Tuesday, August 5, 2008

Market Higher on Continued Declines in Commodities Prices

Commodities continue their recent sell-off, giving a boost to financials.  Lower commodities prices mean less inflation which takes the pressure off of the Fed to raise interest rates soon.  Higher interest rates would be yet another kick in the pants of the beleaguered banking industry.  As a consequence, each time commodities take another tumble, financials rally.  Furthermore, it is widely believed that many large hedge funds who have had success this year were long commodities and short financials.  If these players are unwinding their positions, this further reinforces the divergent movements between commodities and financial shares.
In the good news camp, analysts at UBS upgraded AIG this morning.  The stock promptly rallied in response to the upgrade, which I find amusing.  AIG reports earnings tomorrow.  Why on earth would an investor buy a stock the day before the earnings report just because some analyst at UBS, of all places, decided on a whim that this stock is a buy?  Is that because UBS knows subprime better than anyone?  UBS has certainly lost enough money in the past year because of its subprime exposure, so I suppose that could be the reason.  In any event, once again, without irony, this is reported in the financial press as if it were significant news.  Bloomberg even has the misleading headline "AIG Rises as UBS Upgrades to Buy on Narrower Losses" implying that the company has already reported narrower losses, which is certainly not the case.  Personally, I'm going to wait to hear the actual earnings report from the company itself.  Call me crazy but I don't have an particularly itchy trigger finger.
Meanwhile, in actual earnings news, D.R. Horton reported a wider than expected loss of $399.3 million or $1.26 a share.  Analysts were expecting a loss of 70 cents a share.  Wrong again.  The homebuilder took a $330.4 million charge for inventory impairments and other charges, Revenue dropped 44% to $1.43 billion, the number of homes closed fell 36% while net orders declined 56%.  Still searching for that bottom in homebuilders...   

2 comments:

Market Factors said...

Whatever could be wrong with the market going higher? Decline in demand for commodities is good news right? It will make houses cheaper to build in the future, and that, my friend, is good for the US economy. If commodity prices drop a little more we can get back to the good old goldilocks economy.

spagetti said...

when my revolution comes, financial journalists will be asked to answer for the way they lead us astray with the sensationalist way they formulate their headlines

mind you.. AIG stocks seemed to have peaked short term just as UBS upgraded them.
im not sure which on which company i should (continue) to be more bearish; AIG or UBS ?