John Cornyn Will Be a Texas Thom Tillis and That’s Awful
It Seems Ro Khanna Might Be the Next Dem Rep to Get Torched...the...
We Know Who Donated to Eric Swalwell
Scott Jennings Shredded This Former Dem Rep's Iran Cheerleading on CNN Last Night
Here Are the Two People DNI Gabbard Issued Criminal Referrals for Concerning...
Idiot Math
Pocahontas Wants to Spend Jeff Bezos’s Money
The Pope, Three Cardinals, and the Iran War
In Israel, Garbage Trucks Bring the Garbage
The Implosion of Eric Swalwell: What Was He Thinking?
Debunking Five Tax Day Myths
My Advice to (Young) Women
Immigration in America: Legal Pathways, Border Reality, and the Fight Over Who Belongs
Trump’s Hormuz Masterstroke: How American Energy Dominance Is Exposing China’s Fatal Weakn...
New York Can’t Claim 'Choice' While Silencing It
OPINION

Buckle Up & Stay The Course

The opinions expressed by columnists are their own and do not necessarily represent the views of Townhall.com.
Buckle Up & Stay The Course

I got a question from a subscriber yesterday about the recent volatility and if he should get out of the stock market.

My Reply:

We assess the market throughout each session, and the current volatility isn't a reflection of the underlying fundamentals or upside potential.  There have been a few disappointments with the recent economic data, but earnings continue to be phenomenal.  The smartest move is to hold tight.  Sell losers based on broken fundamentals and take profits on certain high Beta names to raise money and mitigate anxiety.  Be prepared to buy names that go on sale, and obviously adjust to the fact last year's idyllic days of zero volatility are over, but the bull market is not.  CP

Advertisement

Today’s Session

The market has been under pressure all morning, but the outcome of the session probably hinges on the interpretation of Jerome “Jay” Powell’s testimony before members of the Senate.  This should give more clarity than the clown show before House members on Tuesday that sucked out all the oxygen and time only to push their own agendas. 

The nonsense was so amazing, one representative equated slavery to full employment for Black Americans. #Nuts!

While we wait for that, the retail spark continues, and is now undeniable.  Earnings results from key names and observations from management underscore the fact that Americans are feeling much better about their circumstances, and they are shopping again. 

Best Buy (BBY)

  • Revenues $15.36 billion estimate $14.50 billion
  • Earnings per Share $2.42 estimate $2.04
  • Comp Store Sales +9.0% estimate +2.9%

This is nothing short of the perfect earnings report as management raised its guidance for the current year to $5.75 versus $4.75 consensus coming into the day.   With a 17% short position, this stock is poised to rocket through a double top formation to new highs.

Kohl’s

  • Revenues $6.78 billion estimate $6.74 billion
  • Earnings per Share $1.99 estimate $1.77
  • Comp Store Sales +6.3% estimate +6.1%

Gross margins expanded, and inventories declined, as management continues to perfect the Omni-channel approach and benefited from stores located outside of malls.  Operating margin surged to 8.4% from 7.6% a year earlier.

Advertisement

Related:

ECONOMY

Full year guidance of $5.42 is well-above $4.72 consensus.

Retail is rocking

Additional retailers posted stronger-than-expected results this morning as well, and there’s a great chance the Retail Index (RLX) could break through a double top.  RLX is up 37% since August 29, 2017.

RLX

We just got the latest read on personal income and spending, and both were in line with consensus.  We will crunch those numbers for you and have more information in a later piece.

This morning steel and aluminum stocks are moving higher as President Trump continues to pound the table on his determination for fair trade, including the elusive, but obviously massive, dumping of cheap industrial metals by China.

Tech got good news from one of its darlings as Salesforce (CRM) posted a very strong earnings report. 

Initial claims out for the week ending February 17th, declined by 7,000 to 222,000 vs consensus of 233,000. A better gauge, the four-week moving average was decreased by 2,250 to 226,000.  We have now had 155 consecutive weeks of claims below 300,000 Continuing claims decreased to 1,875,000 down 73,000 and the 4-week average for continuing claims declined to 1,925,500 down 16,250.

Advertisement

The market, after being under great pressure all morning, even with great retail news, industrial and metals higher, and tech sizzling, has turned around, as all eyes are on Powell.

Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Recommended

Trending on Townhall Videos

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement