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Wyatt Research Staff

Origin Agritech Ltd, and Saks Inc, lead small-cap volume in pre-market

Origin Agritech Ltd. (Nasdaq:SEED), Saks Inc. (Nasdaq:SKS), Radian Group Inc. (Nasdaq:RDN) and International Coal Group Inc. (Nasdaq:ICOC) are among the most actively traded companies in Friday's trading among companies with market capitalizations under $1 billion.

Also included among the results: Intergrated Device Technology (Nasdaq:IDTI) and Geron Corp. (Nasdaq:GERN), Vivus Inc. (Nasdaq:VVUS) Conseco Inc. (Nasdaq:CNO) and STEC Inc. (Nasdaq:STEC).
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Ian Wyatt

Black Friday Results Mixed

Americans may have had a few days off for the Thanksgiving holiday, but that doesn’t mean it was an uneventful week around the world.

The big news from Thursday came out of Dubai, one of seven semi-independent emirates that make up the United Arab Emirates (UAE) federation. Dubai has been the poster child for excess development, funded by oil revenues and inflated real estate values. It seems the emirate is suffering from an all too familiar overindulgence: too much debt associated with real estate development.

Dubai World, a state run fund, asked creditors if it could delay interest payment for six months on $60 billion. News of the potential debt default sent global markets sharply lower Friday, with Asian indices dropping nearly 6% and the Dow opening over 200 points lower. By the end of the session however, most of the reaction had been muted and while stocks in the U.S. closed lower, Europe finished higher by 1%.

There can be no doubt that Dubai over did it. Dredging ocean floors to build palm tree-shaped islands, indoor ski resorts, and the tallest building in the world are the very definition of excess...

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Claire Caldwell

Formula Systems Depository Receipt, Saks and Mercantile Bancorp lead small-cap percentage gainers

Formula Systems Depository Receipt (Nasdaq:FORTY), Saks Inc. (Nasdaq:SKS) and Mercantile Bancorp Inc. (Nasdaq:MBR) are among the biggest percentage gainers in Tuesday's trading among companies with market capitalizations under $1 billion.

Also included among the results: Safe Bulkers Inc. (Nasdaq:SB), CardioNet Inc. (Nasdaq:BEAT), Lifeway Foods Inc. (Nasdaq:LWAY), Fuqi International Inc. (Nasdaq:FUQI), W Holding Co Inc. (Nasdaq:WHI) and eLoyalty Corp. (Nasdaq:ELOY).
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SCI Microbloggers

Russell near flat; DHT, TTI, and ZONS lead gainers

Small-cap stocks vacillated back and forth in positive and negative territory into the midday time frame, with support from a pocket of upbeat earnings, an optimistic outlook from major PC-maker Hewlett-Packard and strong energy shares countering a soft tone in financials, tech stocks and ongoing concerns about the fragile global economy.  Today’s small-cap gainers are DHT Maritime Inc. (NYSE:DHT), Tetra Technologies Inc. (NYSE:TTI) and Zones, Inc. (Nasdaq:ZONS). 

Other Market Watch highlights today included:

• The slip back below 450 raised caution flags for the Russell going into the afternoon, especially with all these wild last hour moves we’ve been seeing in stocks lately.
•  JP Morgan: Commodity prices – especially agriculture products – should outperform energy and industrial raw material products in 2009.
• The Energy Select Sector SPDR Fund was up more than 2% at mid-session.  
• Energy stocks were among the best performers so far today as crude oil prices reversed overnight losses.

Small Cap Gainers:

DHT Maritime Inc., a tanker ship operator, jumped 17% after releasing earnings numbers today. See (NYSE:DHT).  
Tetra Technologies Inc. jumped 15% as the oil and gas services company tries to mount a comeback after sinking to fresh lows last week. See (NYSE:TTI).  
• Reseller of IT products Zones, Inc. up 8.3% after announcing merger agreement with Zones Acquisition Corp. See (Nasdaq:ZONS).
Two Warren Resources executives buy 65,000 shares late last week; shares are up over 7% today. See (Nasdaq:WRES).  

Small Cap Losers:

Saks slides to loss in Q3 on weak margins, charges; shares dive 24%. See (NYSE:SKS).
Las Vegas Sands Corp. slumped 16% as the embattled casino operator hovers near record lows even though auditors recently removed doubts about the firm maintaining as a “going concern.” See (NYSE:LVS).  
Central Vermont Public Services Corp. is down 10% following news it would announce a public stock offering. See (NYSE:CV).  
W.R. Grace & Co. continues to slide today, making a new 52-week low of $3.30 from a 52-week high of $30. Last week the company was considering a bankruptcy reorganization plan. See (NYSE:GRA).  

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Kevin Pendley

Late slide erases intraday recovery bounce; clouds rate cut glow

In a fitting finish to an exasperating day, small-cap stocks collapsed in the final half-hour of trading as worries about a recession and tight credit lines clouded exuberance tied to a dramatic coordinated global rate cut ahead of this morning’s stock market open. The Russell 2000 (NYSE:IWM) closed down 12.39, or 2.22%, at 546.57, the lowest daily close since August 2004.

It was a turbulent session that saw the market sharply higher ahead of the open, sharply lower shortly after the open, solidly higher in mid-morning, sharply lower at midday, solidly higher with an hour to go, but then finally sinking back into a red sea by the close. For the year, the Russell is now down 28.6%, while the Dow is off 30.2% and the S&P 500 is down 32.9%. At the lows today, the Russell was down 37.1% from the all-time highs.

At approximately 7:00 a.m. ET this morning, the Federal Reserve slashed the target rate for fed funds to 1.5% from 2.0%, which marked the lowest level for fed funds since August 2004. At the same time, central bankers in England, Switzerland, Sweden and China also announced rate cuts, resulting in the first concerted international action on weak economic conditions since the 9/11 attacks seven years ago.

The market appeared to struggle mightily early today with whether or not the surprise global rate cut move was really enough to unclog credit lines and jolt the economy out of the grip of recession. For most of the day, the answer to those questions appeared to be “no.” However, tech stocks led the way back out of the midday slump, apparently driven by bargain hunting and by ideas that access to cheaper money would help investment in technology companies. The tech-laden Nasdaq 100 gave back a 4% afternoon rally by the close, but still managed to finish flat on the day, bouncing off five-year lows in the process. At the trough today, the Nasdaq 100 was down 42% from record highs, near levels consistent with previous recession . . .

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Kevin Pendley

Sharp slide for small caps on soft data, financial woes

Small-cap stocks fell hard Tuesday, as the combination of credit worries, high inflation and a slumping housing market whipped up the perfect bearish storm. The Russell 2000 (NYSE:IWM) closed down 11.94, or 1.61%, at 730.03, while the Dow was off 1.14% and the S&P 500 was down 0.93%. For the year, the Russell is now down 4.69%, backing off quickly after flirting with a test of positive yearly territory late last week. The Dow is down 14.4% for 2008 and the S&P 500 is off 13.7%.

Financial shares remained at the center of the seller hurricane, extending the rout that started Monday as talk of more debt write-downs started making the rounds. The fresh target today was Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc. (NYSE:LEH), which crashed 13% after analysts predicted $4 billion more in bad mortgage debt was ready to rolled off the books this quarter. The shudder of renewed bad debt fear swept through financial stocks, with the Financial Select Sector SPDR Fund tumbling 2.9% and the PHLX KBW Banking Index sinking 3.4% Major U.S. banks like Citigroup Inc. (NYSE:C) and Bank of America Corp. (NYSE:BAC) were hit by the concerns, slipping 2.5% and 4.1%, respectively.

And while the credit crisis was back in play again today, the market also had to come to grips with yet another bad inflation economic report. Last week saw investors essentially shrug off scary inflation numbers on the Consumer Price Index release, dismissing the data as less disturbing because it didn’t reflect the recent collapse in crude oil prices. Then today’s Producer Price Index (PPI) report not only showed headline inflation at 27 year highs, but also reflected “core” inflation, which excludes food and energy prices, at 17-year highs. The realization that the inflation story isn’t just about $4-a-gallon gasoline pump prices and higher grocery bills is a sobering thought for the market.

Just to finish off the bearish news, July housing starts came in below the forecast, with the unit rate at the lowest point since 1991. So, PPI is at 27-year highs, core inflation is at 17-year highs and housing starts are at 17-year lows. Combined, it’s not a pretty picture, and it also handcuffs monetary policy makers who have to walk a tightrope between battling inflation versus coddling economic health.

Broad market sectors on the decline Tuesday included motorcycle manufacturers, real estate management firms, department stores, consumer finance, casinos, . . .

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Kevin Pendley

Russell tumbles amid inflation, housing troubles

Small-cap stocks went into a tailspin on the opening as runaway inflation, weak housing starts and the never-ending credit crunch saga cast a bearish pall over the market. At 9:55 a.m. ET, the Russell 2000 (NYSE:IWM) was down 8.53, or 1.15%, at 733.44.

The inflation horizon became more troubling this morning when the Producer Price Index report came out at 1.2%, which was way ahead of the forecast for a rise of 0.6%. The headline figure marked the largest year-over-year rise in 27 years. Recently, investors have tried to shrug off inflation worries, saying that the data is back-dated and that the biggest inflation ingredient — energy — has been on the decline in late July and in August. However, today’s “core” rate of inflation, which excludes food and energy prices, was up a stunning 0.7%, which was far beyond the forecast for a rise of 0.2%. The year-over-year rise in the core rate was the fastest since 1991. Although you can argue that tracking inflation without including energy and food prices is somewhat silly, one thing the core rate shows us today is that inflation is creeping into other areas than just at the gas pump and in the grocery sack.

Rubbing a little salt in the wound was the Housing Starts report, which came out at the same time as the PPI and which also was a disappointment. The headline for housing starts was down 11.0%, slack compared with the forecast for a decline of 9.9%. The rate of July housing starts was at 965,000 units, which marked the lowest level since March 1991. So, housing starts are at 17-year lows and inflation is at 27-year lows. With many market watchers saying that a recovery in the housing market is a necessary start to a recovery in the financial/credit crisis, the numbers today did nothing to help further the bullish argument.

“With sales still soft, and with lending standards tighter, single family housing starts will contract even further,” Steven Wood, chief economist with Insight Economics, said in an email. “Housing’s contribution to economic growth will be . . .

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