The Brian Sullivan Blog
  • June 2, 2008 07:46 AM EDT by Brian Sullivan

    One Heck of a Week Ahead

    There is an old Wall Street adage that reads "sell in May and go away."  Its based on the historical concept that stocks tend to do most of their moves from Labor Day to Memorial Day and then slow down when the weather gets nice.

    The credit and mortgage crisis has changed this.

    Investors now know that with negative headlines on housing and credit able to cross at any time, any day, its more important than ever to be engaged in the news flow every day, every week.

    This week is a great example.  There are a flurry of economic reports that will provide a clear picture of the health or illness of many segments of the American economy. 

    Monday: ISM manufacturing index

    Tuesday: Monthly auto sales

    Wednesday: ADP employment report - which is now being just as closely watched as the government's monthly payroll data

    Thursday: Weekly jobless claims

    Friday: Monthly payroll report and consumer credit figures

    We also get earnings from a few homebuilders (Toll Brothers, Hovnanian), retailers (Gander Mountain, Collective Brands, Williams Sonoma) and bananas (Del Monte) and booze (Brown-Forman).

    My point -- this is one of those weeks where if you 'went away' you may wish you hadn't.

Dave Young

Bear Stearns was an Investmant Bank , not a Commerial Bank - we can afford the loss. This is a buyer`s market.

June 3, 2008 at 3:29 pm

Justin

I'm watching financials warily. If we have another bear stearns, the American stock market and my dollar denominated holdings are being sold (while they still have actual value). I think we haven't seen the full effect of inflation all of the money created during the rate cuts after the dot com bubble. I hope I'm wrong. I hope we squeak by long enough for me to secure something of real value (land) before we have a major correction in our economy.

June 2, 2008 at 11:11 am

about this blog

  • Brian Sullivan joined FOX Business Network (FBN) in April 2008 as an anchor. He co-anchors the 10am-12pm ET hours of the FOX Business block. Prior to joining FBN, Sullivan served as an anchor for Bloomberg Television where he hosted the programs Morning Call and In Focus.

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