26
Apr
2010

WHAT THE MARKET WANTS: Small Caps on 12-month Winning Streak

This week’s economic calendar features two bellwethers of consumer confidence (one on Tuesday and one on Friday), the FOMC announcement on interest rates on Wednesday, the weekly jobless claims on Thursday, and the quarterly GDP growth rate on Friday.  But it is unlikely that these numbers will have much of an impact on the market this week.

Last week, we had a bevy of economic releases, at least half of which were fairly negative, and the market continued to move ahead broadly on the plethora of positive corporate earnings releases. Today Caterpillar (CAT) and Whirlpool (WHR) had excellent earnings releases which positively affected their stock prices (CAT, up +4.17%; WHR, up +9.98%). Humana (HUM) also beat estimates handily and issued strong guidance for the year ahead, but closed down -4.33%, joining the lagging Healthcare Sector, which came in dead last this past week in our sector performance stats.

The S&P 500 is showing significant resistance in the 1215 area, stemming from long-term resistance at this level going back to July-Oct 2008. The S&P 500 has butted heads with 1215 for nearly 10 days now.

Small is better. We have an interesting "alignment of the stars" on our cap/styles table. Note that that over the past week, month, quarter and year, Small-cap Value has been the leader and Large-cap Growth has been the trailer. (Last week, Small-cap Value was up nearly 5% for the week, and Large-cap Growth trailed but was still up 1.7%.)

Click here to see the Market Stats.

In fact, this perfect alignment allows us to say with confidence that the smaller you were this past year, the better you did. And of course, value did better than growth from a style viewpoint.

Despite rather poor scores in our 30-day sector outlook, Consumer Discretionary led the sectors last week, fueled by the remarkably strong numbers from the housing industry  and strong performance by retail stores over the past month. Energy is predicted to lead for the next 30 days, and we continue to have the most confidence in that sector and the Financials and Information Technology sectors, and the least confidence in Consumer Staples and Materials. Recall, however, that the Materials Sector is heavily influenced by the direction of the dollar.

4 Stock Ideas for this Week

Due to the interesting alignment of cap/styles, it would be foolhardy to ignore this long-lasting preference for small caps and value stocks. So this week I ran the preset GARP search on MyStockFinder (http://MyStockFinder.com), but limited the search to small caps and up-weighted the value style and recent upgrades by analysts. Here are four stock ideas from that search.

  • Epiq Systems, Inc. (Nasdaq:  EPIQ)  Technology (Software)
  • GMX Resources Inc., (Nasdaq: GMXR) Energy (Oil, Gas & Consumable Fuels)
  • Hallmark Financial Services, Inc. (Nasdaq:  HALL)  Financials (Insurance)
  • Jos. A. Bank Clothiers, Inc. (Nasdaq  JOSB)  Consumer Discretionary (Specialty Retail)

Until next week,

David Brown
Chief Market Strategist
Sabrient Systems, LLC
Leaders in Investment Research
http://www.sabrient.com
and  http://Twitter.com/ScottMartindale

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.

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