..is it over yet?

The earnings momentum engine was losing some steam before market open (BMO), but no one noticed luckily as the Bernanke show overshadowed today’s lacklustre earnings. Simply, the very positive results from Tuesday couldn’t be matched, it’s best that earning reports today took a backseat. As far as the ‘show’, it’s contents minus any potential screw up by Bernanke were released at lunch hour and market responded positively as everything and anything dovish is ‘easy money’ and was ‘confirmed’. The USD started to get whacked lower at 12:30 and that was the tale to be for rest of day. As much as this conference was and will remain fodder for debate, the reality is it was a non-event. If austerity was 2010 word of the year, one of 2011 finalist might be ‘transitory’ after today. Enough said, let's move on, it's over with.
This week’s enthusiasm for earnings and FED likely gets digested for rest of week after hitting SP 1355 level. Attention should turn to big April eco data/Macro starting next week, including ‘debt ceiling’ noise as recess concludes.
Shadowlist
■Commodities – The beneficiaries today were clearly the PM’s as they exploded higher. As far as everything else, Copper was weak and base metal stocks (coals, steels) didn’t participate in the USD plunge and underperformed. Nobody is talking about the Shanghai now, but the 4-5 consecutive down days and technically negative below 50ma is something to monitor for our markets and commodity groups (possibly more tightening on it’s way)
■Momentum/ earnings/ winners of ’10 – There is a lot of discrepancies in how tech linked names react to earning, so it’s hard to know what may run or not. APKT ran off a disappointing guidance that only matched their 'own' guidance, while a peer ININ beat Tuesday and gets sold off. KEYN is another one that should have done better today as well as BIDU after hours. AMZN likely confused a few in it’s impressive comeback. Opticals, JDSU and FNSR (noted here recently for eyeing gap) outperformed.








