Market Musings From The ARTS Team

Wednesday, August 18th, 2010 by ARTS Team No Comments »

A sluggish session on Friday capped the worst week for stocks since July 2. Volume was thin, and after fluctuating throughout the day, the market finished significantly lower. Mixed economic data did little to reassure investors, and retail earnings failed to meet expectations. The Dow Jones Industrial Average dropped 16.8 points (-0.16%) to finish at 10,303.15—marking its third consecutive losing session. The S&P 500 lost 4.34 points to close at 1079.27 (-0.40%), and the NASDAQ finished 16.79 points lower to end the day at 2173.48 (-0.77%). Consumer discretionary, technology, and health care stocks were among the worst performers in the S&P though utilities managed to finish higher. J.C. Penney, Nordstrom, Kohl’s, and Macy’s were especially hit hard, videogame makers Electronic Arts and Activision Blizzard remained flat, and both Google and Oracle ended lower. The CBOE Volatility Index, the standard gauge of anxiety in the market, rose above 26.

YTD Stock Market Performance


Much of this anxiety was prompted by the Federal Reserve’s increasingly negative view of the US economy and accumulating evidence—on the basis of jobless claims, retail sales numbers, and other traditional indicators—of a stalled recovery. A marginal increase in retail sales was confined principally to automobiles and gasoline station sales. Worries were compounded by weakness across the southern Euro zone, with investors anxious about how the situation in Europe might affect the global economy. The euro lost close to 4 percent of its value against the dollar as a result.

Crucially, all major indices are negative for the year. The NASDAQ is off 4.22 percent, the S&P 3.2 percent, and the Dow 1.2 percent. For the week, Verizon rose 1.5 percent, helping to buoy the Dow and S&P, if only slightly–though a 12.5 percent collapse in HP more than offset that advance. Cisco and Nvidia continue to perform miserably.

With few additional earnings reports due and extremely light trading volumes over recent sessions, it seems clear that investors should expect a sluggish market environment until after Labor Day. On Friday, for example, only 870 million shares changed hands on the NYSE—decliners leading advancers 8 to 7.

In Europe, the FTSE was up 9.38 to finish at 5275.44 (+0.18), the DAX was off 24.76 to close at 6110.41 (-0.4%), and the CAC 40 dropped 10.16 to end Friday’s session at 3610.91 (-0.28%).

In Asia, the Hang Seng and Nikkei were both unchanged, while the Shanghai SE Composite Index rose 31.225 to close at 2606.7 (+1.21%).

Gold was off 0.20 to finish at $1216.4 per ounce (-0.02%), while oil rose 0.20 to close at $75.59 per barrel (+0.27%).

Popularity: 15% [?]

  • Share/Bookmark

Following The Trends Means More Than Just Following The Fashions

Tuesday, August 10th, 2010 by ARTS Team No Comments »

It is amusing how, in this day and age of constant media obsession with a variety of different and frivolous things, how the concept of a trend went from one of serious study and analysis to some kind of popular culture bastardization in just a couple of short decades. While trends in the world of fashion and celebrity culture can be a strange and unsettling thing, if you are an investor or you plan to become one soon, you need to understand how and why trends can mean the complete success or the utter failure of investment efforts.

The key to navigating the world of stock market investing is to be able to spot the trends before they develop, in order to be able to buy low and sell high. And, spotting trends requires an investor to not only see them before they develop, but to recognize the peak point of a given trend before it is reached as well, in order to get out while the getting is good. Absolute Return Trading Systems (ARTS), Inc. is a simple, reliable and fully automated answer to this problem that has baffled even the best analysts and investors.

Following The Trends Means More Than Just Following The Fashions The automated software looks through all of the data of the stock market to uncover the trends in the market before they develop. This helps you take advantage of them before anyone else. Plus, this software will also recognize the high point of a given trend as well, giving the client plenty of time to get out of ahead, too.

Absolute Return Trading Systems, Inc. is a  subscription based, authenticated market timing software providing paid subscribers trading instructions from our top ranked market timing service designed to produce positive returns in both up and down markets.

Popularity: 20% [?]

  • Share/Bookmark

Market Briefing

Tuesday, August 10th, 2010 by ARTS Team No Comments »

On the whole, the week ending August 6 was far from smooth, though it began promisingly enough. Markets moved strongly upward at the start of the week, finishing above their 200-day moving average for the first time since June. Positive data from the ISM Manufacturing Index helped to build confidence.  However, typically mixed economic data began to sour moods by the middle of the week.  Sellers took over the market on Friday–though a late recovery ultimately pushed stocks back above the 200-day average.

Popularity: 13% [?]

  • Share/Bookmark

Market Musings From The ARTS Team

Tuesday, August 10th, 2010 by ARTS Team No Comments »

On the whole, the week ending August 6 was far from smooth, though it began promisingly enough. Markets moved strongly upward at the start of the week, finishing above their 200-day moving average for the first time since June. Positive data from the ISM Manufacturing Index helped to build confidence.

However, typically mixed economic data began to sour moods by the middle of the week. A better-than-expected July ISM Service Index of 54.3 was effectively offset by a worse-than-expected 1.2% drop in June factory orders, a drop in pending home sales for June, and stagnant personal income and spending numbers for the same month.

A reported increase in private payrolls for July had no effect after news came in that initial jobless claims for the week ending July 31 hit a three-month high of 479,000. On Friday, negative sentiment was reinforced by the US federal government’s report that 131,000 nonfarm positions disappeared in July, well above a projected loss of 87,000 jobs. Overall unemployment, however, remained static at 9.5%–in part because many have given up looking for work.

Sellers took over the market on Friday–though a late recovery ultimately pushed stocks back above the 200-day average. Some strength was visible in building products, life science tools and restaurants.

Large numbers of retail investors clearly remain anxious about re-entering the stock market as economic conditions continue to weaken and additional corrections appear imminent. Depressed trading volume clearly reflects this.

Corporate earnings continue to defy expectations, but their influence has been weakened significantly. Pfizer, Kraft, and Mastercard all issued robust numbers.

Another significant event came in the form of Fannie Mae’s earnings report, with the government-backed mortgage giant reporting a net loss of $1.2 billion in the second quarter of 2010–infinitely more reassuring than its net loss of $11.5 billion in the first quarter. Net revenue was $4.5 billion, up 49 percent from $3.0 billion in the first quarter of 2010. A jump in net interest income and shrinking credit-related expenses helped to bolster the company’s numbers.

The Dow Jones lost 21.42 points to close at 10,653.56 (-0.20%), while the S&P 500 was off 4.17 to finish at 1,121.64 (-0.37%). The NASDAQ dropped 4.59 points to finish at 2,288.47 (-0.20%).

In Europe, the FTSE dropped 33.39 on US jobs data to settle at 5,332.39.

In Asia, Shanghai added 37.64 to end the day at 2,658.39 (+1.44%). The Hang Seng also had a strong performance, rising 127.08 (+0.59%) to close at 21,678.80. The Nikkei 225 bucked the trend, however, dropping a modest 11.80 (-0.12%) to settle at 9,642.12.

The euro gained 0.0120 against the dollar, finishing at 1.3276 (+0.91%). The dollar dropped to $85.45

(-0.45%) against the yen. The yield on the US Treasury’s 10-year bond fell to 2.82%.

Oil rose 0.15 cents to close at $80.55 per barrel, while gold added $2.25 to finish at 1,205.90 (+0.19%) per ounce.

Be sure to follow our performance on Twitter and Facebook!

The ARTS Team

About: Absolute Return Trading Systems (ARTS), Inc. www.absolutereturnsystems.com

Absolute Return Trading Systems (ARTS) Inc. delivers market timing instructions to its subscribers from its proprietary algorithmic market timing software.  The system, designed by a team of researchers over more than a decade, is designed to produce positive returns in both up and down markets.  ARTS provides performance and risk information on 43 exchange traded funds (ETFs) and 21 stock market indices and has consistently been a top-ranked market timing service as measured by the leading third-party performance verification service, TimerTrac.

Popularity: 11% [?]

  • Share/Bookmark

Market Musings From The ARTS Team

Tuesday, August 3rd, 2010 by ARTS Team No Comments »

August 1, 2010

Though Friday’s session was choppy, July came to a close with stocks enjoying their best monthly run in a year. The Dow Jones Industrial Average and the S&P 500 each added close to 7% during July—given impetus by generally favorable earnings reports from a host of major US companies. Three-fourths of the 300 companies in the S&P 500 that reported earnings in July surpassed analysts’ projections; Chevron and Merck are the latest to issue extremely positive numbers. Yet anxiety over stagnant job growth in the US remains poised to derail market performance as investors fear that a “jobless recovery” will eventually work to shrink company profits.

YTD Stock Market Performance

Performance on Friday was mixed, with investors pondering somewhat contradictory data on the US economy, consumer confidence and regional manufacturing. The Dow fell just over a single point as a result, finishing the day at 10,465.94 (-0.01%); the S&P moved marginally upward, to 1,101.60 (+0.01%), and the NASDAQ composite added 3 points to close at 2254.70 (+0.13%). The overall rebound is clearly heartening given the downward drift of stocks in recent months—largely in the face of Europe’s debt crisis and underwhelming US economic data. On Thursday, stocks lost value on news that a regional Federal Reserve president had expressed caution about the strength of the economic recovery, and skepticism was reinforced by ambiguous data. US GDP rose at an annual rate of 2.4% in the second quarter, down from 3.7%–upwardly revised–in the first quarter. Though a majority of analysts had expected a second quarter rise of 2.5%, the figure represented the fourth straight quarter of positive economic growth. Consumer spending, however, remained tepid, while measures of consumer confidence painted a portrait of a still-dubious US populace. At the same time, regional manufacturing activity increased markedly, with the Chicago PMI reporting a figure of 62.3 in July—up from 59.1 in June.

European markets ended Friday mixed. The CAC 40 in France dropped 0.2%, while Germany’s DAX added 0.2%. The FTSE 100 finished 1% lower.

All Asian markets were down at Friday’s close. The Shanghai Composite was off 0.4%, the Hang Seng dropped 0.3%, and Japan’s Nikkei in Japan was down 1.6%.

The dollar rose against the euro, but fell against both the British pound and the Japanese yen. Gold added $12.70 to close at $1,183.90 per ounce, US light crude rose 59 cents to $78.95 per barrel, and the yield on the US Treasury’s 10-year note dropped to 2.91%.

On the whole, consumer sentiment continues to lag far behind hard economic data, which suggest that the recession has been over, technically speaking, for almost a year. Only sharply rising employment—unlikely, at this point–is likely to mitigate negative sentiment and reassure wary investors.

Be sure to follow our performance on Twitter and Facebook!

The ARTS Team

About: Absolute Return Trading Systems (ARTS), Inc. www.absolutereturnsystems.com

Absolute Return Trading Systems (ARTS) Inc. delivers market timing instructions to its subscribers from its proprietary algorithmic market timing software.  The system, designed by a team of researchers over more than a decade, is designed to produce positive returns in both up and down markets.  ARTS provides performance and risk information on 43 exchange traded funds (ETFs) and 21 stock market indices and has consistently been a top-ranked market timing service as measured by the leading third-party performance verification service, TimerTrac.

Popularity: 22% [?]

  • Share/Bookmark

Market Musings From the ARTS Team

Tuesday, July 27th, 2010 by ARTS Team No Comments »

It was a week dominated by earnings reports. By Friday’s close, stocks had reached a one-month high as earnings reports from the industrials sector in particular reinvigorated hopes that recovery is well underway and here to stay. The Dow gained 102.32 on Friday, up 0.99% for the day and 3.24% for the week, closing at 10424.62. Verizon, General Electric, and American Express led the charge on Friday, though Boeing was the week’s star, up 10 percent between Monday morning and Friday afternoon. Verizon beat earnings expectations, though revenue fell as the company continues to battle an energized AT&T; GE’s board approved a 20 percent dividend increase, and a number of brokerages have raised ratings on American Express. Johnson & Johnson proved a laggard, down more than 3 percent for the week. The NASDAQ added 23.58 during Friday’s session, up 1.05% for the session and 4.15% for the week, finishing at 2269.47. The S&P 500 rose 8.99 on Friday, adding 0.82% for the session and 3.55% for the week, eventually settling late Friday at 1102.66.

YTD Stock Market Performance

Positive sentiment was generated (at least in part) by the fact that the vast majority of EU banks passed crucial stress tests, despite reservations among some analysts about the stringency of the tests themselves. Only seven banks failed, and they were generally small and regional, concentrated in Germany, Spain and Greece. Rising investor confidence could be seen in the fact that the CBOE volatility index—a crucial measure of investor fear—lost more than 10 percent, finishing on Friday below 24.

European banks such as Barclay’s, UBS, BNP Paribas, and Deutsche Bank had a mixed Friday on US markets. Royal Bank of Scotland and Bank of Ireland, however, responded positively to the stress test results, rising 4 percent on the news.

In Europe, the DAX rose 175.96 (2.94%) to finish at 6,166.34, while the FTSE 100, less convinced by the bank stress tests, fell 1.19 (0.02%) to close at 5,312.62. In Asia, the Nikkei remained flat, though the Hang Seng added 225.63 (1.10%) to finish at 20,815.33.

The euro closed marginally higher on Friday against the US dollar.

Gold finished the week flat at $1,187.80 per ounce, while oil dropped 3 percent, closing at $78.98 per barrel.

Overall, in a week marked by significant earnings reports, sentiment appeared to swing upward. Most companies beat expectations, though not by as much as many analysts and investors had hoped. In the coming week, 157 other major companies will report earnings, including DuPont, BP, ExxonMobil, Chevron, Boeing, Visa and Merck—among others. Will the current positive outlook hold after next Friday’s close? The vast majority of investors certainly hope so.

Be sure to follow our performance on Twitter and Facebook!

The ARTS Team

About: Absolute Return Trading Systems (ARTS), Inc. www.absolutereturnsystems.com

Absolute Return Trading Systems (ARTS) Inc. delivers market timing instructions to its subscribers from its proprietary algorithmic market timing software.  The system, designed by a team of researchers over more than a decade, is designed to produce positive returns in both up and down markets.  ARTS provides performance and risk information on 43 exchange traded funds (ETFs) and 21 stock market indices and has consistently been a top-ranked market timing service as measured by the leading third-party performance verification service, TimerTrac.

Popularity: 57% [?]

  • Share/Bookmark

Making The Most Of Your Investments In The New Marketplace Of The 21st Century

Tuesday, July 20th, 2010 by ARTS Team No Comments »

There is little doubt that, if you are an avid investor, or even a novice, that you have heard, seen and read about the many stories of the harsh and pervasive economic malaise that is currently miring the economy in a thick fog of dysfunction and failure. And while much of the news is accurate, in and of itself, it does not present the entire picture of where the market stands now, and about how it is poised to bounce back sooner than anyone predicts. The reason is simple, and a few investors have already become aware of how this is possible.

Through the development and implementation of a powerful new investing tool, some investors are continuing to see growth and generate profits even in this horrible economic climate. And they are achieving it through the Absolute Return Trading System, which maximizes the investing analysis process for its clients, bringing them incredible and reliable analysis of market trends allowing them to avoid the losses and hemorrhaging values that have besieged so many other investors recently.

Stock Index Trading System

Basically, investors have been using market trading systems for decades. Such a system is merely a tool devised by investors and fund managers ahead of time, to set up course of action to conceived scenarios in the market. By doing this ahead of the potential scenarios actually coming to fruition, the investors can remove the element of emotion and bias. ARTS offers a completely automated system for investors to utilize a system before disaster strikes. Our automated system completely eliminates the human element from the analysis, meaning that no bias, no emotion, no undue errors and no poor judgments will stand between you and the growth that your investment portfolio could be enjoying.

Popularity: 20% [?]

  • Share/Bookmark

Market Musings From the ARTS Team

Tuesday, July 20th, 2010 by ARTS Team No Comments »

July 19, 2010

US markets finished significantly lower on Friday, with the Dow losing 261 points (-2.52%), the S&P 500 off 32 points (-2.88%) and the Nasdaq tumbling 70 points (-3.11%). The slide was sparked when Bank of America and Citigroup reported weaker quarterly revenues and data suggesting collapsing consumer sentiment revived worries about the strength of the economic recovery. The University of Michigan’s consumer sentiment index fell to 66.5 in July—down from a healthy 76 in late June. Flat consumer prices intensified concerns, indicating weak demand on the part of consumers and an absence of inflationary pressure. Citigroup, Bank of America, General Electric, Intel, and Cisco Systems were among the most actively traded shares, and all finished significantly lower, despite the fact that reported earnings—not revenues—were generally robust. The sell-off wiped out what had been relatively strong gains for the week—between 1.7% and 2.3% through the end of Thursday’s session. In view of the Dow’s 7% gain over the previous two weeks, some retrenchment was perhaps inevitable.

YTD Stock Market Performance

Financial shares were at the center of negative sentiment, with the KBW Bank (BKX) index dropping 5.7%. Only Goldman Sachs was able to weather the prevailing mood, with Goldman shares rising on news that the firm had settled its fraud case with SEC for the relatively modest sum of $550 million.

In the end, the slide spared few, with all 30 Dow shares giving up value. Weakening oil and gold prices helped to pull down underlying shares, with Proctor & Gamble and Wal-Mart being especially hard-hit.

In Europe, all indices finished lower at day’s end, with the CAC 40 suffering the most, losing 2.28% of its value. The FTSE 100 was down 1%, and Germany’s DAX slid 1.8%.

In Asia, results were generally mixed, with the NSE 50 moving the most—up 0.28%.

The euro posted modest gains against the dollar, while the dollar itself slid against the yen. Rising Treasury prices lowered the yield on the 10-year note to 2.94% from 2.98% at the close of Thursday’s session.

Overall, consumer sentiment has deteriorated sharply and Bank of America revenue results appear to have confirmed a persistent pessimism. It could be a rough ride in the weeks and months ahead.

Be sure to follow our performance on Twitter and Facebook!

The ARTS Team

About: Absolute Return Trading Systems (ARTS), Inc. www.absolutereturnsystems.com

Absolute Return Trading Systems (ARTS) Inc. delivers market timing instructions to its subscribers from its proprietary algorithmic market timing software.  The system, designed by a team of researchers over more than a decade, is designed to produce positive returns in both up and down markets.  ARTS provides performance and risk information on 43 exchange traded funds (ETFs) and 21 stock market indices and has consistently been a top-ranked market timing service as measured by the leading third-party performance verification service, TimerTrac.

Popularity: 13% [?]

  • Share/Bookmark

Market Briefing

Tuesday, July 20th, 2010 by ARTS Team No Comments »

July 11, 2010

The markets booked their largest one week gain in nearly a year, however, the volume was unimpressive.  The volume is the fuel that powers the rally, so without a substantial pick up, the move to the upside will likely be contained.  Overhead resistance remains at the lower of the 50 or 200-day moving averages – depending on the index.

Popularity: 15% [?]

  • Share/Bookmark

Market Musings From the ARTS Team

Tuesday, July 20th, 2010 by ARTS Team No Comments »

July 12, 2010

In the relative absence of news, and with light trading volume, stocks moved little during most of Friday’s session. However, in the final hour of trading, the major averages were able to shift upward and finish between 0.6% and 1.0% higher. Major indices—in a shortened week—posted their best weekly gains of the year so far. The Dow Jones Industrial Average added 59.04 (0.58%) to close at 10,198.03; the Nasdaq added 21.05 (0.97%) to finish at 2,196.45, and the S&P 500 Index rose 7.71 (0.72%) to finish Friday’s session at 1,077.96. The VIX dropped 3.1% on Friday, finishing below 25 for the first time since June 21st. The 10 Year Bond moved up 0.3600 to 3.0560%. The fact that wholesale inventories for May met expectations was viewed positively.

YTD Stock Market Performance

The materials sector led the way after the Bank of Korea announced that it was raising its benchmark rate a full 25 basis points (to 2.25%), clearly confident that the global economic recovery is unlikely to stall. Some of the strongest performers in the materials sector included Monsanto (MON 51.17, +3.45), US Steel (X 42.88, +1.79) and AK Steel (AKS 13.38, +0.69). Gold posted a respectable gain.

The financial sector also saw robust performance, finishing 1.6% higher. Regional banks were at the center of trading activity, with Regions Financial (RF 7.14, +0.31), Huntington Banc (HBAN 5.92, +0.25) and Zions Bancorp (ZION 23.24, +0.86) finishing strongly. The larger investment banks shared investors’ confidence, with JP Morgan (JPM 38.89, +0.73), Bank of America (BAC 15.10, +0.24), and Citigroup (C 4.04, +0.07) all enjoying solid gains as a prelude to next week’s earnings announcements.

Light trading volume on Friday can be attributed to the fact that most investors want to limit their exposure prior to the start of the earnings season. Alcoa (AA 10.95, +0.23) will kick off the season on Monday when it releases its second quarter results. Undoubtedly, the week ahead will prove an interesting one.

In Europe, the FTSE 100 ended Friday’s session up 27.49 (0.54%), closing at 5,132.94. The DAX added 29.58 (0.49%), finishing at 6,065.24.

In Asia, the markets were largely unchanged.

Advancing Sectors: Consumer Discretionary (+1.0%), Energy (+0.4%), Financials (+1.6%), Materials (+2.4%), Industrials (+0.8%), Utilities (+0.6%), Technology (+0.6%), Health Care (+0.2%), Telecom (+0.2%), Consumer Staples (unchanged)

Declining Sectors: None Nasdaq +21.05 at 2196.45… NYSE Adv/Dec 2378/630… Nasdaq Adv/Dec 1979/642.

Be sure to follow our performance on Twitter and Facebook!

The ARTS Team

About: Absolute Return Trading Systems (ARTS), Inc. www.absolutereturnsystems.com

Absolute Return Trading Systems (ARTS) Inc. delivers market timing instructions to its subscribers from its proprietary algorithmic market timing software.  The system, designed by a team of researchers over more than a decade, is designed to produce positive returns in both up and down markets.  ARTS provides performance and risk information on 43 exchange traded funds (ETFs) and 21 stock market indices and has consistently been a top-ranked market timing service as measured by the leading third-party performance verification service, TimerTrac.

Popularity: 28% [?]

  • Share/Bookmark