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OPINION

Trump Triumphs On Trade

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The market cheered President Trump’s trade triumph with a big rally in blue chips, led by Boeing (BA), which was the best performing name on the Dow Jones Industrial Average.  Once again, we saw an early rally struggle midway through the session as the NASDAQ and Russell finished the day lower.

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The yellow flag for the session was breadth, which has been flashing caution for a couple of months.

  • NYSE: new highs 62 new lows 133/ up volume 1.64 billion down volume 1.67 billion
  • NASDAQ new highs 87 new lows 89 / up volume 1.11 billion down volume 1.23 billion

S&P 500 Index

+0.46%

Communication Services (XLC)

-0.61%

Consumer Discretionary (XLY)

+0.12%

Consumer Staples (XLP)

0.00%

Energy (XLE)

+1.64%

Financials (XLF)

+0.36%

Health Care (XLV)

+0.52%

Industrials (XLI)

+1.07%

Materials (XLB)

+1.35%

Real Estate (XLRE)

-0.36%

Technology (XLK)

+0.47%

Utilities (XLU)

-0.21%

 

Nasdaq 100

Interestingly, the NASDAQ 100 continues its rocket-ship ascent as each session seems to bring a higher price target for Apple (AAPL), Amazon (AMZN) and Netflix (NFLX) and NVidia (NVDA) keeps moving towards more importance for the index than two tech titans, Cisco (CSCO) and Intel (INTC).  By the way, while it’s only the 38th most heavily weighted in the index, the 17% rebound in Tesla (TSLA) helped the market yesterday big time.

Looking at the S&P 500, energy continues its big rally following the coattails of higher crude.

The move higher in crude is happening as more nations abandon Iran’s supply and some say, as evidence, OPEC can’t control prices any more.   At $75.40, West Texas Intermediate is at its highest level since November 2014 when crude was hit during the Saudi-engineered freefall.

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Related:

STOCKS TARIFFS TRADE

While the S&P Energy Sector (XLE) is higher, its nowhere near the levels it traded back in November 2014.  That suggests there’s a lot more room to the upside.  I still like those Texas names like Concho (CXO) and big dividend payers like Chevron (CVX).

Two reports on manufacturing were strong.

  • ISM Manufacturing Report came in at 59.8, the street was looking for 59.9 

          Although showing increased signs of worry about the impact of tariffs along with persistent  complaints about lack of workers.But everyone agrees the                        economy is strong.

  • Purchasing Managers Index 55.6, the street looking for 54.5

            Backlogs building significantly but price pass through to customers are solid.

PMI

Today’s Session

The rest of the week shifts to jobs and wages in a week that has the potential to see the market through key resistance that would surely trigger panic buying.

Key Breakout Points

  • S&P 500 2940
  • NASDAQ 8,135
  • Dow Jones Industrial Average 26,800

King Dollar

While market breadth is worrisome, it also underscores the fact investors can’t simply throw darts.  The threats to the rally are the Fed and the strong U.S. Dollar.  The dollar is higher this year, but it has been much higher in recent years.  There is no doubt, multinational companies without domestic pricing power are feeling the pinch from the stronger dollar.

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President Trump and Larry Kudlow breached the idea there is a point when the dollar gets too strong.  Apparently, presidents aren’t supposed to say that kind of stuff, and in the past, just suffered the anxiety in private solitude.

Dollar Too Strong or Business Too Weak

This morning, Pepsi offered subpar guidance and blames the strong dollar.  Certainly, in the quarter’s results posted this morning, we could see where the strong dollar had a negative impact (see table).

The largest issue for Pepsi is the inability to pass on cost increases and the general lack of pricing power that has pressured most consumer staple names.

Still, we are watching the dollar, and like every investor, it does play a role in some decision-making.

Pepsi Business Segments

Operating Profit Change

As Reported

Constant Currency

Frito Lay North America

3.5

4.0

Quaker

(1.5)

(1.0)

North American Beverage

(14.0)

(11.0)

Asia & Middle East

17.0

19.0

Latin America

Unchanged

9.0

Europe

3.0

9.0

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