Evening Headlines
Bloomberg:
- Merkel Seeks to Keep Greece on Reform Path in Hollande Talks. German Chancellor Angela Merkel said she and French President Francois Hollande will coordinate on their approach to Greece to keep pressure on the country at the heart of Europe’s debt crisis to overhaul its economy. Merkel, speaking to reporters in Berlin before hosting a working dinner with the French president, said they will discuss “how to receive our colleague,” Greek Prime Minister Antonis Samaras, who visits the German capital today and Paris tomorrow. “It’s important to me that we all stand by our obligations and wait for the troika report and see what the result is,” Merkel said in a prepared statement late yesterday, referring to a report due next month on Greece’s progress in meeting its bailout terms. “We, and I, will encourage Greece to pursue the path of reform that demands a lot from the people.”
- China’s Stocks Fall, Head for Weekly Loss, on Property Measures. China’s stocks fell, extending weekly losses for the benchmark index, after PetroChina Co. posted a decline in profit and the Xinhua News Agency reported the government is studying further measures to strengthen its control of the property market. PetroChina, China’s biggest oil producer and the most heavily weighted stock on the Shanghai Composite Index, retreated after it reported a 6 percent drop in first-half net profit. Bank of China Ltd. paced declines for lenders after it reported the slowest increase in profit in three years. Poly Real Estate Group Co. tumbled to a four-month low. The government is “closely monitoring” changes in the real estate market and has ordered local governments not to relax property controls, the unidentified official with China’s Ministry of Housing and Urban-Rural Development was quoted as saying in the Xinhua report.
- Hong Kong Profit Warnings Hit Record on China: Chart of the Day. More Hong Kong-listed companies are predicting earnings declines than ever before as the slowdown in China's economy curbs demand for their goods and services. Profit warnings have been issued by 331 companies since the start of June, the most for a three-month time frame since Hong Kong Exchanges & Clearing Ltd. started compiling the data in July 2007. "Most of the companies that warned about profits have large exposure in China," said Linus Yip, chief strategist at First Shanghai Securities in Hong Kong.
- The Slowdown in China Hitting Hong Kong's Economy. (video)
- Caterpillar(CAT) Cuts China Production as Digger Slump Reaches Mining. Xu Biao could sit in his office waiting for orders to roll in during a Chinese building boom two years ago. Now, he’s hitting the road trying to drum up business. “Life is difficult,” said Xu, a sales manager at Maanshan Fangyuan Slewing Ring Co. (002147), which supplies parts to Sany Heavy Industry Co. (600031), XCMG Construction Machinery Co. and other equipment-makers. “Every client is cutting production.” Caterpillar Inc. (CAT), which gets 25 percent of sales in Asia, Komatsu Ltd. (6301) and Sany have all slashed output in the world’s biggest construction-equipment market this year as a demand slump caused by slower economic growth spreads from building to mining. Sales of large excavators, mainly used by miners, last month plunged the most since at least January 2009, contributing to the 15th straight decline in the overall market. “The market is just getting worse,” said Wang Shuangming, an analyst with consultant China Construction Machinery Business Online. “It doesn’t matter if you’re a foreign or domestic producer -- everybody is sitting in the same boat.” Total excavator sales fell 24 percent from a year earlier in July to 5,827, according to China Construction Machinery Association data cited by Nomura Holdings Inc.
- Palm-Oil Imports by China Head for 4-Year Low as Economy Slows. Palm-oil imports by China, the world’s biggest buyer after India, are poised to decline to the lowest level in four years as the economy slows and the government seeks to keep cooking-oil prices stable. Shipments will probably drop 7 percent to 5.5 million metric tons in 2012 from 5.9 million tons last year, according to the median in a Bloomberg survey of three analysts and two traders. Port inventories in China totaled 760,000 tons last week, 50 percent more than a year earlier, said Cao Huimin, an analyst at Beijing-based China Cereals & Oils Business Net. Palm oil, used in everything from Nestle SA (NESN)’s Maggi instant noodles and Unilever’s soaps, to candy bars and biofuels, has tumbled 16 percent from a 13-month high in April as a slowdown in China and Europe cut demand, reducing profits at Wilmar International Ltd. (WIL), the largest processor. Palm is trading near the cheapest versus soybean oil in about a year.
- RBI Says Weak India Growth Outlook Imperils Budget Deficit Goal. The Indian government may exceed its budget-deficit target because of higher spending on petroleum subsidies and a weak economic growth outlook that could lead to a tax shortfall, the Reserve Bank of India said. “There is no scope for complacency as fiscal slippage is likely” in the year through March 2013, the central bank said in its annual report released in Mumbai yesterday. The shortfall in the current account, the broadest measure of trade, is set to remain above a sustainable level, it said. These risks must be tackled “forthwith” to contain threats to economic stability, it said, adding India needs to revive investment in public works to help counter the weakest expansion in nine years. The Reserve Bank left interest rates unchanged in July to fight an inflation rate that has averaged more than 7 percent for most of 2012. It said yesterday that damping price increases remains the “cornerstone” of monetary policy. “There are significant risks to deficit and revenue targets,” said Suvodeep Rakshit, an economist at Kotak Securities Ltd. in Mumbai. “Standard & Poor’s and Fitch Ratings are watching us closely and if the deficit keeps slipping, then a credit-rating downgrade will be a very credible scenario.”
- U.S. Incomes Fell More in Recovery, Sentier Says. American incomes declined more in the three-year expansion that started in June 2009 than during the longest recession since the Great Depression, according an analysis of U.S. Census Bureau data by Sentier Research LLC. Median household income fell 4.8 percent on an inflation- adjusted basis since the recession ended in June 2009, more than the 2.6 percent drop during the 18-month contraction, the research firm’s Gordon Green and John Coder wrote in a report today. Household income is 7.2 percent below the December 2007 level, the former Census Bureau economic statisticians wrote. “Almost every group is worse off than it was three years ago, and some groups had very large declines in income,” Green, who previously directed work on the Census Bureau’s income and poverty statistics program, said in a phone interview today. “We’re in an unprecedented period of economic stagnation.” While gains in hourly earnings and average hours worked per week may have had “a minor mitigating effect” on income declines, they couldn’t offset a jobless rate that hasn’t fallen below 8 percent since February 2009 and a record duration of unemployment, according to the Annapolis, Maryland-based firm. The average duration of unemployment increased to a record 41 weeks in November and remains at 39 weeks, Labor Department data show. Almost 5.2 million Americans have been out of work for at least six months.
- Gold Bulls Strongest in Nine Months as Hoard Builds: Commodities. Gold traders are the most bullish in nine months after investors’ bullion holdings expanded to a record on mounting speculation that central banks will do more to bolster economic growth. Twenty-nine of 35 analysts surveyed by Bloomberg expect prices to rise next week and three were bearish. A further three were neutral, making the proportion of bulls the highest since Nov. 11. Investors bought 46.9 metric tons valued at $2.5 billion through gold-backed exchange-traded products this month, the most since November, overtaking France as the world’s fourth-largest hoard when compared with national reserves.
- Dish Network(DISH) Sued by FTC Over ‘Do Not Call’ Violations. Dish Network Corp. was sued by the U.S. Federal Trade Commission and accused of violating the agency’s National Do Not Call Registry in its telemarketing operations. The FTC said in a lawsuit filed yesterday in federal court in Springfield, Illinois, that the second-largest U.S. satellite-television provider illegally called millions of consumers who asked its telemarketers or its affiliates not to call them again.
- Autodesk(ADSK) Tumbles on Reduced Sales Forecast and Job Cuts. Autodesk Inc. plunged as much as 23 percent after the maker of architectural, engineering and entertainment software lowered its annual sales forecast and said it plans to cut jobs as part of a restructuring program. The company will post fiscal 2013 sales growth of 4 percent to 6 percent, San Rafael, California-based Autodesk said today in a statement, down from an earlier forecast for at least a 10 percent expansion. Its operating margin will decrease by 2.1 percent instead of rising by 1.2 percent as previously forecast.
- Mitt Romney: What I Learned at Bain Capital. My business experience taught me how to help companies grow—and what to do when trouble arises. When you see a problem, run toward it before the problem gets worse.
- Morgan Stanley(MS) Funds in Big Facebook Bet. U.S. mutual funds run by Morgan Stanley, the lead underwriter in Facebook Inc.'s $16 billion initial public offering, have disproportionately high investments in the social-media company, leaving fund shareholders exposed to the stock's big drop since its May 18 IPO. New data show that eight of the top nine U.S. mutual funds with Facebook shares as a percentage of total assets are run by Morgan Stanley's asset-management arm, according to fund tracker Morningstar Inc.
- South Korea Court Says Samsung, Apple(AAPL) Infringed Each Other's Patents. A South Korea court on Friday delivered a split decision in its piece of the global legal battle between Apple Inc. and Samsung Electronics Co. over mobile computing patents. A three-judge panel in Seoul Central District Court said Apple infringed two Samsung technology patents, while Samsung violated one of Apple's patents. The court awarded small damages to both companies and said they must halt sales of the infringing products in South Korea.
- New Delhi Expands Curbs on Web Content. India on Thursday broadened recent efforts to regulate the Internet with moves to block Twitter accounts of some prominent journalists and content from mainstream news organizations, sparking a backlash across social media in the country.
- Citigroup(C): Wall Street's Frankenstein Is Still a Monster.
- Strassel: The Silent Second-Term Agenda. Despite the Democrats' shellacking in 2010, the president moved left. Re-election in November will reinforce his view that he was correct to do so.
Business Insider:
Zero Hedge:
- For Marc Faber The Iron 'Ore' Lady Has Sung. (graph)
- Why One SEC Commissioner Spoiled The Fed And Treasury's Plan For Money Market Capital Controls: In His Words.
- JPM's(JPM) London Whale May Face Jail Time For Mismarking Billions In CDS.
NY Times:
- China Confronts Mounting Piles of Unsold Goods. After three decades of torrid growth, China is encountering an unfamiliar problem with its newly struggling economy: a huge buildup of unsold goods that is cluttering shop floors, clogging car dealerships and filling factory warehouses. The glut of everything from steel and household appliances to cars and apartments is hampering China’s efforts to emerge from a sharp economic slowdown. It has also produced a series of price wars and has led manufacturers to redouble efforts to export what they cannot sell at home. The severity of China’s inventory overhang has been carefully masked by the blocking or adjusting of economic data by the Chinese government — all part of an effort to prop up confidence in the economy among business managers and investors. But the main nongovernment survey of manufacturers in China showed on Thursday that inventories of finished goods rose much faster in August than in any month since the survey began in April 2004. The previous record for rising inventories, according to the HSBC/Markit survey, had been set in June. May and July also showed increases.
- Poll: Romney Widens Lead Among Small Business Voters. Sixty-one percent of small business owners plan to vote for the Republican challenger, more than double the 26 percent who say they will vote for President Obama, shows a survey released Tuesday by Manta. The president’s numbers have fallen six points since May, while Mitt Romney has picked up four points with business owners.
- Athens and Berlin in spat over funds. Leaders in Athens and Berlin wrangled publicly over how to deal with Greece's plea for further assistance as fears of a renewed eurozone recession mounted yesterday. An index of business activity in the single currency area showed a seventh consecutive monthly contraction and an accelerating decline in output from Germany, the main engine of eurozone growth. As the debt storm spreads Europe's leaders battle to save the eurozone.
- Oil near $100. Thanks a lot, Fed! Federal Reserve chairman Ben Bernanke may or may not give the market more hints about a possible third round of bond purchases at his speech in Jackson Hole next week. But investors are clearly betting on more quantitative easing or other forms of stimulus. Just look at what's going on in the commodity and currency markets.
- Salesforce(CRM) Q3 forecast misses estimates, shares drop. Salesforce.com Inc's third-quarter earnings outlook missed analysts' estimates and its stock fell more than 5 percent in after-hours trading.
- Japan manufacturing mood worsens on global slowdown -Reuters Tankan. Big Japanese manufacturers' sentiment worsened in August and is expected to improve only slightly in the coming months, a Reuters poll showed, as Europe's debt crisis, a global slowdown and a stubbornly strong yen take their toll on the export-reliant economy.
- Illinois pension reform inaction a negative - Moody's. Illinois' failure to improve its sagging public retirement system during a special legislative session last week is a negative credit factor for the state, Moody's Investors Service said. "Inaction on the state's pension liabilities will further strain this lowest-rated U.S. state's finances," the credit rating agency said in a report on Thursday.
- Romney seeks North American energy independence by 2020. Republican presidential candidate Mitt Romney said on Thursday that if elected, he will ensure North American energy independence by 2020 by pursuing a sharp increase in production of oil and natural gas on federal lands and off the U.S. East Coast.
- German finance ministry studying "Grexit" costs: paper. A working group led by Germany's deputy finance minister is studying the possible economic impact of a Greek exit from the euro zone, a newspaper reported on Friday, as Chancellor Angela Merkel prepared for talks with Greece's prime minister. The Financial Times Deutschland newspaper, citing finance ministry sources, said the decision to set up the working group showed that Merkel and Finance Minister Wolfgang Schaeuble wanted to be fully prepared for a possible "negative scenario". "Colleagues are making calculations about the financial consequences (of a Greek exit) and are considering how a domino effect on other euro member states might be prevented," the daily quoted the ministry sources as saying.
- The number of overnight stays in hotels in France dropped 10% in August, citing the national association of hotels, restaurants, cafes and caterers. Drops reached 25-30% on the Atlantic Coast, Normandy.
The Australian:
- Budget's $10Bn Hit From Coal, Iron Ore Slump. PLUNGING iron ore and coal prices will lower the government's tax revenue as much as $10 billion this year, destroying its promised budget surplus in the absence of a fresh round of spending cuts. The commodity price falls since the budget have been much greater than Treasury forecast and will further cut receipts from mining and company taxes.
- China still faces limits on expanding demand, problems with companies' profitability and uncertainties about the agricultural harvest this year, according to a front page commentary. Global economic growth may remain sluggish for a relatively long period. Stabilization of economic growth doesn't mean the most difficult time has passed, according to the commentary.
- The Chinese steel industry will face more difficulties in 4Q and 1Q, citing Wang Xiaoqi, vice chairman of China Iron and Steel Association. Large inventories will affect the steel industry's future profits, Wang said.
- People's Bank of China Governor Zhou Xiaochuan said the country still faces relatively big pressure on economic growth, according to a statement posted on the central bank's website today, citing Zhou speaking at a meeting on Aug. 22. China may face new challenges for maintaining financial stability as the national adjusts its economic structure, implements interest rate liberalization and reforms its exchange rate forming mechanism, Zhou said.
- Sinotrans Expects Market Glut to Last 2-3 Years. The outlook for the shipping industry in the short term is not optimistic because of an imbalance in supply and demand, citing the Co.'s General Manager Tian Zhongshan. The Co.'s future development focus is still dry bulk carriers. The gap between demand growth and supply growth will narrow to 1.5 percentage points by 2014, from 5 percentage points in the past 2-3 years, Tian said.
- None of note
- Asian equity indices are -1.25% to -.50% on average.
- Asia Ex-Japan Investment Grade CDS Index 149.0 +2.0 basis points.
- Asia Pacific Sovereign CDS Index 130.0 +2.5 basis points.
- FTSE-100 futures -.36%.
- S&P 500 futures +.06%.
- NASDAQ 100 futures +.07%.
Earnings of Note
Company/Estimate
- None of note
8:30 am EST
- Durable Goods Orders for July are estimated to rise +2.5% versus a +1.6% gain in June.
- Durables Ex Transports for July are estimated to rise +.5% versus a -1.1% decline in June.
- Cap Goods Orders Non-Defense Ex Air for July are estimated to fall -.2% versus a -1.4% decline in June.
- Cap Goods Shipments Non-Defense Ex Air for July are estimated to fall -.1% versus a +1.2% gain in June.
Upcoming Splits
- None of note
Other Potential Market Movers
- The UK GDP/Trade reports, Greek Officials meeting with Merkel and the Troika meeting regarding Spain's Bad Bank could also impact trading today.
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