U.S. Equity Market Diary (September 27, 2010)

U.S. Equity Market Diary (September 26, 2010)

The figure below shows the performance of each sector in the S&P 500 Index for the week. All ten sectors gained. The best-performing sector was consumer discretion, up 3 percent. Other better-performing sectors included technology and energy. The three worst-performing sectors were financials, consumer staples and materials.

Within the consumer discretion sector the best-performing stock was CarMax, up 16 percent. Other top-five performers in the sector were Office Depot, Sears Holdings, Lennar and McGraw-Hill.

S&P 500 Economic Sectors

Strengths

  • The aluminum group (represented by Alcoa) was the best-performing group for the week, up nine percent, led by its single member. Investor sentiment appears to have become more positive on the stock.
  • Amazon.com led the retail internet group to outperform, rising seven percent. A major brokerage firm analyst reiterated his “overweight” rating and increased his target price and earnings estimates on the stock. His thesis is that the company is gaining market share within e-commerce, while e-commerce is gaining market share within retail.
  • The diversified metals & mining group (represented by Freeport-McMoRan Copper & Gold) outperformed, gaining 6 percent. The prices of both copper and gold increased during the week.

Weaknesses

  • The paper group was down 4 percent, led by International Paper Co. A major brokerage firm analyst reduced his profit estimates for the company and its competitors, saying he was “unwinding” his expectations for a containerboard price increase.
  • The casinos & gaming group was down 4 percent on weakness in International Game Technology. The previous Friday, a brokerage firm analyst downgraded the firm’s stock, saying replacements of gaming machines are likely to remain slow over the next 18 months.
  • The investment banking & brokerage group underperformed, giving up 2 percent. A major brokerage firm lowered its earnings estimates for Goldman Sachs Group and Morgan Stanley, citing weakness in third-quarter capital markets’ activity.

Opportunities

  • There may be an opportunity for gain in M&A (merger & acquisition) transactions in 2010. Corporate liquidity is high, thereby providing the means to pursue acquisitions.

Threats

  • Should investors’ expectations for an improving economy not come to fruition on a reasonable time frame, it could become a threat to stock prices.
  • As governments around the world begin to wind down the monetary and fiscal stimulus programs put in place during the economic crisis, it will likely present a headwind for stocks.
Total
0
Shares
Previous Article

The Economy and Bond Market Diary (September 27, 2010)

Next Article

Return of Quantitative Easing Good for Gold

Related Posts
Subscribe to AdvisorAnalyst.com notifications
Watch. Listen. Read. Raise your average.