, such as ABK last week, a stock can still fall. There seems to be little rhyme or reason to financial stock prices in this environment, except that the announcement of “no new business” slaughters a stock price. All other news is fair game.
The Dow was completely driven by oil today: when oil fell in the morning, the Dow made gains, and when oil had a change of heart around 2PM, so did the Dow. http://www.advfn.com/p.php is a great site to watch the Dow, Nasdaq, and the S&P 500, and their connection to crude oil prices. The Dow closed the day up 48 points to $11,782. Oil closed the day down 75 cents to
$114.45, the lowest it’s been since May 1, and fell below the benchmark $113 a barrel at one point during today’s trading session.
After the closing bell, Syncora Holdings (SCA) reported a second quarter loss of $492.9 million ($7.67 per share). It should move up or down (who knows?) in the morning. Naked short sellers return tomorrow, and I’m starting to have serious doubts about the fate of Freddie Mac (FRE). By the end of the week if the news that big wig Legg Mason bought millions more shares doesn’t send FRE into the green, I may need to cut it loose. Manny needs mental peace, I need mental peace. Sinkers don’t bring the peace, just the pain!
August 8, 2008
· Filed under money, stock market · Tagged ABK, banks, CHC, China, dollar, dow closed at, Etrade, Fannie, money, oil bubble, oil closed at, SCA, stock market, stocks, trading
Etrade sucks. When I transferred finds in this morning, a little window popped up saying the funds would be ready for immediate investment. When they didn’t show in my account, I called and the rep told me I’d have to wait until the 14th. By 3:30PM I wasn’t happy with that answer, so I called back and the new rep told me they’d fix the problem within 30 minutes. But they didn’t. Total bullshit. You really do get what you pay for, but in Etrade’s case, I think $10 a trade and free customer service is way overpriced.
Telegram U.K. declared a burst of the oil bubble. Well no shit. All the Escalade drivers who have been [falsely] cursing China’s oil demand for driving up the cost of their premium unleaded must be thanking God for answering their prayers. Ah, I’m just bitter today for being cheated by Etrade. As a result of the burst in oil, transportation was the big winner today.
But all I could do today was watch. Mbia (MBI) reported a surprise profit of $1.7 billion before the bell this morning, so its stock jumped big in early morning trading. Between last night and this morning, I whittled today’s buy plan down to three stocks: 50 more shares of MBI before it hit the stratosphere, 100 more of CHC, and 50 more of ABK, but it was a no go on any of it. Damn you Etrade! Liars!
JP Morgan analysts, as if they’re any sort of authority these days, downgraded Ambac (ABK), so its stock fell even after the great profit it reported on Wednesday. People on the Google message boards think it was a classic case of stock manipulation, and I may agree. ABK ended the day down 8%, MBI ended the day up 3%, and CHC ended the day up 48%.
Fannie Mae (FNM) reported a huge second quarter loss of $2.3 billion ($2.54 per share) and a slash of its dividend before the bell this morning, so it was no surprise its stock fell. But it was a bit surprising that Freddie Mac (FRE) saw green today. I know I still have a lot to learn about the stock market, but it struck me as odd that Fannie didn’t pull everything else into its vortex like Freddie seemed to do yesterday.
All in all, I gained today, but not enough to erase yesterday’s huge loss. The Dow closed up 303 points to $11,734, and oil closed down $4.82 to $115.20 per barrel. The dollar made its greatest one-day gain in over five years, and gold hit a 3-month low. The Beijing opening ceremonies are tonight, so the world’s eye will be in China.