Wednesday, December 16, 2009

Dec 16th Market Updates

We are back to the top of the channel. Will we fall back a few hundred points or just continue inching our way upward? Health care, home builders and oil service stocks looking strong. A number of possible short-term stock trades are discussed in this video.



Here's another view on the market along with the nose bleed stocks.



Frankly, I'm playing it safe ( meaning holding more defensive or way oversold positions ). The market advanced into the meeting knowing what was going to be said. Now the question is will oil continue to climb back to the high $70's knowing that the fed has no plans to raise interest rates? If oil holds strong there are many oil service plays that have fallen back on oils fall from $79 to $69 to consider. I jumped into WFT, HLX and SUN today but hedged buy selling X, CHK and RIG. Sold my AMED medical stock yesterday as it hit the top of my target but I'll be looking to buy it back. Both AMED and AFAM are in the same markets and are forecasting very strong outlooks. Still holding dividend producer LLY. Sold my three day trade on China stock GIGM for $4.30 a fast 22% gain on the announcement and pop today. I'll consider buying back at $4. I'll be looking to get back into CHK and RIG on any market pull back ( assuming oil holds strong) or strong oil market.

Wednesday, December 2, 2009

The Future Of : Made In The USA

Watch it on CNBC tonight....Meeting of the Minds: Rebuilding America

Premieres Wednesday, December 2nd 8p ET


Manufacturing led the United States to become the richest nation in the world and has been the foundation of the middle class. But times have changed and today's economy values innovation and design over manual labor -- emphasizing mind over matter. This sea of change has spurred many questions: Are the manufacturing jobs in the US gone forever? Does an economy that doesn't produce anything have any real value and has 'Made in the USA' died, taking with it the soul of our country? CNBC’s Maria Bartiromo gathers some of the most influential leaders in manufacturing for a Meeting of the Minds at Carnegie Mellon University to answer those questions and plan for the industry’s future.

The CEO of GE points out an interesting fact: Germany exports are 40% of GDP and it has a more expensive labor force than the USA. The USA now only exports 7% of GDP down from 25% just 10 years ago. The CEO of Nucor points out that it's America's failed trade policies that has been distroying the middle class not the unions.

Here are just a very few moments from the business special. Forgive the commercial. I was unable to remove it from the free videos:












A steelworker asks GE CEO Jeff Immelt where the constant outsourcing of American jobs is likely to lead this country.













Unions are the focus of this comment by Bill Ford of the Ford Motor Company, who fields a difficult question from a student. Mr. Ford forgets to explain to the student VW is a higher cost Union shop than the USA.













GE CEO Jeff Immelt has a number of suggestions for how America can move beyond its current manufacturing crisis and get back on track.













Discussing America's once-great manufacturing base, and Nucor Steel CEO DiMicco's comment to one of the steelworkers in the audience, with CNBC's Maria Bartiromo.













Students, steelworkers and businessmen discuss the US manufacturing crisis. Bill Ford offers special advice to students.