Evening Headlines
Bloomberg:
- Gunfire Erupts in Cairo as Mubarak Allies Battle Protesters. Gunfire erupted in Cairo’s Tahrir Square early this morning after clashes between supporters of Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak and demonstrators demanding an immediate end to his autocratic 30-year reign. Four people were killed this morning, Al Arabiya television reported. The Al Jazeera network showed footage of bodies being pulled on the street. Mubarak loyalists rode horses and camels yesterday into Tahrir Square, the epicenter of anti-government protests since Jan. 25, swinging whips and clubs. The two sides hurled rocks, bottles and concrete chunks, sometimes from rooftops, and some pro-government marchers carried machetes. Egyptian soldiers didn’t intervene, except to use water cannon to extinguish fires, and there were no uniformed police present. More than 600 people were injured and at least three killed in the clashes, according to state television, as the battle lines shifted with government supporters challenging the demonstrators who reject Mubarak’s plan to remain in power until September elections.
- Portugal Crumbles as Century-Old Rent Controls Choke Investment. Century-old controls on rents and evictions are stifling investment in Portuguese real estate and leaving the country with crumbling city centers as rental income fails to keep pace with maintenance costs, according to landlords and property industry groups. The government has pledged to introduce measures in March to streamline rules on rental properties as it seeks to jumpstart an economy that’s had one of Europe’s weakest growth rates over the last decade.
- BP(BP) Mediator Feinberg Can't Call Himself Independent, Judge Says. A federal judge said Kenneth Feinberg, the lawyer paying victims of BP Plc’s Gulf of Mexico oil spill, can’t identify himself as an independent administrator of a $20 billion settlement fund. U.S. District Judge Carl Barbier in New Orleans concluded yesterday that Feinberg must fully disclose his ties to BP when communicating with potential claimants. Lawyers for oil-spill victims had questioned Feinberg’s handling of the $20 billion trust fund, known as the Gulf Coast Claims Facility, or GCCF.
- ICE(ICE) May Alter Rules to Curb Cotton Speculation, FT Reports. ICE Futures U.S. may change a rule that will help curb speculation in cotton-futures trading, the Financial Times said. Traders seeking to maintain positions to sell or take physical delivery in excess of the spot-month position limit of 30,000 bales would have to show it was “economically appropriate,” ICE said yesterday in a statement. The number of open contracts for March delivery was about 8.6 million bales with fewer than 200,000 bales certified for delivery, the newspaper said, citing Jordan Lea, the head of Eastern Trading, a cotton merchant, and the president of the American Cotton Shippers Association. Speculators may squeeze merchants, spurring a “massive spike where the market breaks down, where you’re literally unable to liquidate your position,” Lea was cited as saying. Cotton prices have more than doubled in the past year.
- Copper Gains to Record, Heading for $10,000 on Demand Recovery. Copper advanced to records in London and New York as manufacturing improved from China to the U.S., boosting the demand outlook for the metal used in construction and electrical applications. Three-month delivery copper added as much as 0.5 percent to $9,993 a metric ton on the London Metal Exchange and traded at $9,970.75 by 11:19 a.m. Tokyo time. Copper for March delivery rose as much as 0.8 percent to $4.58 a pound on the Comex in New York before trading at $4.5535.
- Cyclone Yasi Hits Australian Sugar Crops, Price Advances to 30-Year High. Sugar cane plantations in Australia, the world’s third-largest exporter, likely suffered significant damage from Tropical Cyclone Yasi, helping send futures prices to the highest in 30 years. “It has actually gone right through the center of key cane-growing areas,” Steve Greenwood, chief executive officer of Brisbane-based producers group Canegrowers said by phone today. “It’s going to be as bad as we thought, unfortunately.” Yasi, packing winds stronger than those from Hurricane Katrina, crossed overnight into the north Queensland region, which accounts for about a third of Australia’s sugarcane and 85 percent of the nation’s banana output. Canegrowers yesterday estimated losses including damage to crops and farms of at least A$500 million ($505 million). “The region is an important sugar cane producing region and we suspect significant cane damage has occurred,” Luke Mathews, commodity strategist at Commonwealth Bank of Australia, said in a note today.
- Republican Governors Seize Court Ruling to Undo Health Law. Republican governors from Florida to Arizona say a recent court decision is grounds to stop implementing President Barack Obama’s health-care law. Florida Governor Rick Scott, a former hospital industry executive, said he’ll wait for further rulings before preparing to carry out the law aimed at creating near-universal health care. The state won’t accept a $1 million grant intended to help it get ready, Florida Insurance Commissioner Kevin McCarty said in a letter to federal officials yesterday. “We are not going to spend a lot of time and money with regard to trying to get ready to implement that until we know exactly what is going to happen,” Scott told reporters after a cabinet meeting in Tallahassee yesterday.
- Investors Flee U.S. Municipal-Bond Mutual Funds for 12th Consecutive Week. Investors pulled money from U.S. municipal-bond mutual funds for the 12th consecutive week and added cash to domestic stock funds for the third straight time, the longest streak of deposits since April. Muni-bond funds had net redemptions of $2.7 billion in the week ended Jan. 26, the Investment Company Institute said today in an e-mailed statement from Washington. The withdrawals, triggered by concern that financially strapped cities and states may default, total $33.5 billion over the 12-week stretch. U.S. municipal bonds lost 5.3 percent in the three months ended Jan. 31, according to the Bank of America Merrill Lynch Municipal Master Index.
- Mubarak's Supporters Strike Back. U.S. Pushes for Speedier Regime Change as Rival Camps Clash in Egypt's Streets. Violence erupted in Egypt's capital when supporters of President Hosni Mubarak clashed for the first time with protesters, as the regime dug in against demands, from within the country and from Washington, that a transfer of power begin immediately. The clashes began hours after Mr. Mubarak announced in a speech late Tuesday that he wouldn't run in elections slated for later this year. They gained intensity during the day in central Cairo's Tahrir Square, with the two sides rushing at each other, wielding clubs and throwing Molotov cocktails. Some Mubarak supporters charged protesters on horseback and camelback, a tactic the regime has employed against past demonstrations. Clutches of soldiers looked on, doing little to intervene.
- White House Charts a New Plan. Reacting to Violence in Cairo, U.S. Makes First Calls for a Speedily Formed Transitional Government Without Mubarak. The Obama administration, stung by an outbreak of violence in Cairo Wednesday, is now pushing for a speedy transfer of power to a transitional government that would sideline Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak or remove him from power, people familiar with the matter say. An interim government, made up of opposition parties and parts of the current regime, could buy time to rewrite the Egyptian constitution, let opposition parties organize and prepare for elections this year, the people, who are close to the White House, said. Such a move will put Washington on a collision course with Mr. Mubarak, who appears intent on overseeing any transition, and those in the Egyptian opposition who are pushing for much speedier elections.
- ElBaradei's Role Cast in Doubt. In the weeks leading up to the extraordinary uprising, a spectrum of opposition figures banded together to plan an alternative vision to the regime of President Hosni Mubarak. Even before last month's popular ouster of Tunisia's president electrified protesters in Egypt and across the Middle East, these people held dozens of meetings lasting more than 100 hours. They created a 100-member "shadow legislature" of union leaders, judges and representatives from youth parties and the country's banned but influential Muslim Brotherhood, say people in attendance. While the speed and scope of the past week's protests in Egypt largely took them by surprise, the opposition figures quickly assembled a game plan.
- Voters Do Care About the Deficit and Oppose ObamaCare. An open memo to Frank Rich of the New York Times.
- Hedge Funds Gird to Fight Proposals On Disclosure. Hedge funds are gearing up to take on proposed rules that would force them to turn over more data about their trading positions to the U.S. government. Regulators will be required to keep the information they gather confidential, but some hedge funds are invoking a WikiLeaks scenario, saying they are concerned that too many hands will be on their proprietary data and the government won't be able to protect it.
- States Widen Currency-Trade Probes. State prosecutors are getting help from an organized group of whistle-blowers in a widening investigation into whether banks overcharged public pension funds by tens of millions of dollars for foreign-exchange transactions. The whistle-blowers, who are using Delaware shell companies to remain anonymous, are helping with investigations into the issue by attorneys general in California and Virginia, according to court documents and people familiar with the matter.
- Key Moment Looms for Euro. As European Leaders Prepare to Release Details of New Strategy, Much Rides on Credibility of Plan. European leaders in Brussels on Friday are expected to confirm the broad outline of a strategy for solving the debt crisis, in a move that is seen as a decisive moment for the euro zone.
- TARP Makes Future Bailouts More Likely: Top Official. The financial rescue fund known as TARP has actually increased the likelihood of more bank bailouts in the future, Neil Barofsky, the program’s special inspector general, told CNBC Wednesday. "As long as the market perceives that the government is going to be a backstop...(it will) encourage more and more risk-taking and put us right back where we were in late 2008," said Barofsky.
- Did SEC Staffer Surf Porn While Investors Got Burned? A former regional supervisor at the Securities and Exchange Commission missed an alleged $550 million Ponzi scheme that was unfolding at the same time he was caught accessing pornography on his office computer, according to a report obtained by CNBC.
- China Property Bubble to Pop This Year, Says Analyst. The end may be neigh for China’s inflated property market, according to one analyst who says the nation’s banking system is unlikely to pump out enough credit this year to sustain further gains in real-estate prices. “We think that the bubble will likely burst some time in the next year,” says Forensic Asia Ltd.’s managing director Gillem Tulloch, in Hong Kong. One reason, he says, is China’s state-directed banks will be under pressure to reel back lending in a meaningful way, leaving the economy short of the more than 11 trillion yuan ($1.7 trillion) in credit he says is needed to keep prices rising at rates that make owning more attractive than renting.
- Yasi Damage Seen Less Than Feared. Cyclone Yasi slammed into Australia’s North Queensland coast in the dark hours of Thursday morning, battering the state’s coastal communities and its vast agricultural and mining interests, but there were no reports of fatalities or serious injuries, and the region appeared to escape maximum damage.
- Health Law Starts to Tumble Down. If the administration and the Senate Democrats had any sense, they'd take Judge Vinson's ruling as a gift, not a setback. Because, whether they know it or not, the judge just handed them an opportunity to get health care right.
- Why Apple(AAPL) Will Announce The iPad 2 Within Two Weeks.
- How The Crisis in North Africa Could Make the Global Food Situation Even Worse. Surging wheat prices are certainly one (though not the only) cause of rioting upheaval in Tunisia, Egypt, and elsewhere. And guess what. If things get worse, that could feed back into the food problem. That's because this region is a major source of diammonium phosphate, which is a major ingredient for growing... wheat.
- Treasury Expects to Hit Debt Ceiling by End of May, Discloses Plans for "Century" Bonds.
- Egypt Promptly Turns Ugly Again As 4 Protesters Killed By Pro-Mubarak Supporters: Al Jazeera, Al Masriya And CNN Live Feeds.
- What Egyptians Want: Not Western-Style Democracy. Precious few have bothered to ask exactly what it is that ordinary Egyptians are after. They should, because—beyond the general dissatisfaction with the Mubarak regime now visible on the Egyptian “street”—the values and beliefs of the protestors are likely to have a profound influence on the nature of the political order that will eventually emerge there. On that score, it turns out, there’s ample reason for pessimism. As Caroline Glick, one of Israel’s most astute observers of regional affairs, pointed out this week in the Jerusalem Post: “According to a Pew opinion survey of Egyptians from June 2010, 59 percent said they back Islamists. Only 27% said they back modernizers. Half of Egyptians support Hamas. Thirty percent support Hezbollah and 20% support al Qaida. Moreover, 95% of them would welcome Islamic influence over their politics…Eighty two percent of Egyptians support executing adulterers by stoning, 77% support whipping and cutting the hands off thieves. 84% support executing any Muslim who changes his religion.” Egyptian values, in other words, are far from liberal—even if some of the protesters currently out in the streets might be. This, of course, runs counter to the idea that has taken hold in many quarters: that the end of the Mubarak era will inexorably lead to democracy in the heart of the Arab world. But numbers don’t lie; Egyptian society as a whole is both religious and deeply conservative.
- Whitney Tilson Reduces Short Exposure, Refocuses on Buying Cheap Stocks. Whitney Tilson and Glenn Tongue's hedge fund T2 Partners have had some rough sledding the past few months, mainly due to their large short exposure. Over the last five months, they are down 4.3% net while the S&P 500 has rallied 23.5%. As such, they've re-examined their portfolio construction and have concluded to reduce short exposure and get back to basics: buying cheap stocks.
- CKE Restaurants is Exploring a Move to Texas from California. The parent of the Carl's Jr. and Hardee's fast-foot chains is in 'very early' talks about moving its headquarters from Carpinteria in Santa Barbara County to the Lone Star State, a company spokeswoman says.
Real Clear Politics:
Reuters:
- Middle East Situation 'Fragile' - World Bank Chief. The situation in the Middle East is "fragile" with countries like Egypt and Tunisia caught in a dilemma of "partial modernization" in which the political system does not allow the masses to benefit from economic advances, the head of the World Bank said on Wednesday. Interviewed by phone from Berlin as riots raged across Egypt, World Bank President Robert Zoellick said the lender was ready to move quickly to support nations in the region as they press forward with economic and political reforms. "We are in a very fragile situation, not only for Egypt but for a number of countries across the Middle East," he told Reuters.
- Visa(V) Profit Rises as it Preps for New Environment. Visa Inc's quarterly profit rose 16 percent, slightly beating expectations, as consumer spending ramped up and the company processed more transactions abroad. But the days of outsize returns on low expenses appear to be ending for Visa, the world's largest credit and debit card processing network. It failed to beat expectations by as much as investors have come to expect, and it has yet to fully assuage investor concerns about how it will cope with new U.S. regulations that may reduce future revenue. Shares fell about 1 percent in after-hours trading, after closing 2 percent higher at $72.09.
- Fed's Duke Says Expects Moderate Growth. A top Federal Reserve official suggested on Wednesday she does not think the U.S. central bank will have to extend its $600 billion bond-buying program beyond mid-year, but economic weakness could force the Fed's hand. "If the economy does, as I expect it to, and continues to grow at a moderate pace, then I think things will begin to come together," Fed Governor Elizabeth Duke said in response to a question about extending the bond-buying program after a speech at the University of North Carolina's Kenan-Flagler business school. "If we see further weakness in the economy, then we'll have to decide what seems to be the appropriate action to take at that time," Duke said.
- Green Mountain(GMCR) Q1 Beats Street, Sees Strong Q2 Profit. Green Mountain Coffee Roasters Inc posted a better-than-expected quarterly profit, helped by strong holiday sales of its higher-margin coffee refills, and forecast a second-quarter profit above market estimates, sending its shares up 13 percent.
- PIMCO's Gross Blasts U.S. Culture of Money and Greed. Billionaire bond maven Bill Gross in a February report says America needs new priorities and blasts a culture that worships money and greed. Gross, in remarks called "Devil's Bargain", blames money managers for failing to allocate capital wisely. He criticizes a culture that lives off ill-advised financial innovation such as securitization. In the comments on the website of Pacific Investment Management Co. Gross even points a finger at himself and says he is a member of this rogue's gallery. "I know one thing for sure. This is not God's work -- it has the unmistakable odor of Mammon," says Gross, a founder and co-chief investment officer at PIMCO in Newport Beach, California, where he helps oversee about $1.1 trillion in assets.
- News Corp.(NWSA), Time Warner(TWX) Revenue, Profit Up on Cable. News Corp and Time Warner both posted higher revenue and profit in the December quarter, boosted by surging advertising revenue at their cable TV business units.
- SEC at Odds with CFTC on Swap Trade Rules. The Securities and Exchange Commission on Wednesday proposed rules for trading swaps that differ from those being considered by its fellow US market regulator, the Commodity Futures Trading Commission. The rules for “swap execution facilities”, or SEFs, are hugely important in determining the way derivatives markets function in the future and whether entities – such as Wall Street derivatives dealers – capture trading activity.
ThinkEquity:
- Rated (FCS) Buy, target $21.
- Rated (CEVA) Buy, target $30.
- Rated (ONNN) Buy, target $13.
- Rated (ALTR) Buy, target $45.
- Asian equity indices are -.25% to +.25% on average.
- Asia Ex-Japan Investment Grade CDS Index 108.50 +1.5 basis points.
- Asia Pacific Sovereign CDS Index 119.25 +.25 basis point.
- S&P 500 futures -.07%.
- NASDAQ 100 futures -.18%.
Earnings of Note
Company/Estimate
- (CME)/3.81
- (HOT)/..39
- (EL)/1.44
- (IP)/.65
- (GR)/1.06
- (VIA/B)/.99
- (CAH)/.61
- (MA)/3.05
- (ATK)/1.98
- (DOW)/.35
- (CI)/1.01
- (ITT)/1.25
- (MRK)/.83
- (K)/.51
- (R)/.63
- (CSTR)/.67
- (DLB)/.69
- (JDSU)/.19
- (CBG)/.34
- (N)/.04
- (LVS)//.39
- (CVS)/.79
- (BX)/.30
- (DO)/1.46
8:30 am EST
- Preliminary 4Q Non-farm Productivity is estimated to rise +2.0% versus a +2.3% gain in 3Q.
- Preliminary 4Q Unit Labor Costs are estimated to rise +.2% versus a -.1% decline in 3Q.
- Initial Jobless Claims for last week are estimated to fall to 420K versus 454K the prior week.
- Continuing Claims are estimated to fall to 3950K versus 3991K prior.
- The ISM Non-Manufacturing Composite for January is estimated at 57.1 versus a reading of 57.1 in December.
- Factory Orders for December are estimated to fall -.5% versus a +.7% gain in November.
- None of note
- The Fed's Bernanke speaking, Fed's Kocherlakota speaking, ICSC January Chain Store Sales, Raymond James Global Airline Conference, (EK) investor meeting and the (EMR) investor conference could also impact trading today.
2 comments:
The SPY put in an Elliott Wave 2 high of 130.74 on February 1, 2010, and then went on to fall 0.20% lower, forming a hammer at the top of an ascending wedge, to close at 130.49 on February 2, 2010.
Ford and Johnson Controls are automotive components of the Morgan Stanley Cyclical Index, $CYC; their fall lower suggests an end to both an investment cycle and an economic cycle. The sell off in stocks that comes with a fall in the Morgan Stanley Cyclical Index is going to severe, as it represents the entrance into an Elliott Wave 3 Down.
The Elliott Wave 3 Down is the most sweeping and powerful of all waves; it creates most of the wealth on the way up; and for all intensive purposes destroys wealth on the way down.
In my article How and Why Short Selling Works, I write that in as much as the stock market, VT, is topping out and turning lower, one should consider investing in gold, GLD, which I recommend; or one should consider short selling. Note how the chart of gold shows that it is breaking out from a consolidation triangle. Gold in time past has been taken higher by rising commodity currencies, but now it is likely to be driven higher by falling stock values and a rising investment demand for a safe haven investment, in what is to become the age of deleveraging and the age of disinvestment, that will see competitive currency devaluations at the hands of the FX currency traders.
And I go on to relate that Basic material stocks, IYM, have been volatile, as the market is indeed peaking, as suggested by the fall lower in automobile stocks, and the strong fall lower in transportation stocks, IYT, and as the basic material stocks are driven by Commodity Currencies, CCX.
Airlines, FAA, turned lower with the announcement of QE 2 By Ben Bernanke; its fall lower means the market has turned lower and better prospects are available elsewhere. Note the dark cloud covering candlestick that gave a strong go ahead to sell these short. Also note how these have entered both an Elliott Wave 3 Down and an Elliott 3 of 3 Wave Down. Also note how these fell lower today as there was little buying interest in anything today after yesterday’s run-up in the market.
Utility shares, XLU, entered an Elliott Wave 3 Down today, after having turned parabolically lower and then having bounced up. This action often precedes the markets as a whole turning lower.
Retail, XRT, fell 2% today; its fall communicates that a overall bear market will be commencing soon.
Agriculture commodities, JJA, rose parabolically showing three white soldiers, suggesting a fall lower; those invested in futures may want to close out and take profits and wait for another leg up. US Commodities, DJP, has a wave structure similar to Agriculture commodities, JJA.
Ford and Johnson Controls are automotive components of the Morgan Stanley Cyclical Index, $CYC; their fall lower suggests an end to both an investment cycle and an economic cycle.
So there you have it: both, repeat both, fundamental and technical facts that we are cresting at an Elliott Wave 2 up and about to enter an Elliott Wave 3 Down. The investor should be invested either short or in gold
They are trying to “float” the idea of Suleiman replacing Mubarak to see the reaction by the protesters…that dog isn’t gonna hunt either. The protesters must include all of Mubarak’s influential power hungry cronies.
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