Bloomberg:
- Fragile Five Unravel as Developing Economies Suffer: Currencies. Emerging-market currencies are trailing their peers in advanced economies by the most since 2009 as a global recovery eludes countries from China to Brazil. The 20 most-traded developing-nation currencies tracked by Bloomberg weakened an average 5.3% against the dollar in the past three months, compared with a 1.1 percent gain for the six comprising IntercontinentalExchange Inc.'s Dollar Index. That's the biggest gap since the height of the banking crisis four years ago. Options prices signal that the Indonesian rupiah, Turkish lira and Brazilian real will tumble further.
- China Escalates Islands Challenge to Japan on Philippine Success. China escalated tensions with Japan by sending ships into waters near islands claimed by both sides for more than 24 hours, drawing a formal diplomatic protest from the Japanese government. Ships from China’s newly formed coast guard remained in the Japanese-controlled waters for the longest time since Japan bought the islands last year, Cabinet Secretary Yoshihide Suga said at a briefing in Tokyo today. Japan’s Foreign Ministry summoned a Chinese diplomat and “sternly protested,” he said. The Chinese move mirrors the approach it has taken in asserting its sovereignty claims in a dispute with the Philippines over the Scarborough Shoal area of the South China Sea. That strategy signals a more aggressive stance amid a broader push by President Xi Jinping to make China a maritime power in the region.
- EU Decides Against Anti-Subsidy Duties on Chinese Solar Panels. The European Union decided against imposing preliminary anti-subsidy tariffs on Chinese solar panels, opting to wait another four months to assess whether the levies are warranted in the biggest EU trade fight of its kind. The European Commission waived the right to impose provisional EU duties to counter alleged trade-distorting government aid to Chinese solar-panel manufacturers. The commission, the 28-nation EU’s regulatory arm, will study whether “definitive” anti-subsidy levies should be applied by Dec. 8.
- Australian Jobs Drop in Blow for Rudd’s Re-Election Bid: Economy. Australian employers unexpectedly cut payrolls in July and unemployment held at an almost four-year high, denting Prime Minister Kevin Rudd’s bid for a come-from-behind election win. The number of people employed fell 10,200, the statistics bureau said in Sydney today. That compares with the median estimate for a 5,000 rise in a survey of 24 economists. The jobless rate held at 5.7 percent as fewer people sought work.
- Bank of Japan Refrains From Adding to Record Monetary Stimulus. The Bank of Japan refrained from adding to unprecedented monetary stimulus after consumer prices rose in June and a recovery in the world’s third-biggest economy maintained momentum. Governor Haruhiko Kuroda’s board stuck with an April pledge to expand the monetary base by 60 trillion yen to 70 trillion yen ($723 billion) per year, a statement released in Tokyo today showed. All 26 economists in a Bloomberg News survey predicted the decision.
- Japan's Nuclear Nightmare. Thailand’s stocks are falling at the fastest pace in Asia as an amnesty bill for political protesters spurs demonstrations in the streets of Bangkok and threatens to delay the nation’s biggest-ever infrastructure spending plan.
- Asian Stocks Rise as Bank of Japan Keeps Stimulus Policy. Asian stocks rose, led by health-care companies, after the Bank of Japan maintained its stimulus policy and Chinese exports grew more than forecast. Toyota Motor Corp. (7203) gained 0.5 percent, leading Japanese exporters higher as the yen headed for its first decline in five days. Kubota Corp. surged 5.8 percent after profit at the Japanese tractor maker climbed 50 percent, topping analyst forecasts. Telstra Corp. (TLS) gained 1.7 percent as Australia’s largest phone company posted earnings that beat analyst estimates after luring subscribers to its wireless services. The MSCI Asia Pacific Index gained 0.6 percent to 134.14 as of 11:15 a.m. in Hong Kong, with all 10 industry groups on the gauge advancing.
- Rubber Rallies Most in Three Weeks as Weaker Yen Boosts Appeal. Rubber rallied the most in three weeks as a smaller-than-expected surplus for Japan weakened the nation’s currency, increasing the appeal of contracts in yen, and ahead of Chinese trade data. Rubber for delivery in January on the Tokyo Commodity Exchange gained as much as 4.2 percent, the biggest advance for a most-active contract since July 19. Futures were 3.6 percent higher at 255.2 yen a kilogram ($2,639 a metric ton) at 11:58 a.m. local time. That pared this year’s decline to 16 percent.
- Rebar Advances for 7th Day as Iron Ore Rises to Three-Month High. Steel reinforcement-bar futures in Shanghai climbed for the seventh day after prices of iron ore, a key ingredient in steel making, jumped to the highest in more than three months. Rebar for January delivery on the Shanghai Futures Exchange climbed as much as 0.7 percent to 3,740 yuan ($611) a metric ton, the highest level since April 17, and was at 3,733 yuan at 10:15 a.m. local time. The price is up 2.4 percent this month.
- Egypt’s President Warns Opponents Mediation Has Ended. Egypt’s interim president Adly Mansour vowed to press ahead with the government’s plans, sending a warning to backers of ousted President Mohamed Mursi that “those who stay behind will bear the consequences.” Signaling that a crackdown on two main opposition sit-ins in Cairo squares may be imminent, Mansour said in a televised speech last night that “the train of the future has taken off” and “all of us have to catch it.”
- JPMorgan( Says U.S. Faults MBS Amid Parallel Criminal Probe. JPMorgan Chase & Co. (JPM), the largest U.S. bank, said it’s under federal criminal investigation for practices tied to sales of mortgage-backed bonds that the Justice Department has already concluded broke civil laws. The department’s civil division told the bank in May of its preliminary finding after examining securities tied to subprime and Alt-A loans, which were sold to investors from 2005 to 2007, JPMorgan said today in a filing. The U.S. Attorney’s Office led by Benjamin Wagner in Sacramento has been conducting civil and criminal inquiries, the filing shows.
- China Labor Camps Under Fire from State Think Tank. An influential Chinese government-run think tank is the latest to decry the country’s controversial system of re-education through labor, with a newly published report describing the system as outdated and in violation of judicial principles. The Chinese Academy of Social Sciences, in a political development report published on Monday, said abuses in the system have become increasingly apparent and had given rise to widespread public opposition, according to state media reports summarizing CASS’s findings.
- Diplomatic Rift With Putin Grows as Obama Cancels. Relations Strained Over Russia's Decision to Grant Asylum to NSA Leaker. President Barack Obama's decision to pull out of a one-on-one meeting with Russian President Vladimir Putin in Moscow next month punctuates a steady decline in relations and represents an unusually sharp rebuke for an administration pledged to engaging adversaries.
- Probe Turns Up Heat on Banks. Prosecutors Target Firms That Process Payments for Online Payday Lenders, Others. The Justice Department is targeting banks that service a broad range of what it considers questionable financial ventures, including online payday lenders. The government has issued subpoenas to banks and other companies that handle payments for an array of financial offerings, ramping up an investigation that has been under way for several months, according to Justice Department officials and other people familiar with the matter. It's a shift in strategy: Rather than just targeting individual firms, the government is now going after the infrastructure that enables companies to withdraw money from people's bank accounts.
- Officials Tighten Crude-Shipping Standards. The Federal Railroad Administration plans to start asking shipping companies to supply testing data they use to classify their crude-oil shipments, saying it is concerned that some shipments are being transported in tank cars that aren't safe enough. In a letter to American Petroleum Institute CEO Jack Gerard last week, the FRA said it is investigating whether some crude shipments contain chemicals—possibly from the hydraulic-fracturing process used to extract it—that make them more hazardous than their classification indicates.
- Members Only. How the White House is weaseling Congress out of ObamacCare. The White House on Wednesday released the legal details behind its ObamaCare bailout for Members of Congress and their staffs, and if anything this rescue is worse than last week's leaks suggested: Illegal dispensations for the ruling class, different rules for the hoi polloi.
- Ali Soufan: How Al Qaeda Made Its Comeback. The U.S. regarded the terrorist group's affiliates as local problems—instead of fighting their potent Islamist ideology.
- Obama administration using housing department to compel diversity in neighborhoods. In a move some claim is tantamount to social engineering, the Department of Housing and Urban Development is imposing a new rule that would allow the feds to track diversity in America’s neighborhoods and then push policies to change those it deems discriminatory. The policy is called, "Affirmatively Furthering Fair Housing." It will require HUD to gather data on segregation and discrimination in every single neighborhood and try to remedy it.
- Obama standing by decision to lift moratorium on releasing Guantanamo Bay prisoners back to Yemen. In spite of the ongoing terror threat emanating from Yemen, the White House says it does not plan to rethink President Obama's decision last May to lift a moratorium on releasing Guantanamo Bay prisoners back to that country.
- China risks rise as growth model shifts. Commentary: A huge change in economic drivers is coming.
- Green Mountain(GMCR) earnings beat, revenue falls short. Green Mountain Coffee reported earnings that beat Wall Street forecasts on lower coffee costs and strong sales of its single serve K-Cups, but the stock is tumbling in late trading on weaker-than-forecast sales.
- Tesla(TSLA) posts surprise profit; shares jump 15%. Tesla reported a surprise second-quarter operating profit, causing the premium electric carmaker's shares to jump more than 15 percent after the closing bell.
Business Insider:
New York Times:
Real Clear Politics:
Reuters:
- Agrium(AGU) profit hit by cold North American spring. Canadian fertilizer company Agrium Inc reported a fall in quarterly profit due to an unusually cold spring in North America, but said it expected strong demand for crop inputs for the rest of the year. Unseasonably cool weather in the U.S. Midwest this spring compressed the usual time period for farmers to apply fertilizer to their fields.
- Vale(VALE) profit dives on FX charge; cost-cutting continues. Brazilian miner Vale SA said on Wednesday its second-quarter profit plunged after the company recorded a surprise $2.78 billion in foreign exchange losses on currency derivatives and debt, one of its worst bottom-line results in a decade.
- SolarCity(SCTY) results top Street but shares drop 10 pct. SolarCity Corp, the U.S. solar installer backed by Tesla Motors founder Elon Musk, on Wednesday reported better-than-expected quarterly results, but sharply higher costs and an unchanged outlook for the year sent its shares down 10 percent in extended trade.
- Fusion-io(FIO) reports wider fourth-quarter loss. Storage drive maker Fusion-io Inc reported a bigger quarterly loss as sales and marketing costs jumped almost 51 percent.
- China Gov't Study Reaffirms Huai River 'Cancer Villages'. A government study has reaffirmed the existence of "cancer villages" along the Huai River in eastern China, citing Yang Gonghuan, a former health official who led the study.
- None of note
- Asian equity indices are unch. to +.75% on average.
- Asia Ex-Japan Investment Grade CDS Index 145.50 +1.5 basis points.
- Asia Pacific Sovereign CDS Index 111.0 +1.5 basis points.
- FTSE-100 futures +.29%.
- S&P 500 futures +.32%.
- NASDAQ 100 futures +.34%.
Earnings of Note
Company/Estimate
- (AAP)/1.48
- (NVDA)/.19
- (ONXX)/-.41
- (MNST)/.64
- (PCLN)/9.43
- (MCP)/-.24
- (BNNY)/.14
- (DV)/.41
- (AES)/.28
- (SSYS)/.44
- (DDS)/.79
8:30 am EST
- Initial Jobless Claims are estimated to rise to 335K versus 326K the prior week.
- Continuing Claims are estimated to fall to 2950K versus 2951K prior.
- None of note
- The China Trade/Inflation data, BoJ Press Conference, 2Q Mortgage Delinquencies/Foreclosures, ECB Monthly Bulletin, 30Y T-Bond auction, weekly Bloomberg Consumer Comfort Index, weekly EIA natural gas inventory report, Goldman Power/Utility Conference, (HAR) investor day and the (SYNA) investor meeting could also impact trading today.
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