Don’t get fooled by the bears, sometimes good news is actually …


This weekend I read a host of negative articles assailing this market and the earnings reports from individual companies. The suggestion: The numbers are all hiding something and even companies like Amazon (AMZN) and Apple (AAPL) simply reported figures that exceeded lowball analyst estimates that were meant to generate upside. This is an outrageously bullish sign. You now have the most important arbiters of stock prices fully skeptical of anything positive. And yet the stocks themselves not only tell you otherwise, but make you feel like you are being left out of a big run. What gives? Let’s start with nine months of reducing projections and price targets with no sign of a letup. It is the exact flip side of what was happening when stocks were going higher when we had endless price target bumps. The analysts, I believe, have finally turned negative and we’re seeing a bottom. Maybe not the bottom, but low enough to buy the beaten downs — the Honeywells (HON) and the Carriers (CARR), the Otis Worldwides (OTIS) and ServiceNows (NOW). We aren’t in a position to call a real bottom, mostly because we don’t know how the market will react to a less than 75-basis-point increase in September. We know that the bears think that nothing is enough, but they have gotten a little outrageous. Historically, back-to-back 75-point hikes is enough to get even the late Paul Volcker, former chair of the Federal Reserve, nervous, given how so many of the raw costs are coming down and spending is being reined in by all but the wealthiest. I figure the Fed will signal something in a month that might lead to a sell-off. Otherwise I can see the market doing well through earnings season and then coming to a halt near the next Fed meeting in late September. At that point we will have not only the Fed to deal with but also the midterm elections. Current predictions have the Republicans winning thirty seats in the House, which would give them a majority in both houses and pretty much end anything President Joe Biden wants to do. That could make his agencies lean even more to the left as the possibility of a Republican presidential candidate who could win certainly seems plausible. His agencies so far have a left bias, but they can really go bonkers against the banks, the oils, and the drug companies. It’s unfortunate but that and the Fed could cause a rocky moment in September. All that aside, this past week showed the power of bigger companies. Let’s spend a second on Tim Cook and Apple. That was a most impressive quarter, yet I have read a number of negative pieces about how the numbers augur badly for Apple. How in heck could they bode badly? Did they speak to Tim Cook and he gave them a negative read? To be sure, it wasn’t the most impressive of quarters. There were ways to look at it with some worry. For one, I wanted higher service revenues. But $19 billion is certainly better than satisfactory. Having talked with Cook after Apple reported earnings last week. I was…



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