Pull Back Hits Energy Hardest in Wednesday's TradingSmall Caps putting up the biggest gains at press time (2:30 P.M. Eastern) include La-Z-Boy (NYSE:LZB) up 36.2% after an upgrade to strong buy from Raymond James, Atlas Pipeline Holdings (NYSE:AHD) up 30.2% after announcing a joint venture with Williams (NYSE:WMB) to expand Atlas's presence in Pennsylvania, Tivo (Nasdaq:TIVO) up 51.1%, Human Genome Sciences (Nasdaq:HGSI) up 16.7%, and Applied Signal Technology (Nasdaq:APSG) up 16%. Yesterday's darling stock, Green Plains Renewable Energy (Nasdaq:GPRE) was one of today's dogs lose 16.2% as volume slows from Monday and Tuesday's trading sessions. As of press time (2:30 P.M. Eastern) all major indices are off with the S&P 500 leading the decline by a 2.0% drop, followed by the Dow sloughing off 1.5% and the Nasdaq down 1.4%. The Russell 2000 Index, comprised of the 2,000 largest small cap stocks was down 8.5 points, or 1.61% to 518.13. *****Russia is grumbling. Seems they are not happy that rising debt, slow growth and record Treasury bond sales are dragging the U.S. dollar down. In fact, Russian president Medvedev is calling for some kind of global currency to replace the U.S dollar as the world's reserve currency. (Sound familiar? Like he's taking a page from the Chinese?) In an interview with CNBC on Monday he said, "We need some kind of universal means of payment, which could create the basis of a future international financial system…" Of course, this is a horrible idea. As one analyst put it, "It took decades for the euro to be established. I can only imagine how long it would take for the BRIC countries to put together a currency." *****It's an investing truism that the financials always lead the stock market. Recall that it was bullish comments from Citigroup that kicked off this rally back in early march. And I'm sure nobody needs reminding that it was the financials that kicked off the worst bear market in 80 years. When the S&P 500 and the Nasdaq blew through their 200-day moving averages on Monday, the financials were out in front. But today, even though the major indices finished with slight gains, many financials finished in the red. American Express (NYSE:AXP) dropped nearly 5%. JP Morgan (NYSE:JPM) lost 4.46%. Wells Fargo (NYSE:WFC) lost 4% and Citigroup (NYSE:C) lost 4.88%. Bank of America (NYSE:BAC) is about the only major financial stock to finish in the green, and that was a 1.7% gain. In fact, the Financials SPDR (AMEX:XLF) failed to make a new recovery high along with the Nasdaq and S&P 500. So what gives? Why have the financials underperformed, and why were they weak today? *****One clue comes from the Healthcare Select SPDR (AMEX:XLV). As you may know, healthcare stocks are considered defensive stocks. That's because their revenues are seen as being stable as healthcare is a necessary, as opposed to discretionary, expense. In difficult markets, institutional investors will park their money in healthcare stocks as a way to maintain exposure, but lower risk. If we compare the Healthcare SPDR XLV to the Financial SPDR XLF, we see an interesting divergence starting on May 8. Healthcare has been trending up since that date. And the Financial SPDR has been trending down. To me, this looks like sector rotation. It appears that institutional investors are moving money out of aggressive financial investments and into defensive healthcare stocks. When the institutional investors start playing defense, individual investors should pay attention. *****Technical analyst for TradeMaster Daily Stock Alerts, Jason Cimpl, thinks the rally has about another week before we start seeing some downside. And for good measure, he recommended that his readers take their 29% profits on Fushi Copperweld (Nasdaq:FSIN). This trade took less than 3 weeks. Nice job, Jason. Jason is still holding the two stocks you may have learned about from the TradeMaster video I included in yesterday's Daily Profit. In case you entered either trade, you should know that Jason has recommended a stop loss for FXI at $35.15 and UNG at $12.60. If you missed the video, you can check it out HERE.
Cashing in on China (part two)Last Friday we brought you Chinese stock guru Jim Trippon’s thoughts on investment ideas in China and the outlook for the Chinese stock market (see http://www.smallcapinvestor.com/articles/04112008-cashing_in_on_china). Today, Trippon examines the larger economic picture, the future of China and how it will affect the U.S. economy. Trippon, editor in chief of the newsletter China Stock Digest, runs the largest equity investment research firm in mainland China and advises corporate pensions, private trusts, and high-net-worth families on their China investment strategies. Trippon spoke with SmallCapInvestor.com’s Jennifer Schonberger last week. “Chinese stocks have been a phenomenal alternative to U.S. stocks over the last three years. In 2006 we made a 39% return and last year we made over a 58% return in a year that was mediocre for the U.S. market. Although there is a linkage between the U.S. market and China’s stock market in the short term, when you begin looking over longer periods, our economies could not be going in more different directions. You’re seeing the end of the dollar as the world’s currency, you’re seeing the end of the United States as the world’s largest economy and, at the same time, you’re seeing the rise of China to replace both. “It’s played out a lot because of our trade policies. China’s impact on the United States has actually contributed to our low cost of living by giving us consumer products at manufacturing costs that we could not duplicate here. Even if labor rates rise overseas, they’re not going to bring those parts back here. There’s no way that’s going to shift when the average auto worker in Detroit makes $50 an hour including benefits and the average worker in China makes $5 a day including benefits. It’s a mixed bag in that it’s good for the U.S. consumer to be able to buy cheap consumer products that cost less than they would have if they were manufactured here, but it’s arguably bad for our society to no longer have a middle class that’s viable. “[China] is not too dependent on exports. For the past 30 years the country has been very dependent on exports and still is — [exports] are half of their economy, but each year it’s a lower percentage. That has a lot to do with the fact that not only have we exported our manufacturing business to China, but arguably we’ve . . .
Aventine Renewable Energy Holdings: Beyond fadAs American consumers continue to feel pain every time they pull up to a gasoline pump, renewable energy remains a popular talking point. The question is when will there be more action than talk, and when will investors in companies making such alternative fuels as ethanol reap a bumper crop of benefits in share price. Ethanol obviously has grown beyond a fad as an energy source, and Aventine Renewable Energy Holdings Inc. (NYSE: AVR) is one of the biggest producers and marketers in the United States. The company was established in 1981, giving it a marketing strength absent from many of its recently arriving competitors. Little goes to waste at Aventine: while its strength is ethanol, the company also produces and markets biodiesel and such byproducts as corn gluten feed and meal, distillers products, carbon dioxide and brewers’ yeast. With plants in its hometown of Pekin, Ill., and another in Aurora, Neb., the company’s annual production capacity is around 207 million gallons. Planning for another plant in Indiana, along the Ohio River, is under way, and will bring the eastern Corn Belt into the company’s domain in late 2008 or early 2009. Including its marketing alliances, the company marketed and distributed 697 million gallons of ethanol in 2006, or nearly 13% of the total volume sold last year in the United States. Customers include Royal Dutch Shell plc (NYSE: RDS.A), Marathon Oil Corporation’s (NYSE: MRO) Marathon Petroleum, BP plc (NYSE: BP), ConocoPhillips NYSE: COP), Valero Energy Corp. (NYSE: VLO), Exxon Mobil Corp. (NYSE: XOM) and Chevron Corp. (NYSE: CVX). Since its July 2006 initial public stock offering, Aventine Renewable Energy’s shares have fluctuated substantially, following the ebb and flow of negative and positive news reports about alternative fuels. Other than for a few days after its IPO priced at $43, investors haven’t seen the stock trading anywhere near that level, with shares most recently idling in the $13-$16 range. During its first quarter as a public company, Aventine’s board authorized a $50 million share-repurchase plan. spacer spacer spacer spacer spacer spacer spacer spacer spacer spacer spacer spacer spacer spacer spacer spacer spacer spacer spacer spacer spacer spacer spacer spacer spacer spacer spacer spacer spacer spacer spacer spacer spacer spacer spacer spacer spacer spacer spacer spacer spacer spacer spacer spacer spacer spacer spacer spacer spacer spacer spacer spacer spacer spacer spacer
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