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Before the bell: Stocks ready to climb on hopes of continued low rates

U.S. stock futures were higher Wednesday morning, indicating stocks will open on an upbeat note after investors expectation that interest rates will remain low for some time increased following speeches from Federal Reserve officials. As the dollar further fell, investors turned to asset buying, pushing stocks higher.

Stocks looked for direction Tuesday, finishing the day mixed and not much changed, as Wall Street took a break from a 6-day rally. Today, U.S. bond markets are closed for Veteran's Day.

Continue reading Before the bell: Stocks ready to climb on hopes of continued low rates

Closing Bell: What sell-off? (AIG, ABK, EPR, MBI, JAVA, ORCL, ERTS)

We had another bit of data showing strong home sales in Q3, but as prices fell. Yet the only real thing to note was that the sell-off that was starting out this morning just didn't hold when you look at the broad indexes today. Some dollar directional changes may be part of the issue that kept the stocks from getting cheaper. There were still many losers on the day.

Here were today's unofficial closing bell levels:

Dow 10,247.88 +20.94 (0.20%)
S&P 500 1,093.04 -0.04 (0.00%)
Nasdaq 2,151.08 -2.98 (-0.14%)

Top Analyst Upgrades/Downgrades
Top day trader stocks
Top market rumors

Continue reading Closing Bell: What sell-off? (AIG, ABK, EPR, MBI, JAVA, ORCL, ERTS)

American International Group rallies on Moody's report

Notorious insurance titan American International Group (AIG) is on the upswing today, after Moody's Investors Service reported late Monday that it expects AIG will be able to repay its government debt. The ratings agency observed that AIG has made progress with its restructuring plan, and the firm's latest quarterly earnings "show continued stabilization of the core insurance operations despite challenging market conditions."

The insurance issue has put many of its non-core assets up for sale during the past year to generate capital and pare its unwieldy size, but some of those plans have been iced by new CEO Robert Benmosche. Moody's likes the new chief's approach, with the firm observing, "We believe that the slower approach to restructuring could help AIG to generate more favorable values from its business portfolio than would be the case under rushed asset sales."

Continue reading American International Group rallies on Moody's report

AIG recoups billions in collateral payments

A report in Thursday's The Wall Street Journal [subscription required] reveals that American International Group (NYSE: AIG) is actually reaping the benefits of its risky bets in the credit-default swap market.

AIG was forced to shell out billions to Wall Street banks amid last year's credit crisis, as the assets backed by the credit-default swaps plummeted in value. However, the market's reversal of fortune means that banking heavyweights, such as Goldman Sachs Group (NYSE: GS), are now returning collateral to the infamous insurance giant.

Continue reading AIG recoups billions in collateral payments

AIG paid $7,700 to retain a kitchen assistant

The American International Group (NYSE: AIG) bonuses controversy took a turn for the bizarre today, when The Financial Times reported that the company had paid $168 million in bonuses and retention payments to 400 employees in the troubled financial products unite between December 2008 and March 2009.

And $7,700 of that amount went to a kitchen assistant.

Look: The point here is not to beat up on "the little guy" and in the grand scheme of AIG's malfeasance, $7,700 to a kitchen assistant isn't that big of a deal.

Continue reading AIG paid $7,700 to retain a kitchen assistant

34 banks fail to pay TARP dividends

34 banks opted not to pay their quarterly dividends to the Treasury Department in August -- that's up from the 19 deadbeats for the month of May.

The biggest offenders were American International Group (NYSE: AIG), CIT Group Inc. (NYSE: CIT), First Bancorp (NASDAQ: FBNC) , Sterling Financial Corporation (NASDAQ: STSA), and UCBH Holdings, Inc. (NASDAQ: UCBH).

The Treasury Department provided the USA Today with a pretty condescending explanation: "For some banks, it may be prudent to exercise their right not to pay dividends in a particular month, and we respect their right to do so. To draw any broader conclusions about the state of the banking sector from one month is highly premature and speculative."

Continue reading 34 banks fail to pay TARP dividends

Former AIG exec to head Allstate life insurance unit

Allstate Corp. (NYSE: ALL) has selected former American International Group (NYSE: AIG) executive Matthew Winter to head its struggling life insurance and retirement unit, Allstate Financial.

Allstate Financial returned to profitability in the three months ended June 30 after losing money each quarter since September 2007. The unit has been run by an interim president since January. The ongoing delays had prompted some Wall Street analysts to call on Allstate to sell its small life unit, which was largely responsible for investment losses that led Allstate to post a big loss last year.

Continue reading Former AIG exec to head Allstate life insurance unit

Closing Bell: When gold starts paying dividends (AIG, NTRI, MOS, TM, GDX)

Maybe days with no solid economic data are the best after all. The Saudis denied that OPEC was considered moving away from oil being quoted in US Dollars and gold put in new all-time contract highs. T. Boone Pickens was also out with his new 2010 oil price predictions this morning.

Here were today's unofficial closing bell levels:

Dow 9,731.25 +131.50 (1.37%)
S&P 500 1,054.72 +14.26 (1.37%)
Nasdaq 2,103.57 +35.42 (1.71%)

Analyst Calls: Top Upgrades and Top Downgrades
Top Day Trader Alerts
Top Rumors of the Day

Continue reading Closing Bell: When gold starts paying dividends (AIG, NTRI, MOS, TM, GDX)

Cramer on BloggingStocks: Here comes the death of the bearish funds

TheStreet.com's Jim Cramer says this year will see the mirror image of last year, when redemptions ended the game for many managers.

One year ago today, a quarter ended that put hundreds of bullish hedge funds out of business. Today, a quarter ends that will put hundreds of bearish hedge funds out of business.

Oh, sure, last year some of the bulls were able to stumble through the fourth quarter, but October was a horror show and they ended up getting huge redemption letters and spending the rest of 2008 selling into the strength of the rally to return capital to investors and lock in losses.

Continue reading Cramer on BloggingStocks: Here comes the death of the bearish funds

Options Update: AIG volatility and volume elevated as share rally

American International (NYSE: AIG) closed at $48.40. AIG options were active on volume of 380,937 contracts on September 21. October and November call option implied volatility is at 140, puts are at 152; above its 26-week average of 109, according to Track Data, suggesting larger price movement. AIG puts are more expensive than calls because AIG is difficult to borrow.

UltraShort Financials ProShares (NYSE: SKF) is recently down 70 cents to $24.71. SKF is an exchange traded fund seeking daily investment results that correspond to twice (200%) the inverse (opposite) of the daily performance of the Dow Jones U.S. Financials Index. SKF October call option implied volatility is at 65, puts are at 59, November is at 63; below its 26-week average of 92, according to Track Data, suggesting decreasing price movement.

Option Update is provided by Stock Specialist Paul Foster of theflyonthewall.com

Sirius XM faces a possible delisting

Late Thursday Sirius XM (NASDAQ: SIRI) disclosed it had received a notice from the Nasdaq stock exchange on Tuesday that its share price has closed below $1 for 30 consecutive days, and is therefore not in compliance with the exchange rules. This means it could possibly be delisted.

Sirius has until March 15, 2010, to regain compliance with the minimum bid price rule, meaning its stock has to close at or above $1 for 10 consecutive business days.

Continue reading Sirius XM faces a possible delisting

Are we going to crash again?

It has been about a year since Lehman Brothers failed and this financial crisis started, and it has hit many of the banks hard including Bank of American (NYSE: BAC), Citigroup (NYSE: C) and America International Group (NYSE: AIG).

There has been one thing that has been bugged me in the coverage of it since then. Frequently, reporters use words like unprecedented or unparalleled to describe it. That is false! Financial crises, panics, crashes, bubbles, and bank failures are really about a dime a dozen.

Continue reading Are we going to crash again?

Cramer on BloggingStocks: Worse after Lehman? Are you kidding me?

TheStreet.com's Jim Cramer says everyone in the trenches knows we're better off now -- only the academics disagree.

Am I nuts, or am I missing something? One year after the financial system was brought to its knees, we are back in the mid-9000s and we have taken off the table massive bank risk and are well on our way to recovery.

I keep listening to people like Nobel Prize winner Joseph Stiglitz say the banking system is worse off now and I say to myself, "That's just stupid and wrong and anti-empirical and actually just silly." Anyone who knows what's really going on has to feel this way. And where was Stiglitz when some of us were running around trying to save things?

Continue reading Cramer on BloggingStocks: Worse after Lehman? Are you kidding me?

Closing Bell: The bull after the lull (AIG, DELL, GE, KFT, OSIR, SFD)

Today was a strange post-holiday session as US markets really just keyed off of a weak dollar and higher commodity prices. $70+ on oil and $1,000+ gold were a highlight, but all in all this was merely the U.S. playing catch-up on gains after we had an extra day off.

Here were today's unofficial closing bell figures:

Dow 9,497.34 +56.07 (0.59%)
S&P 500 1,025.37 +8.97 (0.88%)
Nasdaq 2,037.77 +18.99 (0.94%)

Top Analyst Upgrades
Top Analyst Downgrades
Top Day Trader Alerts

Continue reading Closing Bell: The bull after the lull (AIG, DELL, GE, KFT, OSIR, SFD)

Analyst upgrades, downgrades and initiations: AIG, DFS, ERIC, GE, HOG, SYMC ...

Analyst upgrades:

  • Bernstein upgraded Lincoln National (NYSE: LNC) to Outperform from Market Perform based on relative valuation and expectations the company will repay TARP without a capital raise. The firm raised its target to $34 from $26.
  • Thomas Weisel upgraded Ticketmaster (NASDAQ: TKTM) to Overweight from Market Weight and raised its target to $12 from $8 citing dynamic ticket pricing and the potential merger with Live Nation (NYSE: LYV).
  • Citigroup upgraded Harley-Davidson (NYSE: HOG) to Hold from Sell after channel checks indicated retail sales have improved since Q2. The firm raised its target on shares to $26 from $14.
  • McDermott (NYSE: MDR) was upgraded to Outperform from Neutral at Credit Suisse.
  • Ericsson (NASDAQ: ERIC) was upgraded to Hold from Sell at Deutsche Bank.
  • General Electric (NYSE: GE) was upgraded to Overweight from Neutral at JPMorgan.

Continue reading Analyst upgrades, downgrades and initiations: AIG, DFS, ERIC, GE, HOG, SYMC ...

Next Page »

Symbol Lookup
IndexesChangePrice
DJIA-14.2810,318.16
NASDAQ-10.782,146.04
S&P 500-3.521,091.38

Last updated: November 20, 2009: 07:39 PM

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