Posted Jun 25th 2009 4:10PM by Jon Ogg
Filed under: Yahoo! (YHOO), Sirius Satellite Radio (SIRI), Boeing Co (BA), Boston Scientific (BSX), NIKE, Inc'B' (NKE)

Today was not just a strange day in the market. It was nearly baffling. At least it was a strange day if you were looking for the pullbacks to continue. The market was looking lower as the double-dip jobless numbers got worse than expected again, despite final Q1 GDP revisions being less-bad. The quarter-end coming up and the Russell re-balance may have some impact here.
Most of the gains continued throughout the morning into the early afternoon as investors got more confident over Ben Bernanke's testimony strength. Here were the unofficial closing bell levels:
Dow 8,475.57 +175.71 (2.12%)
S&P 500 920.28 +19.34 (2.15%)
Nasdaq 1,829.43 +37.09 (2.07%)
Top 10 Analyst CallsContinue reading Closing Bell: Bernanke credibility helps run the bulls (BA, BSX, FSLR, NKE, SIRI, YHOO, INSM)
Posted Jun 23rd 2009 4:10PM by Jon Ogg
Filed under: Motorola (MOT), Sirius Satellite Radio (SIRI), Boeing Co (BA), Boston Scientific (BSX), ConocoPhillips (COP)

Equities stabilized today after two relatively large selling waves in equities. It even looks like we only had a 1% trading range in the DJIA from top to bottom today. The housing data might have helped marginally, but that was
actually negative data if you dig down into the numbers.
The hope for a return to growth is starting to see a bit of what may be reality setting in now that even Mr. Obama expects double-digit unemployment to become a reality. It seems that the rise in oil actually helped to keep equities higher. Here are today's closing bell levels:
Dow 8,322.46 -16.55 (-0.20%)
S&P 500 894.99 +1.95 (0.22%)
Nasdaq 1,764.92 -1.27 (-0.07%)
Top upgrades and downgradesContinue reading Closing Bell: They just don't stay down long (BA, BSX, COP, MOT, SIRI)
Posted Jun 5th 2009 10:00AM by Jim Cramer
Filed under: Market matters, Boeing Co (BA), Cramer on BloggingStocks
TheStreet.com's Jim Cramer says that it's a jobs play with actual profit that doesn't need help from the government. Does a rising tide lift all B.O.A.Ts? I am talking about the quad-bull that seems to be the leadership here: banks, oils, aerospace (new one, touched on last night on "Mad Money") and tech? Is it enough? I think so.
Aerospace is ready. The new plane cycle the majors have been waiting for is ready. The dollar's down enough to make it pretty stupid to go with Airbus vs.
Boeing (NYSE:
BA) (
Cramer's Take) if you are going to expand your fleet. The new planes have just enough oil-saving to make it so the upgrade is almost going to have to happen.
Continue reading Cramer on BloggingStocks: Aerospace is ready to lead
Posted Jun 4th 2009 10:00AM by Jim Cramer
Filed under: Market matters, Boeing Co (BA), Honeywell Intl (HON), Oil, Cramer on BloggingStocks
TheStreet.com's Jim Cramer says that it is too easy to sit here and take direction from the oil futures. The one-wayness of this new market, the one that started with banks, tech and oil and that has now has come back down to just oil, isn't something that can last. We can't come in here every day and know that the news is not so hot, and what Ben Bernanke said yesterday about the deficit and where he thinks we are is not so hot, and have all of those reasons for a pause trumped by a dollar rise in the oil futures.
It just doesn't make sense, but it is where we are.
Continue reading Cramer on BloggingStocks: Can the market rally without oil?
Posted May 22nd 2009 11:00AM by Steven Halpern
Filed under: Microsoft (MSFT), Pfizer (PFE), Boeing Co (BA), Texas Instruments (TXN), General Dynamics Corp (GD), Northrop Grumman (NOC)
"Golf has Tiger Woods, novelists have Tom Clancy, and the investment community has stars such as Bruce Berkowitz, Bill Nygren, Charlie Dreifus, and Mario Gabelli," states Paul Tracy.
In his The Street Authority Market Advisor, he suggests, "These money managers are at the pinnacle of their craft." Here, he takes a look at these "celebrities" and some of their current top stock holdings.
"These money managers have all amassed prodigious gains over the years for their shareholders. Over the past few months, these gurus have come out with ringing endorsements for certain stocks. This isn't empty talk -- they are putting their money where their mouth is.
Continue reading Investing with the stars: Top stocks from top managers
Posted May 5th 2009 4:00PM by Jon Ogg
Filed under: Amazon.com (AMZN), Boeing Co (BA), Chesapeake Energy (CHK), Alcatel-LucentADS (ALU), Las Vegas Sands (LVS), Crocs Inc (CROX)

Ben Bernanke tried to talk up the markets today
in light of reports that ten of nineteen banks under the stress test needed capital. Bernanke said that a
recovery does lie ahead and that housing is near a bottom. At the end of the day, it was hard to get any feeling for gains or profit taking.
Here are today's unofficial closing bell levels:
Dow 8,410.65 -16.09 (-0.19%)
S&P 500 903.80 -3.44 (-0.38%)
Nasdaq 1,754.12 -9.44 (-0.54%)
Top Analyst Upgrades and DowngradesContinue reading Closing Bell: The pullback with no sting (ALU, AMZN, BA, CROX, CHK, LVS, NVAX)
Posted Apr 25th 2009 8:40AM by Trey Thoelcke
Filed under: Earnings reports, Microsoft (MSFT), Apple Inc (AAPL), Ford Motor (F), American Express (AXP), Boeing Co (BA), Hershey Co (HSY), Coach Inc (COH), Yum Brands (YUM), Contl Airlines'B' (CAL), Wells Fargo (WFC), JetBlue Airways (JBLU), SanDisk Corp (SNDK)
Here are some highlights from this past week's earnings coverage from BloggingStocks:
Continue reading Earnings highlights: Apple, Ford, Microsoft, Wells Fargo, Boeing, American Express and more
Posted Apr 22nd 2009 4:15PM by Jon Ogg
Filed under: Boeing Co (BA), Federal Natl Mtge (FNM), Contl Airlines'B' (CAL), Wells Fargo (WFC)

Despite the market being up the last hour, today's stock market made six changes between being up and down. Oil inventories
continued their building to record or near-record levels. It was very light on the economic calendar today so traders had to use the cumulative earnings as the directional report. Even very
weak global recovery targets from the IMF were ignored.
Here are today's unofficial closing bell levels:
Dow 7,886.41 -83.15 (-1.04%)
S&P 500 843.56 -6.52 (-0.77%)
Nasdaq 1,645.85 +2.00 (0.12%)
Top Analyst UpgradesTop Analyst DowngradesContinue reading Closing Bell: Directionless market, but directed stocks (BA, CAL, COF, FRE, WFC, OSTK)
Posted Apr 22nd 2009 9:50AM by Jim Cramer
Filed under: Earnings reports, Market matters, JPMorgan Chase (JPM), Boeing Co (BA), TD AmeriTrade Holding (AMTD), United Technologies (UTX), Cramer on BloggingStocks, U.S. Bancorp (USB)
TheStreet.com's Jim Cramer says a few calls Tuesday show the positives in this market. So many conference calls, so little time to really assess what the heck was happening when it was happening. Nevertheless, a few calls pretty much defined the positive action, and they have to be highlighted.
First, the
TD Ameritrade (NASDAQ:
AMTD) (
Cramer's Take) call showed you what I have been looking for: renewed interest in the stock market by retail people trying to make money off the wild swings and the exchange-traded funds. I am no fan of the ETFs, but I am a fan of new people in the game, and Ameritrade confirmed what I was thinking could be happening: actual interest in stocks at the new lower levels. It's a positive -- not a huge positive, but a positive nonetheless.
Continue reading Cramer on BloggingStocks: Notable battles won by the bulls
Posted Apr 22nd 2009 7:35AM by Melly Alazraki
Filed under: Before the bell, International markets, Earnings reports, Market matters, McDonald's (MCD), Boeing Co (BA), Morgan Stanley (MS), Economic data, Oil, Financial Crisis

U.S. stock futures once again fell Wednesday morning, indicating Wall Street stocks could open on a lower note as investors braced for another day full of corporate results, including Boeing (NYSE: BA) and McDonald's (NYSE: MCD).
No doubt, banks will continue to be in focus. On Tuesday stocks rebounded and gained back some of Monday's losses after Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner told a Congressional panel that most U.S. banks have adequate capital and that there are signals that credit markets are on the mend. But the Associated Press got hold of a document saying the federal bank "stress tests"
hit regional banks hardest. Today, also,
Morgan Stanley (NYSE:
MS) is set to report before the opening bell.
Continue reading Before the bell: Stocks set for lower open ahead of more earnings
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