Navarro's
Big Economic Picture
Following
the Bouncing Headlines
The
range of news stories splashing across the front page of Investors
Business Daily last week pretty much summed up the short term bullish
drivers. Retail sales were
reported to be strong, as consumers continue to shrug off the effects of
higher gas prices. Crude
dipped below $70 as inventories were higher than expected.
And, most importantly for inflation watchers, productivity
bounced strongly back in the first quarter of 2006 to 3.2% after a
disturbing dip in Q4 of last year.
I
certainly don’t want to get in the way of such bullish news by staying
on the short side so I will bide my time here.
My theory is that a lot of consumers are staying afloat by
juggling their debt across credit cards that promise zero interest rates
for balance transfers – and they are numb to their increasingly
precarious situation. How
else are they absorbing such gasoline price shocks while spending so
freely? At some point, the
time will be up for that kind of credit card maneuvering, and it may be
the same time that adjustable rate mortgages start to move steeply up.
We’ll
see. In the meantime,
it’s best to remain data driven and see what the economic reports are
giving us and how the stock and bond markets are interpreting the data.
This
Week's Market Movers: Fed Week
As
for the coming week’s data, the biggest market mover will almost
certainly be the Fed’s interest rate decision on Wednesday, May 10th.
The question is not whether the Fed will hike rates another 25
bips, That’s a
given. Rather, it is whether the Fed will announce or signal a pause,
which Chairman Ben Bernanke
implied in recent Congressional testimony.
If the Fed does signal pause, be damn sure you are on the long
side by Wednesday.
That
said, last week’s jobs report will surely give the Fed pause about any
pause. Sure, the number of
jobs created was well below expectations – and the markets rallied on
that dovish inflationary news. But
lost in translation was the fact that wages popped up sharply.
At any rate, we will soon see – quite literally.
And
by the way, the rest of the economic news is likely to be rather
pedestrian. Key reports
include business inventories and retail sales on Thursday and the trade
report and consumer sentiment on Friday.
Ordinarily, these have market moving potential but I just don’t
see any surprises here.
Portfolio Shorts and Pans: Cleaning House & Sweeps Play
ABC
Scares Up Bird Flu Movie
“May
sweeps will soon be upon us, and this year ABC will feature one of the
ratings-grabbing month's most time-honored traditions: a
ripped-from-the-headlines disaster thriller.
The
network has scheduled a movie called "Fatal Contact: Bird Flu in
America" for Tuesday, May 9. The "meticulously
researched" two-hour film will tell the story of an avian flu
outbreak in the United States, the people affected by it and those
trying to stop it.”
-- Zap2It
On
the basis of this news, I doubled my holdings of Sinovac (SVA) on what
might prove to be either a dumb idea or brilliant.
The macroplay here is that I
expect bird flu stocks to get some play from the airing of the prime
time movie. But the movie does go
head to head with American Idol and the Unit and ABC has done little to
promote the movie. We’ll see.
As
for two other stocks of note, I scaled into Discovery Labs based on the
Vaino column as it dipped last week.
I did think about bailing on the legal issues, but decided to
give it another week. Glad I did,
as the stock finished strong.
I
also opened a position in ONYX Software, which I have recommended
before. It’s sitting around
$4.50 but it has some acquisition interest and could sell as high as
$5.50 to $7.00. It’s technicals
are improving. I don’t see much downside here.
However, the stock is very illiquid.
As
for the rest of my holdings, they are gone.
I closed my QQQQ short early last week and avoided another nick
and cut of the bullish blade. I
also jettisoned most of my penny stock brigade – AKSY, SPEX, SURG, and
XOMA – on deteriorating technicals.

Davio's
Hedging Your Bets
Main
Street versus Wall Street
The
Jobs Report came in very weak for April; about 65k under the expected
number. On
top of that, the March report was revised down another 36,000.
Main
Street may have been alarmed but Wall Street loved it.
Why? Because people think
that employment softness indicates that the FED will soon be done
raising rates, which will somehow be a positive for the future of equity
markets.
This
is the same old story with the overall “Fed is done” equity rally.
Basically, I think that the market will translate any news as
positive for the last push up to the top end of the SPX where our target
has been set at 1340-1380.
Yet to me, low job growth and inflation just don’t mix in the
long run.
Since the first week of 2006, when the broader US indices had
their exaggerated upside move, the “Big 3” Indices’ (S&P, Dow,
Nasdaq) gains have been rather muted when compared to Gold and Interest
Rates, as I illustrate in the table below.
Even
momentum names like Empire Resources and DXP Enterprises, which are on
the IBD “Momentum Specials” list, got crushed last week for no
apparent reason.
When
I see reversals like this in a midday with no catalyst. I know there is
a change a brewing.
Remember…tops are Processes not Moments. There is a change in
the feel to this rally.
It feels heavy and tired to me.
I
would love to see a final run up to 1340-1380 range.
It would be a great spot to sell longs and begin setting up for a
bearish summer/fall fling to new lows.
Earnings
are over for the most part and there isn’t a lot of catalytic
information in the near future, outside of Fed meetings.
Who is left to buy after all the good news is out?
Let’s
review.
| |
1/8/06
Closing Prices |
5/4/06
Closing Prices |
%
Change |
| Gold |
565/oz |
682/oz |
20.92% |
| 10-year
Interest |
4.35% |
5.15% |
18.39% |
| SPX |
1287.61 |
1312.25 |
1.91% |
| COMPX |
2317.04 |
1212 |
0.02% |
| INDU |
10960 |
11452 |
4.49% |

Vaino's Biotech
Corner
DSCO Redux &
Some Updates
Last
week, a spate of shareholder lawsuits were announced against Discovery
Labs (DSCO). This is a company I
recommended last week prior to the lawsuit announcements.
I made my recommendation based on DSCO’s recent fall from
grace, which I saw as an overreaction.
In
particular, DSCO fell 50% after an announcement that batches of its
product Surfaxin had failed to pass six month stability tests.
Now
here’s what the law suits (seven at last count) allege:
“The
Company admitted that although it had been testing the ‘production
validation batches’ periodically for stability, stability had never
been achieved.”
I
am troubled by this. One of the
very important criteria the FDA requires prior to beginning a clinical
trial is proof that a compound
is stable over a certain period of time.
That is, the FDA won’t give a company permission to dose
patients with a drug unless they can prove the drug going into the
patient is the same one that was put in the bottle.
In the case of a six month stability study, this means that only
batches of the drug less than six months old could be used in any
clinical trial. In cases where
the clinical trial is meant to be short, it is possible for the company
to provide correspondingly short stability data (21 CFR 312).
My
advice was to buy this company “on the dip.”
I did not, however, anticipate that such a dip would come as the
result of legal action. The above
allegation is very serious, and I am eager to hear DSCO’s response.
My gut feeling is still to buy. However, in light of these
lawsuits this pick has become much more of a speculation than I
intended. As a final DSCO take,
the stock started the week at about 3 bucks, fell to less than $2.50
after the lawsuit dip, but it did finish very strongly with a 12% gain
on Friday on above average volume.
Diversa
(DVSA) has been doing pretty well over the past two months.
Since I recommended the stock on the weekend of March 18 it
increased from $8.55 to as high as $11.80 on May 2.
I did mention that I thought the stock was a long term (2 yrs)
play, and that the price would take a hit for the next few earnings
reports.
DVSA
announced Q1 earnings on May 1, and the stock dropped to as low as $9.60
last Tuesday morning. By mid
afternoon, however, the stock was trading back in the mid $11s.
I think the same dip will happen when they announce Q2 earnings,
and will time accordingly. I
still have no rational explanation for this nice pop now.
Some things I’m happy to take on faith.
I
recommended Tercica (TRCA) almost two months ago.
Since my recommendation the stock is down almost 25%.
TRCA launched Increlex as a treatment of childhood endocrine
deficiencies in January. They
have an earnings conference call scheduled for May 9.
The Market obviously thinks sales aren’t going to be good.
While I don’t have any information on what TRCA will report on
the 9th, based on their orphan drug status I think the news
will be good, and the stock will go up.
Be careful, however, as Market Edge has it as a short sale
candidate. So just to be
clear, TRCA is not a stock for the faint of heart.
I’m scaling up my own holdings.
I
suggested shorting Neurocrine Biosciences (NBIX) two weeks ago.
The price has since dropped from $62.82 on April 24th
to below $50 on May 3rd. As
I mentioned, I do believe NBIX is a good company overall, it was just
trading too high. The FDA has
committed to ruling on Indiplon by May 15th.
Consensus is the drug will be approved.
Even while approval of Indiplon is already priced-in, the news
will inevitably push the stock price up a bit.
Perhaps overcautiously (I’ve been burned on shorts before), I
sold my puts for a nice profit. I
was feeling speculative and bought some May 55 calls, with the intent to
sell on May 16th.

“Any
trader or investor who ignores the power of macroeconomics over the
world’s
financial markets will, sooner or later, lose more than they
should—and if they are
trading on margin, perhaps more than they
have.”
-- If It's Raining in Brazil, Buy Starbucks
|

|
Peter
Navarro is a business professor at the University of California
and the author of the best-selling investment book
If It's
Raining
in Brazil, Buy Starbucks. His latest book is
The
Well-Timed Strategy |
|

|
Matt
Davio is a managing partner at the hedge fund,
Red Rock Capital Fund.
Catch
his Daily
Blog as PeterNavarro.com
|
|

|
Andrew
Vaino is a Ph.D. chemist who spent two years at
The Scripps Research Institute in La Jolla, CA, working in the
laboratories of Nobel-Laureate Barry Sharpless and Kim Janda. He
currently teaches at The University of Maine, where his research
group is focused on exploring the interface between enzymology,
organic chemistry, and nanotechnology. |
© 2006
Peter Navarro, Matt Davio and Andrew Vaino
www.peternavarro.com
Editorial Archive
CONTACT
INFORMATION
Peter Navarro
Irvine, California USA
Email
| Website
DISCLAIMER:
This newsletter is written for educational purposes only. By no means do
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holding of any financial instrument whatsoever. Trading and investing
involves high levels of risk. The authors express personal opinions and
will not assume any responsibility whatsoever for the actions of the
reader. The authors may or may not have positions in the financial
instruments discussed in this newsletter. Future results can be
dramatically different from the opinions expressed herein. Past
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