Rover's Weekly Market Brief — 11/08/2019

November 8, 2019 Printer Friendly Printer Friendly

Indices

DJIA: 27,681.20 (+1.22%)

NASDAQ: 8,475.00 (+1.06%)

S&P 500: 3,093.08 (+0.85%)

Commodities

Gold: 1,459.80 (-3.41%)

Copper: 268.80 (+1.32%)

Crude Oil: 57.39 (+2.12%)

New Blog Post – Underappreciated Features – Comments and Notes

We have created a new blog post that describes two of the really useful and generally underappreciated features of Stock Rover; Comments and Notes. Both are designed to easily allow you to add your thoughts and observations to your investment process. Learn more about these two great features here.

Stock Rover Reviewed by Value Stock Guide

Stock Rover was recently reviewed by Value Stock Guide. Value Stock Guide called Stock Rover an exceptional stock research tool for fundamental investors and they fully recommended Stock Rover for stock research. You can read our press release here.

Economy

New orders for manufactured goods fell -$2.9 billion (-0.6%) in September marking the second consecutive monthly decline after August’s -0.1% drop. A -$2.4 billion (-2.8%) drop in transportation equipment led a -$3.1 billion (-1.2%) decrease in durable goods orders, both of which had increased in the three prior consecutive months, and orders excluding transportation were only down -$505 million (-0.1%). Orders fell for construction, mining, and material handling machinery, but these were more than balanced out by increases in orders for metalworking machinery, turbines, and photographic equipment, bringing overall machinery orders up $81 million (+0.2%) for the month. Defense orders were up for communications equipment and aircraft, but orders for navigation equipment dropped, with overall orders excluding defense unchanged at -0.6%.

The trade deficit narrowed by -$2.5 billion to $52.5 billion, with imports falling off more steeply (-$4.421 billion to $258,440) than exports fell (-$1.835 billion to $205,990 billion). Goods exports fell -$1.9 billion, with decreases for soybeans (-$1.0 billion) and automobiles (-$1.0 billion), but increases for capital goods (+0.8 billion). Imports fell for household goods/cell phones (-$0.8 billion), entertainment goods (-$0.6 billion), semiconductors (-$0.6 billion), and automobiles (-$1.1 billion). Service exports fell -$0.1 billion, while service imports increased by +$0.1 billion. Trade deficits dropped with Germany (-$1.9 billion to $5.0 billion) and China (-$0.9 billion to $28.0 billion), but increased with Canada (+$0.9 billion to +$2.5 billion).

Job openings fell -277,000 to 7.0 million on the last day of September, down -5.0% from September 2018, and the lowest number of job openings since March 2018, although the number of available jobs still exceeded the number of unemployed workers by 1 million. The total number of hires for the month increased +50,000 to 5.934 million, with separations increasing +76,000 to 5.808 million. The quits rate dropped from 2.4% to 2.3%, matching the rate in September 2018, with higher rates for leisure/hospitality (4.5%), retail (3.4%), and construction (2.5%), and lower than average rates for government (0.8%), education (1.3%), and mining (1.5%). In the 12 months ending in September, there were 69.9 million hires and 67.4 million separations, yielding a yearly net employment gain of 2.5 million.

Upcoming Economic Reports:

Friday November 15 – Retail Sales

Friday November 15 – Industrial Production

Earnings Calendar:

 

Monday Tuesday Wednesday Thursday Friday
Liberty
Broadband
(LBRDA)
Tyson
Foods
(TSN)
Cisco
Systems
(CSCO)
Walmart
(WMT)
Kodiak
Sciences
(KOD)
UGI
(UGI)
Rockwell
Automation
(ROK)
S&W
Seed
(SANW)
NVIDIA
(NVDA)
JC Penney
Co
(JCP)






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