Late-Night Headlines
Bloomberg:
- The cost of protecting company debt from default fell for the first time this week as stocks rallied the most in almost two months and Verizon Wireless(VZ) agreed to buy Alltel Corp.(AT) and assume $22.2 billion of debt.
- National Semiconductor(NSM) reported a smaller-than-expected drop in fourth-quarter profit and predicted earnings growth this year after it updated factories and focused on higher-priced chips. The shares surged 10% in after-hours trading.
- Lehman Brothers(LEH) may raise as much as $5 billion in capital by early next week. Lehman executives are talking to at least one US pension fund and an overseas investor to discuss terms of a transaction. “We are buyers of the stock on the assumption that CEO Dick Fuld will steady the Lehman ship and, with greater stability, the stock will appreciate,” said Deutsche Bank AG analyst Mike Mayo. Lehman shares already reflect “worst-case scenarios” for the investment bank, Mayo said.
- The Group of Eight industrialized countries may try to convince China and India to agree to monitoring of cuts in energy use that Japan says will fail without support from the world’s fastest-growing economies.
- Vietnamese stocks may extend this year’s worst slump among global markets as the government raises interest rates to quell inflation, Merrill Lynch said. The Ho Chi Minh Stock Index extended a record losing streak to 21 days on concern a widening trade deficit and inflation at a 16-year high will prompt overseas funds to sell local holdings. The benchmark index, at its lowest in 27 months, has lost 58% just this year.
- Short interest on the NYSE jumped 2.73% the last two weeks of May to a new record of 16,431,000,000 shares. Here are the top 5 short interest increases, decreases and total positions as of May 30th.
- New NYSE short targets. Here are the 25 NYSE stocks with the largest percentage increase in short interest relative to their float from May 15th through May 30th.
MarketWatch.com:
Wall Street Journal:
- Chinese security forces are battling to contain antigovernment dissent across the Tibetan plateau, nearly three months after violent clashes started in Tibet’s capital, Lhasa.
BusinessWeek.com:
- Dimon May Go Shopping. The JPMorgan(JPM) CEO dodged subprime, bought Bear, and still has funds to spare.
Automotive News:
- General Motors(GM) is close to a deal to buy Cobasys LLC, a supplier of batteries for some of the automaker’s hybrid-electric autos. Cobasys is jointly owned by Chevron Corp.(CVX) and Energy Conversion Devices(ENER).
Financial Times:
- Act now to prick the oil price bubble. Bubbles come to an end eventually but there is no guarantee that this will happen soon. The global economy is likely to be forced into a serious crisis if we do not explore the possibility that this is a bubble that needs to be burst quickly. Much of the rise in oil price is the result of activity on the New York Mercantile Exchange, the energy exchange. This is activity by index funds and pension funds that are investing in oil futures, not for direct use but as financial assets for profit. They have invested $260 billion in commodity markets, compared with $13 billion just five years ago. Much of this money is in oil. The Goldman Sachs Commodity Index is heavily weighted by oil - 78 per cent compared with less than 2 per cent for precious metals. The point is that this paper market is not driven by the pressures on demand and supply but entirely by price expectations. How large is the speculator activity? The total open interest - the number of open or outstanding contracts for which an individual is obliged to the exchange because that individual has not yet made an actual contract delivery - in the 2008 contracts on May 21 was 849.472 contracts, which equals 849 million barrels, or nearly 10 times the daily crude oil production. This is a problem that requires immediate action. There is no need for western governments to go down on their knees to Arab oil sheikhs, or to ration oil to the increasingly cash-strapped and angry consumers.
Late Buy/Sell Recommendations
Citigroup:
- Reiterated Buy on (OI), target raised to $70.
Morgan Stanley:
- Reiterated Overweight on (NSM), target $28.
Night Trading
Asian Indices are -.25% to +1.25% on average.
S&P 500 futures +.01%.
NASDAQ 100 futures -.01%.
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- (TSL)/.48
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- None of note
Economic Releases
8:30 am EST
- The Change in Non-farm Payrolls for May is estimated at -60K versus -20K in April.
- The Unemployment Rate for May is estimated to rise to 5.1% versus 5.0% in April.
- Average Hourly Earnings for May are estimated to rise .2% versus a .1% gain in April.
10:00 am EST
- Wholesale Inventories for April are estimated to rise .5% versus a .1% decline in March.
3:00 pm EST
- Consumer Credit for April is estimated to fall to $7.2 billion versus $15.3 billion in March.
Other Potential Market Movers
- The Fed’s Evans speaking, Fed’s Bullard speaking, Canaccord Adams Diabetes/Obesity Conference and Sandler O’Neil Global Exchange Trading Conference could also impact trading today.
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