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Current DateTime: 08:17:26 23 Nov 2009
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Expiration DateTime: 11/23/2009 8:18:22 PM

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Current DateTime: 08:17:26 23 Nov 2009
LinksList Documentid: 30456179
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The President: What a Difference a Day Makes
Published: Tuesday, 15 Sep 2009 | 11:56 AM ET
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By: Bob Pisani
Reporter

The contrast between the president's speech today at the GM plant in Lordstown, Ohio, and his speech yesterday on Wall Street could not have been more glaring.

Today, the president stood in shirtsleeves and made it clear his economic policy was helping revive the economy. He was animated, full of fight, and acted like he was running for re-election.

He waded into the crowd and enthusiastically shook hands with the workers.

He was clearly at ease.

By contrast, yesterday he appeared at Federal Hall, gave a somber speech, admonished Wall Street, and apparently did not want to be seen shaking with traders, so did not even bother to come across the street to the New York Stock Exchange.

A market top? The usual cynical comments from the trading community as signs emerge that retail traders are returning to the market.

Numbers released in the last 24 hours certainly seem to indicate that retail traders are getting more active. Daily client trades for the major retail brokers were up sharply in August:

  • Schwab up 24% [SCHW  Loading...      ()   ]
  • ETrade up 37.4%-year ago [ETFC  Loading...      ()   ]
  • Knight Capital: up 53% [NITE  Loading...      ()   ]
  • TD Ameritrade up 71% [AMTD  Loading...      ()   ]

These are numbers that compare August 2009 to August 2008, but sequential numbers (July to August) were also up as well.

Some of this was clearly due to very heavy trading in low-priced, high-beta financials (think Fannie Mae [FNM  Loading...      ()   ] and Freddie Mac [FRE  Loading...      ()   ]).

However, other data on mutual fund inflows indicate that retail investors, for the first time this year, are indeed putting more money into equity mutual funds.

This is eliciting the usual cynical comments, that retail investors always get in at the top. But if we are truly at the beginning of a surge in the earnings cycle, that old saw may not play out.

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