Microsoft Chisels Epitaph for Options
Editor's note: This column, which reflects market activity from the day before, originally appeared July 9 on RealMoney.com. To sign up for RealMoney, where you can read Bill Fleckenstein's commentary every day, please click here for a free trial.
Buckle up, folks, we've got lots to cover. To dispense with the uneventful first, the overnight markets were a snooze, except for Japan, which was higher. Of course, the big news of the evening was Microsoft's(MSFT Quote) announcement that it would replace stock options with restricted stock, and treat remaining options as an expense (more about that below). In any case, after our market opened, we kind of flopped around, bolted higher, then commenced a zigzag process. To zero in on the particulars, Cisco(CSCO Quote) was higher on pontificating by pom-pom king John Chambers that "in the coming two to four months, spending by companies on information technology will recover." (Later in the day, a Cisco spokeswoman said that Chambers' remarks were misconstrued, and that he had said that industrywide spending will start rising about two to four months after IT customers begin to see their own businesses turning up, whenever that is.) Pom-Pom Pooh-Bah: Mr. Chambers has no data to back this up, and he carries with him the reputation as pied piper of the Internet craze, but nevertheless, that vision lit a fire under his stock, and for some reason, Intel(INTC Quote) as well. Meanwhile, folks completely and totally ignored the news from Logitech (LOGI Quote) (more about that below). I took advantage of this morning's frenzy to establish a position in October Cisco puts, and bought some more October Intel puts. Back to the action, there was a whole lot of motion in the early going, but not much net change. Stocks sported red and green pretty evenly. After the morning's push higher, the market sold off, tried to rally back to a new high, couldn't do it, and sold off in the last half hour to set the prices you see in the box scores. When I put a summation sign under today's action and the action of recent days, when I look at sentiment, end-zone dancing, froth and my hate-mail indicator, this has all the hallmarks of exhaustion. Of Frenzy and Fermentation: Is it the final exhaustion for this move? I don't know. But when we finally witness exhaustion, it will look like this. (I myself continue not to short until I see some signs of a failed rally. But I have been stepping up my purchase of fall puts, as I think we will see a total collapse before the fall is out.) I cannot believe the frenzy we are seeing on arm-waving, while signs of deteriorating fundamentals are ignored. If tomorrow is a down day, one could construct the argument that the exhaustion has been seen. The bottom line is, even though earnings expectations set by corporate America for this quarter are quite low, expectations on the part of the bulls are extraordinarily high, and that is a recipe for a dislocation.| Index | Close | Change |
| Dow | 9156.21 | -66.88 |
| S&P 500 | 1002.21 | -5.63 |
| Nasdaq Composite | 1747.46 | +1.00 |
| Nasdaq 100 | 1295.16 | -3.21 |
| Russell 2000 | 476.99 | +3.02 |
| Semiconductor Index (SOX) | 401.87 | +2.96 |
| Bank Index | 890.32 | +1.54 |
| Amex Gold Bugs Index | 151.38 | -0.23 |
| Dow Transports | 2562.41 | -2.71 |
| Dow Utilities | 245.31 | -2.02 |
| NYSE advance-decline | -257 | -681 |
| Nikkei 225 | 9990.95 | +0 |
| 10-year Treasury Bond | 3.71% | -0.027 |
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| Dow Jones | S&P 500 | NASDAQ | 10-Year Note | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 10,433.71 | 1,105.65 | 2,169.18 | 33.17 |
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