05
Apr
2010

WHAT THE MARKET WANTS: Market Inches Ahead

The market continued its slow but persistent trek upward, inching along as it did during the holiday-shortened past week. In fact, the S&P 500 set an 18-month high today at 1187.73 and closed very near the high.

The news behind this upward crawl has been a mixture of economic reports. Last week we had a disappointment here and there, but for the most part the numbers were better than expected. Friday's employment report -- which is being felt today since the market was closed on Friday -- was up 162,000. That was not quite the hoped-for 200,000, but it was much better than the decline in jobs the previous month. This morning, pending home sales were up a quite surprising 8.2%, having been expected to be flat; they were down almost the same percentage a month ago. And, to put a little icing on our market cake, the ISM came in at 55.4, a bit above the projected 54 and last month’s 53.

The news will be slim the rest of the week. Few corporate reports are scheduled, and the only economic reports of any real significance will be chain store sales and initial jobless claims on Thursday.

Market Stats. All styles and caps were up a small amount last week. Just to make things interesting, Mid-cap (All) was the leader, up +1.5%, while Small-cap Growth was the worst, up +0.5%. You can see on the market stat tables that Mid-caps and Small-caps have maintained a fairly substantial lead over the past 1, 3, 6 and 12 months.

Click here to see the Market Stats.

With regard to sectors, our projected leader last week was Energy, and indeed it came in second, up +4.3%, but it was surpassed by Materials which gained +5.9%, being heavily impacted by the weakness of the dollar. Financials turned in another strong week, up nearly +2% and Utilities found itself in the third spot among these leaders, up + 2.6%.

Dragging the bottom once again was Consumer Discretionary, Information Technology and, for the first time in a while, Healthcare. Telecom, which had been projected as second highest ranked sector for the next 30 days, came in about the middle of the pack.

Looking forward, we continue to favor Energy, Financials, Healthcare and Telecom but would avoid Consumer Discretionary, Industrials, and Consumer Staples.

What this Market Wants. We begin a new quarter this week, having completed a very favorable first quarter. The value component of each market cap did much better than the growth component in Q1 -- Small-cap Value led, up more than +10%, while Large-cap Growth trailed, up only +4.8% -- so I would conclude, at least for the time being, that this market favors the value style, and within that style, small- and mid-cap stocks, particularly those in the Energy, Financial and Telecom sectors. As has been the case for most of the last year, the market frowns upon overvaluation, poor cash flow, and high debt levels.

4 Stock Ideas for This Market

This week, I started with the Undervalued Large Cap Growth preset search on MyStockFinder (http://MyStockFinder.com), but I instead geared it to small and mid-cap stocks. Then, I asked for both Buys and Strong Buys, and up-weighted Technicals slightly. I also focused the search on Energy, Financials, Healthcare, and Telecom to identify four new stock ideas. Although strength in our Telecom rankings primarily comes from large-cap foreign ADRs, I managed to find one mid-cap service provider to telecom companies worldwide that gets a Buy from the Sabrient ratings algorithm.

Green Plains Renewable Energy (Nasdaq: GPRE) – Energy
Protective Life Corp. (NYSE: PL) – Financials
Valeant Pharmaceuticals Intl (NYSE: VRX) – Healthcare
Syniverse Holdings (NYSE: SVR) – Telecom

Until next week,

David Brown

Chief Market Strategist

Sabrient Systems, LLC

Leaders in Investment Research

http://www.sabrient.com

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Full disclosure:  The author does not personally hold any of the stocks mentioned in this week’s “Stock Ideas."

Disclaimer: This newsletter is published solely for informational purposes and is not to be construed as advice or a recommendation to specific individuals. Individuals should take into account their personal financial circumstances in acting on any rankings or stock selections provided by Sabrient. Sabrient makes no representations that the techniques used in its rankings or selections will result in or guarantee profits in trading. Trading involves risk, including possible loss of principal and other losses, and past performance is no indication of future results.

david / Tag: Add new tag, GPRE, PL, sectors, SVR, VRX /