- Reminders Of Just How Bad Things Are
- Rally: We're At A Very Important Point
- Key Earnings Phrase: Reaffirms Full Year Guidance
- Financials Rally A "Violent" One
- Repeat Of Financials Selloff Seems In Doubt
- Earnings: Glass Half Empty Or Half Full?
- Bulls Find No Joy In After Hours Session
- What Happened To Market? Financials Run Out Of Steam
- Are Banks Overbought?
- Big Three Financials Deliver
- Mad Mail: Buy a House – Now
- Lightning Round OT: Las Vegas Sands, CapitalSource and More
- Lightning Round: FuelCell, Microsoft, eBay and More
- Fast & Furious Trades: Microsoft, Lilly, Dow...
- Market Pans Panera Bread
- Commander Planet: Unexpected Green Trade!
- Emerging Money: These Colors Don’t Run
- Is GE the New Citigroup?
- Pops & Drops: Hershey, Pepsi...
- Credit Suisse Profit Beats Forecasts
- Gas Natural Considers Cash Bid for Fenosa
- ABB Profit Rise Hits Expectations, Ups Guidance
- European Shares Seen Lower, Results Flurry Dominates
- India's Bharti Airtel Profit Beats Forecast, Shares Up
- Singapore's MAS Ups 2008 Inflation View to 6% - 7%
- SK Telecom Profit Falls on Marketing, Outlook Weak
- Japan Exports Fall for First Time in Nearly 5 Years
- Weaker Oil Prices Lift Asian Markets, Tokyo Gains 2%

This is a very interesting, and potentially important, day. There are a lot of reasons to sell, not a lot of reasons to buy...and the market is rising to the highest levels since January. What is going on?
I have been grousing for the past 24 hours that we have been in a time warp for the past couple days, back to March headlines:
Dollar weaker
New highs for heating oil, nat gas, oil
Energy, materials outperform
Financials faltering
So why are we getting this slow, modest, midday rally? Traders are divided here, but the most common answer I am getting is that traders are getting more comfortable with taking on more risk. There are several reasons for this, but the two most important are a belief that: 1) the U.S. economy will gradually improve in the second half of the year, and 2) the Federal Reserve has essentially provided a backstop with the Bear Stearns bailout.
Both of these are rather bold assumptions, and may prove wrong, but there is clearly a class of traders (a minority, but enough to move the markets: call them "first adopters") who are willing to make the bet here. And you can see it in the VIX: again sitting at the lowest levels since October.
Questions? Comments?



