Bloomberg:
- Putin Says Crimea Sacred, Attacks U.S., EU Over Ukraine. President Vladimir Putin attacked the U.S. and Europe for backing Ukraine and said that Crimea, which the Kremlin annexed from the former Soviet republic in March, has “sacred meaning” as Russia’s “Jerusalem.” As Ukrainian officials planned to pause shelling on Dec. 9, Putin said he isn’t surprised by the country’s separatist conflict, given what he termed “the coup and violent takeover of power” in Kiev in February. He said the U.S. and European Union, who have imposed sanctions that are hobbling Russia’s economy over its stance on Ukraine, would have penalized his country even if the conflict hadn’t broken out.
- Putin Seen Grasping at Straws as Economic Cures Fail to Impress. Russian President Vladimir Putin’s recipe for riding out an economic storm has a whiff of the panic he’s trying to quell. The measures, announced yesterday in a 70-minute Kremlin speech to lawmakers and top officials, ranged from a proposed tax and legal amnesty for those repatriating capital to a four-year moratorium on tax increases. That’s too little, too late, say analysts at banks including VTB Capital and Danske Bank.
- Siege in West Iraq Shows Failure to Reverse Islamic State Gains. Hauling bodies from under the rubble, Ahmed al-Dulaimi’s fighters count the cost of defending the only major city in western Iraq yet to fall to Islamic State. Last week, at least 17 of his men were killed resisting an onslaught to capture Ramadi, the capital of Iraq’s biggest province. With government forces weakened and local government leaders fleeing to safety, tribal fighters like Dulaimi’s group are among the last standing.
- Japanese Corporate Bankruptcies Linked to Weak Yen at Record. Japanese corporate bankruptcies linked to the yen’s slide rose to a record, highlighting strains on small and medium-sized companies as Prime Minister Shinzo Abe campaigns for re-election on his economic strategy. Forty-two of the companies that failed in November cited the weaker currency as a contributor, bringing the total number of bankruptcies associated with the yen this year to 301, almost triple that of the same period in 2013, according to a survey by Teikoku Databank Ltd. It said surging costs of imported food, metals and construction materials are squeezing small companies.
- China Plans Wealth-Product Rules to Limit Shadow Banking Risks. China urged banks to directly invest money raised from wealth-management products, signaling a more limited role for trusts and securities firms, and said it wanted to end implicit guarantees of the investments. The China Banking Regulatory Commission plans to let wealth management funds set up their own investment accounts, a draft rule seen by Bloomberg News showed. Money can’t be invested in domestic listed shares, shares of unlisted firms, or private placements by listed companies, unless it’s for high-net worth individuals, the rule said. A Beijing-based spokeswoman for the regulator confirmed a document was circulated to banks for feedback. The value of wealth-management products surged to 12.7 trillion yuan ($2.1 trillion) by June, leading growth in so-called shadow banking as high returns and savers’ perceptions of an implicit government guarantee fueled investment.
- Don’t Blink as China Stocks Swing Most Since 2010 on Volume Jump. The Shanghai Composite Index (SHCOMP) surged as much as 2.7 percent before tumbling to a 3 percent drop today: all within the first 90 minutes of trading. The 165-point swing in the benchmark index is the biggest since November 2010 and comes at the end of a week where volumes surged to all-time highs. The gauge rose 0.3 percent to 2,908.43 as of 10:59 a.m. local time. “The market is becoming very speculative,” said Wang Zheng, the Shanghai-based chief investment officer at Jingxi Investment, which oversees about $120 million. “The market will be in for a very wild up-and-down next week.”
- Asian Stocks Little Changed Before U.S. Monthly Jobs Report. Asia’s regional benchmark index was little changed ahead of a monthly U.S. jobs report. Materials shares led declines, while consumer companies advanced. The MSCI Asia Pacific Index (MXAP) slipped less than 0.1 percent to 140.68 as of 9:01 a.m. in Tokyo, before markets opened in Hong Kong and China. Fortescue Metals Group Ltd. slid 4 percent in Sydney. The Asian equity gauge is flat this week.
- Brent Drops From 4-Year Low as Saudi Discounts Deepen Price War. Brent extended losses from a four-year low as Saudi Arabia offered customers in Asia record discounts on its crude, bolstering speculation it’s defending market share. West Texas Intermediate dropped in New York. Futures fell as much as 0.7 percent in London and are headed for a second weekly decline. State-run Saudi Arabian Oil Co. cut its differential for Arab Light sales to Asia next month to $2 a barrel below a regional benchmark, according to a company statement. That’s the lowest in at least 14 years. The kingdom doesn’t want to subsidize Iran, Iraq and Venezuela and is willing to let the market decide prices, said Daniel Yergin, an energy analyst and Pulitzer Prize-winning author. Crude slumped 18 percent last month.
- Greenspan Says He Would Pre-Empt Asset Bubbles Financed by Debt. Former Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan, who was blamed by some economists for overheating equity and housing prices in the 1990s and 2000s, said that were he in the job today, he would take pre-emptive action to tackle asset bubbles if they were financed by leverage.
- Protests Spread Across Country Day After Eric Garner Grand-Jury Decision. Thousands of Demonstrators Gather in Lower Manhattan. Protests rippled across the country Thursday, a day after a grand jury didn’t charge a New York City police officer in the death of a black man who allegedly was selling untaxed cigarettes last summer. For a second night, demonstrators gathered in New York, Washington, D.C., and beyond chanting variations of: “Shut the whole system down!” “No justice, no peace” and “I can’t breathe.” The crowd swelled to thousands in New York.
- Gunbattle Erupts in Chechen Capital of Grozny. Fighting Raged for About 12 Hours; Police Say Wiped out Last of the Gunmen. Islamist rebels launched the largest attack in years in the capital of the Russian republic of Chechnya early Thursday, leaving dozens of wounded and at least 10 police officers and 10 gunmen dead, officials said. The early morning attack came hours before a state-of-the union address by Russian President Vladimir Putin from the Kremlin. The violence shattered the relative calm of Grozny, which has been relatively stable in recent years under Chechen leader Ramzan Kadyrov.
- Uber Snags $41 Billion Valuation. Investors Place $1.2 Billion Bet Ride-Sharing Service Keeps Breakneck Pace.
- ‘Peak Oil’ Debunked, Again. The world relearns that supply responds to necessity and price. It has been 216 years since Thomas Malthus gave birth to the idea that mankind’s appetite for natural resources would outstrip nature’s capacity to supply them. There have since been regular warnings that the world is running out of soybeans, helium, chocolate, tunsgsten, you name it—and that population growth has become unsustainable.
- 'Game we can’t win': Coal states brace for growing number of plant closures over EPA rules. The energy industry and coal-producing states are projecting a wave of power plant closures in the final two years of the Obama administration as Environmental Protection Agency regulations take hold.
- House rebukes Obama over immigration actions, spending fight looms. House Republicans voted Thursday to block President Obama's immigration executive actions, though it was unclear whether the largely symbolic step would be enough to prevent a risky budget stand-off next week. The House voted 219-197 for the bill, by Rep. Ted Yoho, R-Fla., that declares Obama's actions "null and void and without legal effect."
Zero Hedge:
- 3 Things Worth Thinking About. (graph)
US News:
- U.S. Oil Reserves Hit 38-Year High. (graph) Fracking has unleashed a torrent of oil and natural gas, the Energy Information Administration says.
Caixin:
- China 2015 GDP Growth May Be 7%, Former NEA Head Says. China's economic growth may drop to about 7% next year, citing Zhang Guobao, former head of National Energy Administration at a forum in Guangdong's Hengqin today.
Bernstein:
- Rated (EW) Outperform, target $155.
- Rated (CAVM) Outperform, target $65.
- Rated (LSCC) Outperform, target $8.50.
- Asian equity indices are -.50% to +.50% on average.
- Asia Ex-Japan Investment Grade CDS Index 101.0 +1.0 basis point.
- Asia Pacific Sovereign CDS Index 61.75 unch.
- FTSE-100 futures n/a.
- S&P 500 futures -.01%.
- NASDAQ 100 futures -.02%.
Earnings of Note
Company/Estimate
- (BIG)/-.05
- (GCO)/1.44
- (BNS)/1.38
8:30 am EST
- The Change in Non-Farm Payrolls for November is estimated to rise to 230K versus 214K in October.
- The Unemployment Rate for November is estimated to remain at 5.8%.
- Average Hourly Earnings for November are estimated to rise +2.1% versus a 2.0% gain in October.
- The Trade Deficit for October is estimated at -$41.2B versus -$43.0B in September.
- None of note
- The Fed's Meyer speaking, German Factory Orders report, (OMI) investor day, (ITW) investor meeting and the American Society of Hematology Annual Meeting could also impact trading today.
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