Peter Cardillo
Peter Cardillo
1972 Harlem mosque incident describes the April 14, 1972 shooting of a New York City Police Departmentofficer at the Nation of Islam Mosque No. 7 in Harlem, Manhattan, New York City. The officer responded to a fake 9-1-1 call, was shot and died six days later. The incident sparked political and public outcry about mishandling of the incident by the NYPD and the administration of Mayor John V. Lindsay...
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We are seeing a continuation of this rotation process, with people selling some of the big tech and other gainers of the year, and putting money in sectors that still have room to gain, namely, industrials, metals, anything commodity-related,
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There's no question it's earnings-driven. The rally continues to move ahead but on a rotation basis. There are two things driving the market - earnings and economic data. Today's market seems more based on earnings than economic data.
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Many (tech and telecom stocks) are undervalued. If we have a period of slow growth followed by an acceleration in the economy, I think we could see money flow back, and the one thing that's been very consistent in this market is the rotation factor, ... It tells everyone money is not leaving the stock market.
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Basically it's individual stocks outperforming the rest of the market. The feeling that the Fed is not going to raise is infiltrating the whole marketplace and what we're now looking at is future earnings, but we're still in that rotation mode.
basically fed feeling future individual looking raise rest rotation stocks
Basically it's individual stocks outperforming the rest of the market, ... The feeling that the Fed is not going to raise is infiltrating the whole marketplace and what we're now looking at is future earnings, but we're still in that rotation mode.
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What we're seeing is typical of a market that is trying to make a bottom, but we're not necessarily there yet.
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What we're seeing here is investors becoming increasingly nervous, awaiting the economic data tomorrow (Thursday). Profit warnings and future growth (concerns) are overshadowing the enthusiasm that we saw develop late yesterday -- it's a feeding process.
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What we're seeing here is a market that's just waiting to assess economic data later in the week and, of course, moving into the earnings season.
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What's shaking the market is oil and the aftermath of the hurricane, ... Every time the price of oil moves into new, higher territory that creates worries about the strength of the economy going forward.
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Unless some real news comes out that could accelerate impeachment talks, it's probably already been discounted, ... Big deal, we're going to see the president get angry, say a few curse words.
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Unless he should say something really out of the ordinary, which is unlikely, I think his comments will likely have a limited effect on stocks,
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We're in uncharted times here, both for the economy and for the stock market. Some of the old rules just don't apply to global economics and to the global mechanism of how things are working.
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We're into the second day of the quarter, and the market is technically signaling a short-term rebound as we prepare for tomorrow's unemployment report.
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The perception is turning toward the fact that the economy is slowing and we can still continue to grow even if the economy grows at 5 percent.