Today's Headlines
Bloomberg:
- Euro-Region Industrial Output Drops as Slump Persists: Economy. Euro-area industrial output fell
more than economists forecast in January, adding to signs that
the region’s recession extended into the first quarter. Factory
production in the 17-nation euro zone dropped 0.4 percent from December,
when it rose a revised 0.9 percent, the European Union’s statistics
office in Luxembourg said today. The median forecast in a Bloomberg News
survey of 32 economists was
for a 0.1 percent decline. Production fell 1.3 percent in
January from a year earlier.
- Italian Bonds Decline as Borrowing Costs Climb at Debt Auction. Italian bonds fell, with two-year
yields rising the most in two weeks, as borrowing costs
increased at an auction amid concern a political deadlock will
derail plans to fix the nation’s finances. Shorter-maturity notes led declines as the country sold
3.32 billion euros ($4.3 billion) of securities due in December
2015 at an average yield of 2.48 percent versus 2.30 percent at
the previous offering last month. “The market is a bit complacent about the risks that can
happen in Italy,” said Mohit Kumar, head of Europe and U.K.
rates strategy at Deutsche Bank AG in London. “If you have a
government that is unable to pursue structural reforms, it will
have an impact on economic growth in Italy.”
- Europe to Contract as Much as 1.5%, El-Erian Says: Tom Keene.
- PBOC Chief Says China Should Be on ‘High Alert’ on Inflation. China
should be on “high alert”
over inflation after February’s figures exceeded forecasts,
central bank Governor Zhou Xiaochuan said, signaling a heightened focus
on controlling prices. Monetary policy is “no longer relaxed” and is
“relatively neutral” as demonstrated by a 13 percent target for
money-supply growth that’s tighter than expansion in the last two years,
Zhou, head of the People’s Bank of China, said at a press
conference today during the annual gathering of China’s National
People’s Congress. Zhou’s comments add to signs that officials are
tightening
policies even as the recovery in the world’s second-biggest
economy shows signs of weakness.
- China’s Stocks Slump to Two-Month Low on Property Curbs. Chinese stocks fell, dragging the
benchmark index to a two-month low, as real estate and
construction companies tumbled on concern policy makers will
step up property curbs. Sina.com reported the southern city of Shenzhen banned
developers from raising home prices, citing discussions with
property companies. Poly Real Estate Group Co. and Gemdale Corp.
declined more than 3 percent. Sany Heavy Industry Co. (600031), the
nation’s biggest maker of construction machinery, lost 2.1
percent. CSR Corp. (601766) and China CNR Corp., the nation’s top train
makers, slumped at least 3.7 percent on concern the dismantling
of the rail ministry will curb state spending. “Property curbs and the central bank’s possible attitude
towards tightening liquidity make investors nervous,” said Wang Weijun, a strategist at Zheshang Securities Co. in Shanghai.
“There’s concern the economic recovery will falter.” The Shanghai Composite Index (SHCOMP) dropped 1 percent to 2,263.97
at the close, capping a five-day, 3.6 percent losing streak
that’s the longest in four months. The gauge also erased its
gain for the year.
- Copper Falls on Concern China Housing Curbs Will Sap Demand. Copper
fell the most in a week amid
concern that policy makers will expand efforts to cool the
housing market in China, the world’s biggest consumer. Chinese stocks
fell, dragging the benchmark index to a two- month low, as real estate
and construction companies tumbled. Sina.com reported the southern city
of Shenzhen banned developers from raising home prices. Accelerating
inflation means the country should be on “high alert,” Zhou Xiaochuan,
head of the People’s Bank of China, said today, signaling a
heightened focus on controlling prices. On the Comex in New York, copper futures for delivery in
May slid 0.7 percent to $3.5285 a pound at 12:01 p.m., heading
for the biggest decline since March 1.
- Iron Ore Falls Most Since January Amid China Property Concerns. Iron ore fell the most since
January amid concern curbs on construction in China will reduce
demand for the commodity used to make steel. Imported ore with 62 percent iron content at the Chinese
port of Tianjin dropped 3.1 percent to $139 a dry metric ton
today, the most since Jan. 16, according to The Steel Index Ltd.
The global benchmark fell 13 percent from a 16-month high
reached Feb. 20. Sentiment is deteriorating because of concerns about demand
from real estate in China, Oscar Tarneberg, an analyst at The
Steel Index, said by e-mail today. “China’s panicked basic-material destock continues, with
construction and real-estate firms caught up in a severe
economic slump, caused by tightening liquidity and the ongoing
threat of negative property policies,” Melinda Moore, an
analyst at Standard Bank Plc, said in an e-mailed report today.
- Import Prices in U.S. Climbed in February as Energy Costs Jumped. The cost of goods imported into the
U.S. climbed in February by the most in six months, reflecting a
jump in energy expenses that is now receding. The 1.1 percent
increase in the import-price index followed a 0.6 percent gain in the
prior month, Labor Department figures showed today in Washington. The
median forecast of 43 economists in a Bloomberg survey called for a 0.6
percent advance. Prices
dropped 0.3 percent over the past 12 months.
- Business Inventories in U.S. Increase by Most Since May 2011. Inventories in the U.S. rose in
January by the most since May 2011 as companies replenished
warehouses and shelves amid signs demand will pick up. The 1 percent
increase in goods on hand exceeded the highest forecast in a Bloomberg
survey and followed a 0.3 percent gain in December that was more than
previously estimated, Commerce Department figures showed today in
Washington. The median estimate was for a 0.5 percent advance. At the January sales pace, businesses had enough goods on
hand to last 1.29 months, up from 1.28 months in the prior month
and the highest since August. Business sales dropped 0.3 percent in January, reflecting
declines at factories and wholesalers.
Wall Street Journal:
- New Pope: Live Updates.
- The Resilient Consumer? Not Quite. Resilient?
That’s not exactly the word we’d use to describe it. The bulk of the
gain came courtesy of auto sales and rising gas prices. Excluding those two items, and building materials, sales were up a far less impressive 0.36%. Sales were down at department stores, restaurants and furniture stores. “That indicates consumers may have cut their spending on non-essentials,” Dow Jones’ Sarah Portlock and Jeffrey Sparshott wrote this morning.
CNBC:
- Crumbling BRICs: Why You're Better Off Elsewhere. The
BRIC nations increasingly look like they will no longer be the building
blocks of international investing. As a group, Brazil, Russia, India
and China have been seen as the
collective pillar of emerging market growth, leading to an exodus of
money from U.S. stocks and into global equities. But signs indicate that trade has begun to run its course, and investors are looking for opportunity elsewhere.
Zero Hedge:
Business Insider:
NYPost:
- Goldman’s(GS) Blankfein on trader talent hunt at Morgan Stanley(MS). Lloyd Blankfein smells blood in the water. The Goldman Sachs
CEO is taking dead aim at Morgan Stanley’s most prized assets — its best
and brightest employees — after his rival decided to defer pay for
senior bankers. Blankfein, as a big game hunter, recently landed
13-year Morgan Stanley veteran Kate Richdale, head of its Asia Pacific
investment banking business. The CEO’s talent hunt is continuing,
sources said. Goldman currently is in selective talks with other Morgan
Stanley bankers and has also lured a handful of traders from the bank.
The classic Wall Street maneuvering comes months after Morgan Stanley
told some execs it would defer pay, including their cash bonuses, over
three years — a move that caused some bankers to grouse.
c/net:
Reuters:
- Exclusive: Obama administration to let spy agencies scour Americans' finances. The Obama
administration is drawing up plans to give all U.S. spy agencies full
access to a massive database that contains financial data on American
citizens and others who bank in the country, according to a Treasury
Department document seen by Reuters. The proposed plan represents a
major step by U.S. intelligence agencies to spot and track down
terrorist networks and crime syndicates by bringing together financial
databanks, criminal records and military intelligence. The plan, which
legal experts say is permissible under U.S. law, is nonetheless likely
to trigger intense criticism from privacy advocates.
-
Italy's Berlusconi promises parliamentary battle against magistrates. Italy's former prime minister,
Silvio Berlusconi, facing trial on tax fraud and sex charges and
under investigation for suspected political bribery, promised to
take on prosecutors after parliament opens this week.
- Russia risks billions of dollars if Cyprus defaults - Moody's.
Telegraph:
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