Trader Talk
- Risk Trade Is Back On
- This Week's Biggest Story: The Dollar
- Corporate Issuance Continues at Torrid Pace
- The Bernanke Dollar Bounce & Gross Says Forget About Rate Hike
- Colgate Really Sparkles After Hours
- Light Volume Has Traders Complaining
- Gold Shatters Another Record
- Have Retailers Reached Their Limits?
- The Retail Mind Game
- The Gold Rush Is On
TRADER TALK RSS FEED
MOST SHARED
- The 'Real' Jobless Rate: 17.5% Of Workers Are Unemployed
- US Home Prices Up 5th Month, 2nd Straight Quarter
- GM's Agreement to Sell Saab To Swedish Firm Falls Apart
- Buyers Look For Bargains At Luxury Condo Auction
- FDIC Fund Falls into The Red, Bair Urges Lending
- Revised GDP Reading Puts Growth at 2.8%; Inflation Tame
- Weak Dollar Is Golden for Mining Companies
- Behind The Scenes With Warren Buffett
- CA "More Profitable" After Saving Energy: CEO
- Busch: The Debt-Interest Rate Paradox
- The Lloyd's Prayer, Leggo My Eggo, Plate Hate & Your Emails
- Buy These 'Competitively Positioned' Stocks: Portfolio Manager
- Behind The Scenes With Warren Buffett
- 'Why the American Consumer Will Keep on Buying No Matter What'
- On Assignment: Europe & Asia
- The L.A. Extravaganza: A Test for Auto Shows
- 8 Stocks That Could Gain With Rising GDP
- 5 Stocks That Benefit from Health Care Legislation: Analysts
- GM's Agreement to Sell Saab Unit Falls Apart
- Consumer Confidence Improves But Still Shaky
- US Home Prices Up 5th Month, 2nd Straight Quarter
- FDIC Fund Falls into The Red, Bair Urges Lending
- Ron Paul's Plan to Audit Fed a 'Serious Attack': Mishkin
- Strong Banks, Weak Credit: Treasury Rethinks TARP
- Fairfax Lawsuit Keeps Heat on Chanos, SAC's Cohen
- Blog: Behind The Scenes With Warren Buffett
- Buyers Look For Bargains At Luxury Condo Auction
CNBC Reporter
China's Shanghai Index up 2.7 percent as Chinese PMI was stronger than expected. U.S. ISM will be released at 10 Am ET.
And that's the point: with earnings season just about over, it is economic news that will be the driver for the next couple of months. Nonfarm payrolls for October on Friday is the most important statistic.
Elsewhere:
1) Ford [F
Loading...
()
] up 9 percent pre-open, reported much stronger than expected earnings: $0.26 ex-items, versus consensus of a loss of $0.12.
They generated $1.3 billion in positive cash flow, far better than expected. North America was particularly strong on better volume and pricing. They appear to be increasing market share.
They are now expecting positive cash flow in the fourth quarter and expect 2011 to be "solidly profitable" (they had previously said 2011 would be "breakeven or better").
CEO Alan Mulally will be on the air with our Phil Lebeau at 12:10 ET today.
2) CIT [CIT
Loading...
()
] down by about half (from $0.72 to $0.38) pre-open on their prepackaged bankruptcy filing, word of which had already leaked out on Friday.
3) Humana's [HUM
Loading...
()
] Q3 earnings topped estimates ($1.78 vs. $1.77 est.) amid a lower-than-expected rise in revenues (up 8.0 percent vs. up 9.3 percent est.). Medicare Advantage membership jumped 11 percent, which offset a 4-percent decline in its commercial plan membership.
The health insurer sees "substantial" growth next year - which will be good for revenues (greater premiums) but bad for earnings as reduced government Medicare subsidies are expected (higher costs). 2010 earnings guidance is disappointing ($5.05-$5.25 vs.$5.36 est.).
4) Clorox [CLX
Loading...
()
] reported better-than-expected Q1 earnings ($1.18 vs. $0.95 est.) on a notable rise in margins (up nearly 5 percentage points from last year) Sales were inline with expectations as volumes rose 1 percent.
The consumer goods maker raises full-year earnings of $4.05-$4.20 vs. $4.18 est., but sees revenues growing just 1 percent to 2 percent, slightly below estimates of 2.2 percent growth.
5) Dean Foods [DF
Loading...
()
] Q3 earnings beat estimates by a penny, but saw its top line results fall short of estimates ($2.77 billion vs. $2.94 billion est.) due to lower milk prices. However, the dairy distributor sees prices of milk moving higher during the current quarter and expects that trend to continue into 2010.
The company raises sees Q4 earnings to be at least $0.36, below estimates of $0.39.
6) Bob Kelly, CEO of Bank of New York/Mellon, reportedly turned down the Bank of America [BAC
Loading...
()
] CEO job. Rochdale's Dick Bove echoed the sentiments of most traders: " What I do not understand is why the Board of Directors or the government would believe that an outsider with a good job would go to Bank of America where his pay would be restricted and he would be forced to submit to bullying by the banking regulators."
_____________________________
_____________________________
Questions? Comments?
POPULAR TRADER TALK POSTS
- Risk Trade Is Back On
- This Week's Biggest Story: The Dollar
- Corporate Issuance Continues at Torrid Pace
- The Bernanke Dollar Bounce & Gross Says Forget About Rate Hike
- Colgate Really Sparkles After Hours
- Light Volume Has Traders Complaining
- Gold Shatters Another Record
- Have Retailers Reached Their Limits?
- The Retail Mind Game
- The Gold Rush Is On








