All News, Video and Posts related to TOPIC: Earnings

Friday, December 14, 2007

THE FINAL TRADE

The Final Trade  Fast Money  Weeknights
Next Week's Trades
 
  Want to know the trades that may make you money next week? Here's your playbook to tackle the Street:

What's the trading heading into broker earnings next week?
Worth: (GS) is a sell.

What's the trade heading into retail earnings next week?
Macke: (BBY) is a buy.

How can you trade the widening crack spread?
Finerman (VLO) is a Buy (Finerman owns VLO).

 

How To Trade Like The Fast Money Five
 
  Pops & Drops ETF Education -Karen Finerman explains how to trade ETFs or exchange traded funds.

Click here for the Fast Money Trade School Lesson of the week.

 
Where's the Money?
 
 

Is it a buy or a sell? Next week, the Fast Money Five tell you how to read the street’s biggest events so your fast money stays fast

Monday:
Earnings Before: ADBE Earnings After:

Tuesday: Earnings Before: BBY**, GS** Earnings After: DRI, HOV, PALM, TTWO, RAD Eco: U.S. Housing Starts

Wednesday: Earnings Before: GIS, JOYG, MS** Earnings After: NKE**, ORCL**, PAYX

Thursday: Earnings Before: BSC**, CAG, CCL, FDX**, DFS, Earnings After: JBL, MU, RIMM** Eco: Leading Indicators, Philly Fed

Friday: Earnings Before: CC**, WAG Earnings After: Eco:Personal Spending, Mich Confidence Other: Quadruple witching

 
 
Stocks on the Move
 
  Pops & Drops

The Fast Money five takes a look at the week's biggest market movers.

T (AT&T)

ABK (AMBAC)
BDK (Black & Decker)
XHB (Homebuilders ETF)
AMZN (Amazon)

Click here to see if you have these recent Pops & Drops in your portfolio.

 
 

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In web exclusive video the Fast Money Five bring you even more hot trades every night, right after the show! Get your Web.Extra now!

 

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Get your "Fast Money" on the go. Subscribe to Pops & Drops and Word on the Street, for advice from The Fast Money Five on some of today's top trades.

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line.

 

Contact the Commissioner
 
  Dylan Ratigan

The worst week in nearly a month is behind us, my Fast Money friends, but the fun could just be beginning. It's clear from the market action this week that the Fed's plan to save the financials did little to assuage concerned investors. But on Fast, the past is prologue, and we look to the future for money-making opportunities. And next week should provide many. We kick it off Tuesday with Goldman Sachs earnings. They've been the Teflon traders on Wall Street, going short bonds backed by subprime loans well before anyone on The Street. But will savvy trading be enough to save them from diminishing returns from their other businesses going forward? We shall see. We shall also see how broker brethrens Bear Stearns and Morgan Stanley handled their subprime swoons. Also on the calendar next week will be a slew of Tech earnings, including RIMM, Oracle, and Palm. Some areas of tech have shown good resilience in the face of the mortgage meltdown, but can they continue to do so if and people and businesses deciede to spend less? One of the more overlooked names reporting earnings next week: FedEx. As the nation's largest shipper, it should not only provide an early tell of economic activity, but also the heath of online shopping as we head into the all-important holiday season. As always, an open market is one in with you can make money, and we will try to just that all next week. I hope you join us. .

-Dylan

If you have questions about The Final Trade or suggestions for Fast Money, please send an email to FastMoney@cnbc.com

 

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Today's CNBC MarketWrap

CNBC's Daily Market Wrap
Friday, Dec. 14, 2007


Today's top 5 stories on CNBC
1. Bull Shops in China: When it comes to investing, Jim Rogers, Rogers Holding chmn. is bullish on China and commodities, with CNBC's Maria Bartiromo.
2. Wii Can't Get It: Nintendo's big hit is virtually sold out everywhere, and CNBC's Jim Goldman looks into whether there's a secret to scoring the hottest game console of the year.
3. Cramer Loves the Buck: Mad Money host Jim Cramer shares his outlook on the economy and the dollar, with CNBC's Michelle Caruso Cabrera.
4. CPI Higher Than Expected: November's Consumer Price Index is up 0.8%, and Jack Bouroudjian, of the Brewer Investment Group, and CNBC's Rick Santelli and Steve Liesman interpret the data.
5. Virtual Worlds Hot: Social networking is hot and virtual worlds are taking those online interactions to the next level, with CNBC's Julia Boorstin.
Click here to view all of today's Top stories


Clip of the week:

Holiday Tech Picks
NY Times personal technology columnist David Pogue reveals his favorite gadget gifts for the holiday season.


CNBC Blogwatch

Sportz Biz w/Darren Rovell: Mitchell Report Player Rebuttal Form: Fill It Out Right Here.

There are more than 80 players named in the Mitchell Report and suffice it to say, there will be a lot of lawyers hired over this. But I figured I'd save them some time and money, which is important when you are former player Mark Carreon and only made $3.4 million in your career. Click here to view posting.

Tune in to CNBC Monday to watch the market unfold
1. CNBC'S EXCLUSIVE HOLIDAY CENTRAL SURVEY - THE ECON STORY: The CNBC Holiday Central Survey finds the Economic Grinch can't steal Christmas, but it won't be for lack of trying. How much will the economy or fears over home prices impact the consumer? And point blank, how much will America spend this Christmas? Steve Liesman has the economic data surrounding retail season.
2. CNBC'S EXCLUSIVE HOLIDAY CENTRAL SURVEY - THE RETAIL STORY: Bertha breaks into the Holiday Central Survey data to look at surprising numbers. Where are Americans shopping and what are they buying? How many of them drink Starbucks? And who's buying a Wii this year? Do discounts matter... and when will Americans pay off their holiday credit card bills?
3. THE FEDEX FACTOR: With just eight days until Christmas, December 17th is the busiest shipping day of the year at FedEx. Eleven million packages move through FedEx today. This final week of buying is the make-or-break point for retailers and the peak business season for transportation companies - the commercial conduits that deliver gifts and products around the country. Margaret Brennan asks how healthy are shipment levels? What do they tell us about consumer spending? Margaret rides along with FedEx deliveries and broadcasts live from one of its facility.
4. THE DOLLAR'S GETTING POUNDED: It's holiday season around the world, but Americans aren't shopping in the UK. It's one week until Christmas, and the weak dollar means that some of London's most heavily trafficked retail areas... are, well, less trafficked by Yankees than in years past. CNBC Europe's Steve Sedgwick explains.
5. PAULSON FORECLOSURE TOUR: Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson is touring the nation to discuss the administration's efforts to reduce foreclosures. Diana Olick joins the tour to follow Paulson as he meets with local officials, community leaders and local businesses to help heal the nation's foreclosure wounds.
 
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Thursday, December 13, 2007

Today's CNBC MarketWrap

CNBC's Daily Market Wrap
Thursday, Dec. 13, 2007


Today's top 5 stories on CNBC
1. Perspective on Steroid Report: Discussing the pervasiveness of steroid abuse in the baseball industry, with MSNBC's Keith Olbermann and CNBC's Erin Burnett.
2. Bogle & James: CNBC's Erin Burnett discusses the market and subprime problem with Vanguard founder Jack Bogle and Thomas James, chairman & CEO, Raymond James Financial.
3. Holiday Tech Picks: NY Times personal technology columnist David Pogue reveals his favorite gadget gifts for the holiday season.
4. Wilbur Talks Dealmaking: In an exclusive interview, Wilbur Ross, W.L. Ross chmn. & CEO reveals the art of "steeling" deals, with CNBC's Maria Bartiromo.
5. Stop Trading & Listen to Cramer: Mad Money host Jim Cramer shares his stock picks with CNBC's Erin Burnett.
Click here to view all of today's Top stories


CNBC Blogwatch

Political Capital w/ John Harwood: GOP's Gap -- Enthusiasm For Presidential Candidates

The Iowa primaries are next month, but as CNBC reporter John Harwood blogs, there seems to be a growing lack of enthusiasm voters have for the GOP presidential candidates. Click here to view posting.

Tune in to CNBC tomorrow to watch the market unfold
1. CONSUMER INFLATION: Steve Liesman breaks down the key CPI data and other significant economic reports. Is the jump in wholesale prices making its way to consumers?
2. DRY CLEANER INDEX: Jane Wells goes to a LA-area dry cleaner to explain how these businesses are a leading indicator of economic downturn and why business for some is off 10%.
3. DANGEROUS INFLATION: Inflation is not only a worldwide fear, for some, it's just plain dangerous. The world's poor are the hardest hit when inflation rises. Once necessities are no longer affordable, the world's most impoverished will often take them, in the face of violence and chaos. Michelle Caruso-Cabrera explains why economists and the Central Bank are so fearful of inflation even in the face of the credit crisis.
4. YALE CEO SUMMIT: It's the world's first school for actual CEOs. Twice a year, 120 CEOs, government regulators, activists, and academics come together to discuss the shifting global context, emerging forms of governance accountability, enhancing customer relationship management, technological innovation, and the human infrastructure.
5. CHINA, SECURITY & SURVEILLANCE: The U.S. capital markets are funding population surveillance inside Communist China. China Security & Surveillance is one of the fastest growing surveillance companies in the world. But CSR's bread and butter is selling, installing and monitoring surveillance cameras for local Chinese police stations. The cost of doing business in China may be cooperating with the Chinese government (a la Yahoo and Google) but does the same rule apply for a Chinese company raising capital and trading on the NYSE? Or is this just as politically loaded as buying shares of Lockheed Martin, Honeywell or GE?
 
CNBC Plus

CNBC Investing Tools
portfolio watch Stock Screeners
Insider Trends Fund Screeners
Financial Glossary Earnings Screeners

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