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us stock market, understanding the stock market
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2/10/10 Stock Split Report Update
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Stock Split Report Subscribers:
MARKET ALERTS:
Targets hit alerts: None issued
Buy alerts: BUCY; QID
Trailing stops: None issued
Stop alerts: None issued
The market alert service is a premium level service where we issue intraday alerts relating to the general market conditions, when stocks hit action points (buy, stop, target, etc.), and when we see other information impacting the market or our stocks. To subscribe to the SSR alert service you can sign up at the following link:
http://www.investmenthouse.com/alertssr.html
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We have DIVIDED the video into component parts: Market Overview, Technical Summary, Economy, and the Next Session. This allows you to choose the segments you are interested in without having to find the spot in a longer video. Click on the link to the portion you wish to view.
MARKET OVERVIEW
TO VIEW THE MARKET OVERVIEW CLICK THE FOLLOWING LINK:
http://investmenthouse1.com/ihmedia/MarketOverview.wmv
TO VIEW THE TECHNICAL SUMMARY VIDEO CLICK THE FOLLOWING LINK:
http://investmenthouse1.com/ihmedia/TechnicalSummary.wmv
TO VIEW THE ECONOMY VIDEO CLICK THE FOLLOWING LINK:
http://investmenthouse1.com/ihmedia/Economy.wmv
TO VIEW THE NEXT SESSION VIDEO CLICK THE FOLLOWING LINK:
http://investmenthouse1.com/ihmedia/NextSession.wmv
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SUMMARY:
- Advantage upside: NASDAQ leads a break through the recent downtrend
- Jobless claims improve along with unadjusted numbers.
- Why the dollar still rallies in uncertainty: look at the condition of the other western economies.
- Friday sports a lot of weather-delayed data.
- Long weekend may prompt more upside Friday as shorts cover ahead of the weekend after a 5 week downside run.
Techs help lead a bounce ahead of long weekend.
The advantage went to the upside on Thursday as NASDAQ led a break through the recent downtrend that started roughly in mid-January. After stalling at the downtrend line from January and right below the 10 day EMA for a couple of days, NASDAQ made a break back up through that level and lead the charge for the rest of the market. Maybe it was simply a delayed response to the EU stating it would rescue Greece. The players involved in that - primarily Germany and France - have issues with this, but are begrudgingly agreeing to do so if the Greeks initiate some more severe austerity plans such as changing their pension age, cutting down on public spending, etc. I say delayed response because the futures were up in the morning but backed off ahead of the open on the SPY. The dollar rallied again, apparently because investors had little faith in what the EU would do with respect to Greece. The dollar surged nicely (1.3692 Euros versus 1.4729 Wednesday). That was off its low for the session but still strong. As the dollar backed off its high during the session, the stock market had a reaction, moved to the upside, and closed at its highs. Indeed, the SPY was still moving higher in extended-hours trade. What was it that caused this reversal, the dollar played a big role in causing this reversal, and was likely the deciding factor in the end.
Jobless claims were out before the open on Thursday, and they had improved (440K versus 483K the week prior, 465K expected). Even some of the unadjusted-by-season numbers improved in continuing claims and emergency claims. There is overall improvement, but that did not have much impact on stocks in the morning. Maybe it was President Obama who claimed he was a "fierce business advocate." Maybe that is rallying confidence in the US putting fourth serious economic recovery in the months to come. This administration and indeed all administrations are heavy on talk and rather light on action, however. The small business employee hiring credit is an example of the lack of understanding of how businesses work. I will not hire a 50K-per-year employee for a 5K tax credit.
Stocks started lower, but then started to rally. That weaker dollar gave them an impetus, and that sparked tech stocks and "over there" plays to recover from their recent selloffs. After all, the market has been down for five straight weeks and making new lows as it came down. If more news comes out of the EU with respect to the PIIGS, that could provide further upside impetus to the market. The other side of the coin is that Germany and France could be left in poor condition if Europe tries to bail everyone out.
Whatever the cause, the market turned, rallied, and closed at the session highs. The SP500 +1%, NASDAQ +1.5%, SOX +2.3%. Volume was better but still below average, and the breadth was solid.
OTHER MARKETS
Dollar. The DXY0 closed higher against the Euro, although it did back off from its session highs. That put it flat on the session against other currencies. It is still in a strong uptrend, surging and testing. It was testing today after it looked like it would surge higher. The dollar remains strong and has no indication it will peak out anytime soon. We can factor in additional gains to the upside. It is interesting to note that as the dollar posted gains on this session, stocks posted gains as well particularly stocks that were tied directly to the dollar several months back (in other words, moved inversely with the dollar). Everything was heading higher on Thursday.
http://investmenthouse.com/ihmedia/dxy0.jpeg
Oil. Oil posted another gain as well ($75.30, +0.38). There was a bounce off support and is now trying to rally past the next resistance at $76. The 50 day EMA is there, as well as several price points along the way. Oil tapped that level on Thursday and backed off somewhat. It is try to make a bounce inside of its range. Oil remains range-bound as it gyrates up and down. There are no more of the big, sweeping moves up and down; there are highs and lows bouncing back and forth. It could be the change of season, but it has not tipped its hand as to what it is going to do. It has only made a higher low and held the range.
http://investmenthouse.com/ihmedia/xoil.jpeg
Gold. Gold posted a nice gain after undercutting the December and late-January lows, breaking up a double bottom. It held the October support and bounced sharply and has now recaptured its lows. It is unclear whether it will continue the move and break through the important 1100 level. It did have a nice day and moved up 20 points. That is hard to complain about, but gold holders do have to watch that overhead in the future.
http://investmenthouse.com/ihmedia/xgld.jpeg
Bonds. Bonds continued to sell. There is no need to run to US Treasuries if Europe will be safe, right? That is only part of the picture. The US bond auctions have not been barn burners this week. The 10 year did not go that well, and had to offer significantly more interest to attract the buyers we need to fund our profligate spending. The 30 year auction on Thursday had the same issues. We had to pay much more than anticipated, in terms of yield, to attract the buyers to fund our debt. Thus, we saw bonds sell and yields rise. The 10 year yield rose (3.72% versus 3.69% Wednesday). Bonds are back at the bottom of this range at a key support level. We also have an interesting pattern. There is a run higher, the selloff, and the retracement. Then there is a test that held the same level and a retracement to the same level once more. That is a pattern that often leads to a further, deeper selloff. That would mean bonds sell and interest rates will go higher. If there is a drop down to the 103-102.50 level at the 200 day EMA, we will see them go higher fairly quickly. Looking at the Fibonacci chart, this rebound retraced up to the 50% level. It rebounded again to the 6 1% and has rolled over. It is now down at the point where the bounce started. That makes this a very important level for bonds. If they break this, interest rates will spike up quickly.
http://investmenthouse.com/ihmedia/tip.jpeg
TECHNICAL
INTERNALS
Volume. Volume was up on the day. It rose almost 4% to 2B shares on the NASDAQ, and it rose almost 6% to 1B shares on the NYSE. Volume was up on an upside day, and that shows there could be buyers involved. Volume was below average on both NASDAQ and NYSE, however. That is not that convincing. It was not a runaway move to the upside and not as strong as we have seen on prior selling days or prior upside sessions.
Breadth. The breadth was solid. When days move significantly up or down, there is matching breadth. Advancers were almost 3:1 on NASDAQ and over 3:1 on the NYSE. The breadth would indicate that this is not short covering ahead of the three-day weekend. Typically, on the short covering rally, the sectors that have been sold off are the ones that are covered (in other words bought back). That means the breadth is relatively narrow. Look at the charts, the move down was broad on this five-week sell off. Sellers were selling just about every sector of the market. When there is short covering, you would get rather broad breadth on the rebound. We cannot say that this was just buying for the sake of long-term buying. I am sure there are some doing that because many of the hedge fund managers say we should all be buying on this dip. That will bounce stocks back up somewhat, and we may get some nice upside trades on this. We cannot, however, assume this is the longs buying for a long-term rally and a new high on this rally.
CHARTS
NASDAQ. The indices started to break back up through their near term resistance. In the case of NASDAQ, that was the 10 day EMA it was riding down during this five-week selloff. It bumped it twice, on Tuesday and Wednesday, and it broke through on Thursday. It is the same story on the SP600 and the SOX. The SP500 is interesting because it is the laggard and it did not make the move through the 10 day EMA because the financials did not participate. The indices have been trading for the last couple of days between near resistance (that was stopping its bounce back up) and support down below that they tested just a week ago and held. They traded in this range and finally got enough impetus to break through to the upside. NASDAQ broke through that near resistance, and that was a start to the move back upside. It has a lot of overhead coming from the September peak just below 2200, up to the top of the November and December range at 2205. That will act as resistance for NASDAQ in the near term as it makes a bounce. If the NASDAQ can break through the November and December peaks, then it has a clear shot to the bottom of the January consolidation. That is where it peaked out and rolled over into this downside leg. That would be a seminal test. Either the market will have the strength to push through, or it will fail and come back down for a deeper selloff into the 2000 range. That relies upon NASDAQ being able to break through the key level at 2205. It is one step at a time.
You cannot start looking down the road at what may happen and expect it to happen. One can anticipate moves based on history, but no one knows what will happen; it is all based on probabilities. This is this next major probability since it broke higher above this level. It may just be short covering. We may see that level on Friday on some more short covering ahead of a three-day weekend. Will the buyers remain on Tuesday, or will that be it? Will they have shot their ammunition and short-covering ahead of a long weekend to turn over and fall back down from there? Either way, I am not building in a lot of upside for the long term. I am not very confident in it, but that does not mean it will not happen. If the market shows it, we will move that way. We have we been buying upside positions when stocks show they are ready to be bought because nobody is smarter than the stock market. When the stock market tells you to do something, you do it. We took positions to the downside at the close yesterday in the event the market sold off. It did not do that, so we closed out some of those positions and may close the others if the market continues to bounce. Even though I feel the market may ultimately head back down, I do not know that for a fact, so we move in when there are good risk/reward positions. If it does not work out, we are not killed on the play.
SP500. SP500 showed similar action. It is still in the four-week fall. It bounced, but note that it did not move through the 10 day EMA. It could be just a laggard as it was on Thursday and still move higher as the rest of the market moves higher. It has serious resistance from the September peak up to the bottom of the November and December consolidation, however. As with NASDAQ, It has an important level in the October peak and the November and December peak that it has not taken out. There are many price points where the index was jammed up for quite awhile. It takes some time to break through that up to 1100 and the October peak, not to mention 1113 in November and December. It is the same thing with NASDAQ. If it makes the break, it is able to come up to the old high? January, the bottom at 1130, will be the key. Can it break through that or will it turn back down and sell further?
SP600. The small caps bounced off of the 310 support level and are moving up to test the next resistance. Their key level is in September and October. They did not have the November and December consolidation up above that level. They will be testing a key twin top just ahead, and small caps tend to be a barometer of economic activity down the road. They are lagging a bit. If they fall short, the other indices may move higher in the near term, but they likely will not succeed if the small caps are forecasting economic issues later in the summer. That makes sense given we have followed the EU out of the recession and the EU is already having major troubles holding their gains.
SOX. The semiconductor index bounced through the 10 day EMA and held it in check the entire way down. It is already at its September and October peaks, and its next level is in December before it runs up toward January. We will see how the chips fare. They were the first to sell off, and they are making a good run. If they break through the September and October highs, that is a good indication for the rest of the market.
In sum, this was not a definitive move by any means. It was a short-term improvement for the upside. It broke through the near-term resistance in the form of the downtrend, but all the indices still have key resistance levels near at hand. It may get to them on Friday if there is more short covering moves ahead of the weekend. After that, that is when the key move comes in next week. The question is whether they will be able to find buyers outside of the short covering to pick up the torch and carry forward. They may fade and move back to further selling. Even at that point, if they do find more buyers, can they take out the January consolidation? When there is this kind of correction after such a long run, it is often an indication that when stocks make it back to this level, it is just setting up another test as part of the longer-term consolidation after a long-term run higher.
LEADERSHIP
Industrials. As you would expect, if there where stocks engaged in short covering, then they would be bouncing along with the sectors that have been selling. BUCY bounced up through a resistance level. Even though it looked like it was ready to turn over, it bounced higher. There was to close that position today. This may be one you could flip and play to the upside. There is resistance as 60, but you may be able to get a move back up to 64. That is not bad considering it closed at 57. That is a nice trade if it pans out. CMI broke almost to a new closing high on the rally. It sold off but recovered much more rapidly with a nice earnings report.
Technology. Technology is another key area for this move. Looking at the chart of AAPL, it mirrors SP500 and NASDAQ. It sold off, it was stalling at the 10 day EMA, but now is breaking higher. There is a lot of resistance for AAPL overhead as well on the November and October peaks and the bottom of the January consolidation. If AAPL can make that move, odds are that the market follows. GOOG is moving laterally. It did not participate much in the rally on Thursday, but it has not given up the gains. Same with MSFT. It looks to be in trouble, but it flattened out its pullback and has been moving in a lateral consolidation. This will be an important move. It is at its 10 day EMA and tested it on Thursday. If it fails, it will go down and fill the gap from October. That would be a key move for NASDAQ because it is such a large cap in that particular index. We were playing MRVL to the downside, but it broke higher on volume on Thursday and we had to close the downside play. This could provide an interesting upside trade up to roughly 2150 level. That is not a huge gain, but if you play options, you might be able to trade that to the upside.
China. China is showing some improvement. Although the Chinese stocks overall have been struggling, there are some in good shape. MR gapped higher off an orderly pullback to the 50 day EMA, and we picked up some of that today. SINA is showing similar pullback to support, as are many stocks. Volume is swelling as it holds that level and starts to bounce. There are interesting plays out there.
Healthcare. Healthcare has been a sector somewhat immune to the selling. ILMN is bouncing higher on Thursday after an ABCD pattern. RMD gapped higher, tested, and is rallying on strong volume. HGR gapped higher and cleared resistance. It is a strong breakaway gap. There is money moving into the drug, medical appliance, and healthcare stocks in general, and we have been picking some up along the way.
Energy. Energy has been beaten up, but there are stocks such as CHK holding at the 200 day EMA and trying to bounce off a higher low. SLB has set up an ABCD pattern and is bouncing. That could make a nice rally to the prior high at 72. Even stocks that have really been kicked around, such as CVX, are trying to find support. There is a range of support you can see from prior peaks and volumes. It sold off to that level, snapped back, bounced, and is recovering from those levels. CVX will not sell off. It might demonstrate a trade up to the bottom of the range, 72-76.
Retail. Retail has been one of the leaders, and after hours, there is trouble. This could be something that plays into Friday. BWLD had a nice move during the regular session, and CMG and PNRA were holding up quite well. They were performing admirably and all moving higher on solid volume. They were all coming in just ahead of earnings. After hours, there are some issues with these stocks. CMG took a hit and is trading down near 98 after hours. BWLD is trading much sharper. It was trading near 48.5, and it is down near 4 1.50 after hours. CMG is being hit as well. They reported good earnings, but the outlooks were conservative and investors are punishing them after hours. BWLD looked like it might gap down through a key level. If it does, it is not going to do much for us. It will likely continue lower, although there is a lot of support near 40. The other two stocks will gap, but it looks like they are going to hold above key levels. CMG will be holding above the August and September peaks, so it will not be a complete wash out. It will have a possibility to bounce. Same with PNRA. Retail stocks have been leading the market higher. If they are taken out, what happens with respect to the other markets? After hours, the SPY was moving higher, so the initial reaction is not much of one to the downside for the market overall.
THE ECONOMY
Why the US is still a popular store of wealth despite our debt levels.
THE MARKET
MARKET SENTIMENT
VIX: 23.96; -1.44
VXN: 23.43; -1.8
VXO: 23.09; -1.18
Put/Call Ratio (CBOE): 0.86; -0.07
Bulls versus Bears:
This is a reading of the number of bullish investment advisors versus bearish advisors. The reason you look at this is that it gives you an idea of how bullish investors are. If they are too bullish then everyone is in the market and it is heading for a top: if everyone wants to be in the market then all the money is in and there is no more new cash to drive it higher. On the other side of the spectrum if there are a lot of bears then there is a lot of cash on the sideline, and as the market rallies it drags that cash in as the bears give in. That cash provides the market the fuel to move higher. If bears are low it is the same as a lot of bulls: everyone is in and the market doesn't have the cash to drive it higher.
Bulls: 38.9%. The selling took further toll on bulls, dropping them from 40.0%. After peaking at 53 on this move the bulls continue to run, falling to a new low post- July 2009. Once again bulls peaked out near the 50% level. Bulls have bumped at 50ish since late August 2009, falling to 45ish and then rebounding. Getting close to the 35% level that is the threshold for what is considered a bullish climate. Hit a high of 47.7% mid-June on the run from the March lows. Again, to be seriously bearish it needs to get up to the 60% to 65% level. Dramatic rise from 21.3% in November 2008, the bottom on this leg. This last leg down showed us the largest single week drop we have ever seen, falling from 33.7% to 25.3%. Hit 40.7% on the high during the rally off the July 2008 lows. 30.9% was the March low. In March the indicator did its job with the dive below 35% and the crossover with the bears. A move into the lower 40's is a decline of significance. A move to 35% is a bullish indicator.
Bears: 22.2%. Surprisingly bears fell for the week, down from 23.3% after a brisk rise up from 16%ish on the lows this leg where it held for several weeks. Peaked near 28% in November, falling short of the 35.6% hit in July 2009. For reference, cracking above the 35% threshold considered bullish. Hit a high on this run at 47.2%. For reference, bearishness hit a 5 year high at 54.4% the last week of October 2008. The move over 50 took bearish sentiment to its highest level since 1995. Extreme negative sentiment. Prior levels for comparison: Bearishness peaked at 37.4% in September 2007. It topped the June 2006 peak (36%) on that run. That June peak eclipsed the March 2006 high (33%) and well above the 2005 highs that spawned new rallies (30% in May 2005, 29.2% in October 2005). That was a huge turn, unlike any seen in recent history.
NASDAQ
Stats: +29.54 points (+1.38%) to close at 2177.41
Volume: 2.05B (+3.81%)
Up Volume: 1.771B (+884.583M)
Down Volume: 326.271M (-786.888M)
A/D and Hi/Lo: Advancers led 2.88 to 1
Previous Session: Decliners led 1.02 to 1
New Highs: 55 (+25)
New Lows: 20 (-4)
NASDAQ CHART: http://investmenthouse.com/ihmedia/NASDAQ.jpeg
NASDAQ 100 CHART: http://investmenthouse.com/ihmedia/NASDAQ100.jpeg
SOX CHART: http://investmenthouse.com/ihmedia/SOX.jpeg
SP500/NYSE
Stats: +10.34 points (+0.97%) to close at 1078.47
NYSE Volume: 1.061B (+5.8%)
Up Volume: 842.408M (+401.537M)
Down Volume: 207.756M (-343.617M)
A/D and Hi/Lo: Advancers led 3.17 to 1
Previous Session: Decliners led 1.09 to 1
New Highs: 86 (+4)
New Lows: 39 (-3)
SP500 CHART: http://investmenthouse.com/ihmedia/SP500.jpeg
SP600 CHART: http://investmenthouse.com/ihmedia/SP600.jpeg
DJ30
Stats: +105.81 points (+1.05%) to close at 10144.19
Volume DJ30: 194M shares Thursday versus 178M shares Wednesday. As with the other indices, up but still below average.
DJ30 CHART: http://www.investmenthouse.com/ihmedia/DJ30.jpeg
FRIDAY
It is a Friday ahead of a three-day weekend. There will be a lot of weather-delayed data coming out that should have appeared on Wednesday. Retail sales, Michigan Sentiment, business inventories, and the crude inventories will all be coming out. We are looking for a big boost the retail sales in January. Same store sales were solid, so that is not out of the picture at all. Autos were up much stronger than anticipated, and they make up a big chunk of the estimated 3% gain in retail sales that we are supposed to see. There will also be the Michigan Sentiment, and it is supposed to come it better at 75. That is a decent reading, but is still recessionary.
We saw perhaps some short covering start on Thursday. There have been five weeks to the downside, and after that, you sometimes get a rebound. That is only natural. When there is a three-day weekend ahead, then that is a logical time to take some shorts off the table. We had to do some of the same ourselves. If there is a continued upside move on Friday, should you continue to move in? We have several good upside positions. Do we want to move in on what could be a short-covering rally ahead of a three-day weekend? In other words, Tuesday could see the weakness return, even if the indices put in some upside moves. If NASDAQ moves up to these prior peaks, it could still turn back down. We do not want to do a lot of buying on Friday. If you want to make some trades, we will have some plays to look at, but I am not too excited about loading up to the upside. Things are still very choppy and volatile. The market is trying to make a bounce, but there are ulterior reasons for that bounce other than good, old fashioned long buying, looking to drive the market up to a new rally high. I noted some stocks that could be plays such as CVX or SLB, and there are others. As far as new plays, we may have some we want to move into. There are some stocks in good position that we may be willing to pick up a partial position on, but I do not want to get too deeply involved because of the three-day weekend.
I also want to see how the earnings play out. That came out after hours, and they were somewhat sobering because they go right to the heart of the consumer. The consumer has supposedly been better off because retail as been moving up, sentiment has been moving up, and retail sales numbers have been moving up. If the outlook for these restaurants suddenly sours, however, that is not a good indication for the consumer continuing to lead the market. The short of it is that we have picked up nice positions over the past few days. We will continue to look, and we can pick up a few positions if we see a play we cannot resist. We will not be taking new, big positions ahead of a three-day weekend. I would like to see more clarification come next week. Then we can pick up more positions the way the market moves.
Support and Resistance
NASDAQ: Closed at 2177.41
Resistance:
2167 from the July 2008 intraday low
2168 is the September 2009, intraday peak
2169 is the March 2008 closing low (double bottom)
2177 is a low from March 2008
2191 is the October 2009 peak
The 50 day EMA at 2203
2205 is the November 2009 peak
2210 (from September 2008) to 2212 (the July 2009 closing low)
2218 is the August 2005 peak
2245 from July 2008 through 2260 from late 2005.
2275 - 2278 from the February 2008 and April 2008 lows
2292 is a low from January 2008
2319 from the September 2008 peak
2326.28 is the January high
2324-2370 is a range of resistance from early 2008
2382-2395 from 2008
2412-2415 represents a series of peaks and lows in 2007, 2008
2453 is the August 2008 peak
Support:
2155 is the March 2008 intraday low
2143 is the October 2009 range low
2099 is the mid-September 2008 closing low
2070 is the September 2008 intraday low
2060 is the August peak
2048 is the early October 2009 closing low
The 200 day SMA at 2030
2015 from an early August 2008 peak
S&P 500: Closed at 1078.47
Resistance:
1078 is the October range low
The 10 day EMA at 1078
1084 to 1080 (September 2009 peak)
The 50 day EMA at 1098
1101 is the October 2009 high
1106 is the September 2008 low
1114 is the November 2009 peak
1119 is the early December intraday high
1133 from a September 2008 intraday low
1150 is the January 2010 peak
1156 is the Sept 2008 low
1185 from late September 2008
1200 from the July 2008 low
Support:
1070 is the late September 2009 peak
1044 is the October 2008 intraday high
The August peak at 1040
The early October 2009 closing low at 1025
The 200 day SMA at 1023
The early August intraday peak at 1018
The November 2008 peak at 1006 closing 1007.53 intraday
992 is the August 2009 consolidation low
Dow: Closed at 10,144.19
Resistance:
10,285 is the late December consolidation peak
The 50 day EMA at 10,274
10,365 is the late September 2008 low
10,496 is the November 2009 high
10,609 from the Mid-September 2008 interim low
10,963 is the July 2008 low
Support:
10,120 is the October 2009 peak
9829 is the September 2008 closing high
9918 is the September 2008 peak
9855 is the early September peak in its lateral range
9835 is the late September 2009 peak
9654 is the November 2008 high
9625 is the October 2008 closing high
9620 is the August 2009 peak
The 200 day SMA at 9521
9430 is the early October low
9387 is the mid-October peak
Economic Calendar
These are consensus expectations. Our expectations will vary and are discussed in the 'Economy' section.
February 09 - Tuesday
Wholesale Inventories, December (10:00): -0.8% actual versus 0.5% expected, 1.6% prior (revised from 1.5%)
February 10 - Wednesday
Trade Balance, December (08:30): -$40.2B actual versus -$35.8B expected, -$36.4B prior (no revisions)
February 11 - Thursday
Initial Claims, 02/06 (08:30): 440K actual versus 465k expected, 483k prior (revised from 480K)
Continuing Claims, 1/30 (08:30): 4538K actual versus 4600k expected, 4617k prior (revised from 4602K)
February 12 - Friday
Retail Sales, January (08:30): 0.3% expected, -0.3% prior
Retail Sales ex-auto, January (08:30): 0.5% expected, -0.2% prior
Michigan Sentiment, February (09:55): 75.0 expected, 74.4 prior
Business Inventories, December (10:00): 0.2% expected, 0.4% prior
Crude Inventories, 2/5 (11:00): 2.32M prior
End part 1 of 3
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us stock market
understanding the stock market
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