Thursday, March 18, 2010

Today's Headlines


Bloomberg:

  • Pelosi Tactic for Health-Care vote Would Raise Legal Questions. House Speaker Nancy Pelosi may be creating new grounds for a court challenge to the proposed U.S. health-care overhaul as she considers using a mechanism that would avoid a vote on the full legislation. Pelosi said this week she might use a parliamentary technique that would “deem” House members to have passed the Senate’s health-care plan by voting for a more politically palatable package of changes. Some legal scholars question whether that approach can be squared with the Constitution and the Supreme Court’s 1998 declaration that the two houses of Congress must approve “precisely the same text” before a bill can become a law. “Any process that does not result in the House taking of yays and nays on statutory text identical to what passed the Senate is constitutionally problematic,” said Jonathan Adler, a professor who runs the Center for Business Law & Regulation at Case Western Reserve University’s law school in Cleveland.
  • Republicans Lose Bid to Force Up-or-Down Vote on Health Care. U.S. House Democrats defeated an effort by Republicans to curtail Democrats’ options in seeking to pass their $940 billion health-care overhaul. By a 222-203 vote, lawmakers headed off a Republican resolution that would have required a separate, recorded vote on the Senate’s health care plan. The Republicans were seeking to keep Democrats from using a parliamentary technique to avoid a direct vote on that bill. The House may hold a rare Sunday vote March 21 on the Senate health-care bill and a separate package of revisions. House Democratic leaders say they may use a parliamentary technique that would “deem” House members to have passed the Senate bill by voting for the more politically palatable measure containing the revisions. House Speaker Nancy Pelosi said earlier this week that bypassing a direct vote on the Senate measure was an option because there are “a lot of people who don’t want to vote for it.” Republicans, who unanimously oppose the health-care plan, say no bill or amendment has ever been deemed passed that related to an area affecting one-sixth of the economy, as does the health measure. Republicans said Democrats are trying to avoid taking responsibility for the health-care plan.
  • Greece Leads Increase in Sovereign Credit Swaps on Bailout Woes. Credit-default swaps on Greek sovereign debt rose to the highest in almost three weeks as an aid plan for the nation’s debt crisis appeared to be unraveling. Contracts on the government’s borrowings jumped 28 basis points to 316, according to CMA DataVision prices. Investor concern that failure to resolve Greece’s deficit woes will trigger a wider debt crisis also drove up at the cost of default protection on German and French sovereign debt. Greek Prime Minister George Papandreou set a one-week deadline for the European Union to resolve internal disagreement and formulate an aid package. “Time is indeed running out for Greece with a huge amount of debt maturing in the coming month,” London-based analysts at BNP Paribas SA wrote in a note to investors. “It is not clear how much the Greek threats to go to the IMF are meant to put pressure on the EU to come up with aid.” Swaps on German government debt rose 3 basis points to 28.5 and contracts on France increased 3.5 to 40.5, CMA prices show. The Markit iTraxx SovX Western Europe Index of swaps on 15 governments climbed 3 basis points to 71.5, the highest in almost two weeks. The cost of protecting European corporate bonds from default also rose, with the Markit iTraxx Crossover Index of 50 companies with mostly high-yield credit ratings climbing 9 basis points to 416, according to JPMorgan Chase & Co.
  • Commodities Attract $3.98 Billion, Barclays Estimates. Investors put $3.98 billion into commodities last month, almost 29 times the amount in January, favoring investments linked to indexes over exchange-traded products, Barclays Capital said. Total commodity assets under management, which were also bolstered by gains in prices, expanded to $255 billion in February, after dropping $12 billion to $245 billion in January, the bank said. Inflows in January were $139 million. “Commodity investments have resumed in February, primarily from institutional investors employing commodity indices to gain broad-based exposure, as retail investors still remain jittery,” Barclays said in a report, distributed today. Investments in exchange-traded products shrank $1 billion and those tied to indexes expanded by $4.5 billion, Barclays said. Medium-term notes, or products customized for investors, attracted $494 million. Energy got $2 billion of the additional investments, agriculture $1.18 billion, industrial metals $481 million and precious metals $251 million. A year earlier, gold exchange- traded products alone attracted $6 billion of investment, Barclays said.
  • China, U.S. Trade War Risk Rising, Credit Suisse Says. China is closer to a trade war with the U.S. than any time in the last five years as the two trade barbs over the proper value of the Chinese currency, according to Credit Suisse Group AG economist Dong Tao. Five U.S. senators including Charles Schumer of New York and Lindsey Graham of South Carolina introduced legislation this week to make it easier for the U.S. to declare currency misalignments and take corrective action. Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao rebuffed calls on March 16 for an end to the currency link, saying he doesn’t think the currency is “undervalued.” “In the near future, given the political tension between China and the U.S., it is unlikely that we will see much of an appreciation,” Tao told Bloomberg Television. “If the U.S. launches trade sanctions, China is likely to retaliate.”
  • Euro Drops for Second Day on Concern Europe Split on Greece Aid. The euro weakened for a second day against the dollar and yen in the longest stretches of decline in almost a month on concern Greece will fail to secure financial assistance from the European Union. Brazil’s real dropped the most in more than a month after the central bank yesterday put off raising interest rates. The European currency declined versus 15 of its 16 major peers as Greece’s prime minister set a one-week deadline for the European Union to craft a financial aid mechanism for the nation, challenging Germany and damping appetite for the euro. “It’s political brinksmanship now,” said Sebastien Galy, a currency strategist at BNP Paribas SA in New York. “People are expressing their views on Greece and its issues by getting short euro-dollar.”
  • Jobless Claims in U.S. Decreased By 5,000 Last Week. First-time jobless applications dropped by 5,000 to 457,000 in the week ended March 13, in line with forecasts, Labor Department figures showed today in Washington. The number of people receiving unemployment insurance increased, and those getting extended benefits also rose. The four-week moving average of claims, a less volatile measure than the weekly figures, decreased to 471,250 last week from 475,500 the prior week, today’s report showed. The unemployment rate among people eligible for benefits, which tends to track the jobless rate, held at 3.5 percent in the week ended March 6, today’s report showed. The percentage of Americans who can’t find work is likely to “remain elevated for an extended period,” Treasury Secretary Timothy F. Geithner, White House budget director Peter Orszag and Christina Romer, chairman of the Council of Economic Advisers, said this week in a joint statement to lawmakers. The administration officials said unemployment may even rise “slightly” over the next few months as discouraged workers start job-hunting again. U.S. employers won’t hire enough workers this year to lower the jobless rate much below the level of 9.7 percent reached in February, they said.
  • Central Bank Gold Holdings Expand at Fastest Pace Since 1964. Central banks added the most gold to their reserves since 1964 last year amid the longest rally in bullion prices in at least nine decades, data compiled by the World Gold Council show. Combined holdings rose 425.4 metric tons to 30,116.9 tons, an increase worth $13.3 billion at last year’s average price, according to the data. India, Russia and China said last year they added to reserves. The expansion was the first since 1988, the data from the London-based council show.
  • Lehman Shows Auditors Fail Investors Eight Years After Reforms. Eight years after Congress passed the Sarbanes-Oxley Act to clean up the accounting industry, Ernst & Young LLP’s audit work for Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc. may show firms still put client interests ahead of investors. Lehman’s bankruptcy examiner said he found credible evidence of malpractice by Ernst & Young, the third-biggest U.S. accounting firm, stemming from its “failure to follow professional standards of care.” The examiner, Anton Valukas, said Ernst & Young never followed up after it was told about transactions Lehman used to hide billions of dollars of assets.

Wall Street Journal:

  • Greece may seek financial aid from the International Monetary Fund over the April 2 to April 4 Easter Weekend, citing a senior Greek official. Greece has little hope for aid next week from the European Union's March 25 summit, the official said. Greece is likely to put on hold plans to raise 10 billion euros through one or two bond sales until after the EU summit, the official said.
  • NYU Professor Edward Altman Tries His Hand At Credit Ratings. Finance professor and credit market guru Edward Altman is entering the ratings game. Altman, professor of finance at New York University's Stern School of Business, has partnered with RiskMetrics Group Inc. (RISK) to develop a new proprietary tool to evaluate the creditworthiness of nonfinancial companies, the company said Thursday. The initiative comes after burned investors and other critics excoriated established ratings agencies for assigning top-notch ratings to securities that in many cases ended up being worthless during the credit crisis.
  • China Official Warns of Currency Risks. A senior Chinese trade official warned that any further appreciation of the Chinese currency risked driving exporters to the wall, underscoring the domestic political pressures on Beijing amid growing international calls for China to let the yuan rise. Vice Commerce Minister Zhong Shan, in an exclusive interview Thursday ahead of a visit to the U.S., said that the profit margin on many Chinese export goods was less than 2%.
BusinessWeek:
  • Dodd's Chief Counsel Bought Financial Stocks During 2008 Crisis. Senate Banking Committee Chairman Christopher Dodd’s chief counsel in 2008 traded stock in Morgan Stanley(MS), Wells Fargo & Co.(WFC), American International Group Inc.(AIG) and other rescued companies as the panel considered legislation to address the credit crisis, according to her financial disclosure form filed with the Senate. Amy Friend, 51, who is now leading the panel’s effort to write a bill overhauling Wall Street regulations, bought $1,000- to-$15,000 stakes in four banks, weeks after Dodd hired her in January 2008, the form shows. She also owned shares of Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac, AIG and other insurance firms, according to the disclosure document, which she signed on June 5, 2009. “This looks very bad,” said Melanie Sloan, the executive director for Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics in Washington and a former Democratic congressional aide. “At the very least it’s inappropriate and it gives the appearance of wrongdoing, even if there is none.” Friend’s counterparts on the banking panel’s Republican side and on the House Financial Services Committee didn’t own financial instruments, according to their 2008 disclosures. Senate rule 37 states that no lawmaker or employee “shall knowingly use his official position to introduce or aid the progress or passage of legislation, a principal purpose of which is to further only his pecuniary interest.”
Fox News:
  • Fox News Poll: 55% Oppose Health Care Reform. As Americans wait for Congress to act on health care, a Fox News poll released Thursday finds 55 percent oppose the reforms being considered, while 35 percent favor them. In addition, just over half of voters think House Democrats are “changing the rules” to get their bill passed. About a third of voters (31 percent) think House Speaker Nancy Pelosi and the Democrats are “playing by the rules” to get health care through, while 53 percent think they are “changing the rules.” Looking at the results by political party, 53 percent of Democrats think their party is playing by the rules, about one in four think they are changing the rules (27 percent) and the rest are unsure (19 percent). Varying majorities of Republicans (78 percent) and independents (57 percent) think House Democrats are changing the rules to pass the bill. The level of public support for the health care overhaul has remained fairly steady since last July -- 35 percent favor it now and 36 percent favored it last summer. The number opposed -- 55 percent -- is up from 51 percent in January, and from 47 percent last July. Opposition hit a high of 57 percent in December. Among partisans, the president’s party faithful are alone in supporting the proposed reforms. Sixty-six percent of Democrats favor them, while 53 percent of independents and 88 percent of Republicans oppose them.
NY Post:
  • Blackstone(BX) President to Host 'Private' Pelosi Fundraiser. Steve Schwarzman's right-hand man is mounting a campaign to win over House Speaker Nancy Pelosi. The longtime Republican is organizing a fundraiser for the Dems in an attempt to gain her support fighting a tax on private-equity earnings now under consideration on Capitol Hill, sources tell The Post. Blackstone Group President Hamilton "Tony" James, 58, is planning to host an event at his home at which Pelosi is scheduled to speak and which other private-equity bigwigs are expected to attend. The mission, according to a person familiar with the matter, is to convince Pelosi to slow down the momentum in Congress to take measures that could harm private-equity firms, with a particular focus on stopping legislation that would raise taxes on "carried interest."
Business Insider:
Risk.net:
  • Goldman Sachs(GS) Uses Scenarios to Study Reputation Risk. Goldman Sachs is using scenario analysis to study reputational risk, according to its global co-heads of operational risk management, Spyro Karetsos and Mark D'Arcy. "Franchise value is highly important within the organisation and managing reputational risk is a by-product of that," says Karetsos, who is based in New York. "While it is not our responsibility to quantify reputational risk, there is an internal process that measures our exposure to those risks that are difficult to quantify, one of which is reputational risk."
Rasmussen Reports:
  • Daily Presidential Tracking Poll. The Rasmussen Reports daily Presidential Tracking Poll for Thursday shows that 23% of the nation's voters Strongly Approve of the way that Barack Obama is performing his role as President. Forty-three percent (43%) Strongly Disapprove giving Obama a Presidential Approval Index rating of -20. That’s just one point above the all-time low (see trends).
Politico:
  • President Obama's Pitch: Fate of Presidency On the Line. President Barack Obama had exhausted most of his health care reform arguments with members of the Congressional Hispanic Caucus during a White House meeting last Thursday when he made a more personal pitch that resonated with many skeptics in the room. One caucus member told POLITICO that Obama won him over by “essentially [saying] that the fate of his presidency” hinged on this week’s health reform vote in the House. The member, who requested anonymity, likened Obama’s remarks to an earlier meeting with progressives when the president said a victory was necessary to keep him “strong” for the next three years of his term.
Reuters:
  • EU's De Gaucht Questions U.S. Over Trade, Raps Yuan. The European Union wants more engagement by the United States to restart global trade talks and allay EU fears of U.S. protectionism, the bloc's trade commissioner said in newspaper interviews published on Thursday. On China, Belgian Karel De Gucht reiterated that Beijing was manipulating its yuan currency. "The yuan is under-priced. It certainly has an impact on their (U.S.) export and trade patterns. The complaint is legitimate," he told the Financial Times newspaper. De Gucht questioned U.S. President Barack Obama's recent choice of words when setting a goal of doubling U.S. exports over the next five years. "It is interesting to note ... that he speaks about 'exports' and not about 'trade'," De Gucht was quoted as saying. "Trade means also accepting that imports are doubling. I don't think it's by accident that the word export is used instead of trade."
  • Broadcom(BRCM) Sees Sales Growth, More M&As. U.S. chipmaker Broadcom Corp (BRCM) expects to exceed the global semiconductor industry's sales growth this year on rising consumer appetite for new mobile devices and TVs, its chief executive said.
Financial Times:
  • MEPs to Continue with Hedge Fund Revisions. European lawmakers pledged to forge ahead with their own efforts to revise controversial EU proposals to regulate hedge funds and private equity fund on a pan-European basis for the first time, in spite of an impasse amongst member states. On Tuesday, efforts to reach a compromise agreement amongst EU member states failed because of a refusal by the UK to concede on a couple of key issues. On Wednesday, MEPs, who must also approve new rules, said they would carry out hammering out their own amendments to the original, much-criticised proposals put forward by the European Commission. Jean-Paul Gauzes, the French MEP who is steering the package through the European Parliament, said the stalemate amongst member states “shouldn’t alter our schedule too much”. “We shouldn’t wait for the council (member states) to take a decision,” he added, a sentiment subsequently supported by MEPs from most of the big political groupings in the parliament. This means that the key parliamentary committee is likely to vote of proposed amendments in April.
  • Commission to Back Curbs on Swaps. Brussels is to propose steps to tackle speculative trading, notably in relation to credit default swaps on sovereign debt - the financial instrument of choice for those who take bets against European governments, most recently in Greece. Michel Barnier, the EU internal market commissioner, said in a speech to European lawmakers he planned to propose a text that would provide a "framework" to cover purely speculative "naked" short selling: "Notably, where this relates to CDS on sovereign debt." "I hope, with these measures, we will have better and safer markets, without discouraging financial innovation," he told MEPs in the European parliament. Mr Barnier did not give details of planned measures. Commission officials indicated a whole range of possibilities would be considered.

Bear Radar


Style Underperformer:

Mid-Cap Growth (-.57%)

Sector Underperformers:
Oil Service (-2.95%), Coal (-2.80%) and Banks (-1.78%)

Stocks Falling on Unusual Volume:
PLCM, MDVN, THRX, CPX, VIP, MBT, TESO, SFY, BRKR, MLHR, ROST, PTEN, CPHD, VLTR, TLK, WGO, LNT, HGT and IHS

Stocks With Unusual Put Option Activity:
1) CY 2) ATVI 3) VIP 4) BX 5) CAM


Bull Radar


Style Outperformer:

Small-Cap Value (+.29%)

Sector Outperformers:
Hospitals (+1.94%), Education (+1.58%) and HMOs (+1.39%)

Stocks Rising on Unusual Volume:
NKE, VRUS, HNT, GSK, GLW, QCOM, SQNM, JCOM, CRK, FNSR, MDTH, SMRT, TEVA, PANL, NWPX, CSKI, CAGC, FMCN, CLNE, RGLD, CTXS, GES, GME and MCO

Stocks With Unusual Call Option Activity:
1)
CNO 2) MCO 3) NKE 4) NBR 5) DD

Thursday Watch


Evening Headlines

Bloomberg:
  • Build America Bond Extension Passes U.S. House Panel. The House Ways and Means Committee voted 25-15 along party lines to approve a three-year extension of the Build America Bonds program, the fastest-growing part of the $2.8 trillion U.S. municipal debt market. The measure will be sent to the full House for consideration as early as next week. The federally subsidized Build America program, created last year as part of the government’s economic stimulus, is set to expire Dec. 31. President Barack Obama’s fiscal 2011 budget proposed extending and expanding the program while reducing the subsidy to 28 percent. The program has drawn opposition from Senate Republicans. Iowa’s Charles Grassley, the senior member of his party on the tax-writing Finance Committee, criticized Build America for steering “huge underwriting fees” to investment banks. U.S. Senate Minority Whip Jon Kyl, the second-ranking Republican in the chamber, faulted the program for providing higher subsidies to states with lower credit ratings, encouraging them to take on more debt.
  • GE(GE) Tells Obama 'Sell Hard' in Indonesia With China in Pursuit. General Electric Co. Chief Executive Jeffrey Immelt wants Barack Obama to “sell hard” in Indonesia as he extols U.S. expertise in industries such as clean energy. He’ll have to work fast -- Premier Wen Jiabao will make China’s sales pitch in Jakarta next month. President Obama’s trip to his childhood home, already delayed once and currently scheduled for March 23-25, is key to a pledge to boost U.S. exports and “lead the global economy” in providing alternatives to fossil fuels.
  • 'Sinister' German Spy Plan Aimed at Hedge Funds, Analysts Say. Germany’s suggestion that it may order spies to track speculators targeting currencies is “sinister and silly,” according to analysts, who said hedge funds in London and New York would be the targets. Germany’s Finance Minister Wolfgang Schaeuble told the Bundestag on March 16 that the country may have to consider ordering “intelligence agencies to set up surveillance of who is getting together with whom for which kinds of speculative processes, and where” to protect the euro. Schaeuble said that “speculation is increasingly targeting currencies and countries.” His comments followed a report in Spain’s El Pais newspaper last month that the secret service was investigating “attacks” on the country by unnamed investors. Politicians are concerned about the collusion of hedge funds in making bets on currencies and trading in so-called naked credit-default swaps, where they buy protection without owning the underlying debt, according to Jacob Schmidt, founder of Schmidt Research Partners Ltd., a London-based hedge fund advisory firm. Intelligence agencies could use techniques honed in the fight against money laundering and terrorist funding if they wanted, said Vanessa Rossi, a senior research fellow in the international economics program at London’s Chatham House. “Within continental Europe there are those that do think that financial speculators are sort of terrorists,” said Rossi. “In their lexicon it is economic terrorism, so they may view this as more serious than the U.S. or U.K.”
  • Obama Overstates Loan Modifications, Republicans Say. The Obama administration is inflating the success of programs that prevent foreclosures by skewing data on loan modifications and revising the goals, according to House Republicans. Reports on the Home Affordable Modification Program are “glossing over disappointing results” by counting temporary changes toward the goal of permanent relief for as many as 4 million borrowers, said a letter sent yesterday to Treasury Secretary Timothy F. Geithner by Republican representatives Darrell Issa and Jim Jordan. Lynn Turner, the former Securities and Exchange Commission chief accountant, said Treasury’s approach “seems to have taken a page out of the accounting manuals at Enron and Lehman,” referring to accounting disputes that accompanied two of history’s biggest financial collapses. “It has become the culture of Washington and Wall Street, and they reinforce one another.” Turner, now a managing director at forensic accounting firm LECG LLC, is a Democrat who served under former President Bill Clinton. “Rather than acknowledge the program’s failure, Treasury is trying to confuse the American people by counting HAMP’s higher number of temporary modifications -- fewer than one-third of which are successfully converting to permanent ones -- toward the goal,” the letter reads.
  • Greece Keeps IMF Option Alive as Merkel Urges Caution on EU Aid. Greek Prime Minister George Papandreou kept alive the possibility of requesting International Monetary Fund aid as German Chancellor Angela Merkel cautioned against “hasty” decisions on European Union assistance for the country. As long as “Greece is still borrowing at an unreasonably high interest rate, over 6 percent,” the country will keep “all options open” while preferring an EU solution, Papandreou said at a press conference in Brussels today with European Commission President Jose Barroso. European finance ministers this week approved a framework for emergency aid to Greece, while leaving the final go-ahead to government leaders who meet next on March 25-26 in Brussels.
  • Cancun Climate Talks Get Dim Prognosis Nine Months Before Start. Government negotiators are already writing off chances for a global treaty to fight climate change, nine months before the annual talks begin in Cancun, Mexico. Kunihiko Shimada, principal international negotiator at the Japanese Ministry of the Environment, said yesterday a deal this year is “almost impossible.” Jos Delbeke, who spearheads European Union climate policy at the European Commission, ruled out a “comprehensive legal agreement” in 2010. Their remarks call into question whether efforts to curb greenhouse-gas emissions are progressing after failing in Copenhagen in December. President Barack Obama’s energy proposal is bogged down in the U.S. Congress. Without a U.S. commitment, China and India, two of the fastest-growing polluters, may be reluctant to limit greenhouse gases blamed for global warming. “The expectations for a legally binding treaty are diminishing,” Abyd Karmali, global head of carbon markets at Bank of America Merrill Lynch, said in an interview at the Bloomberg New Energy Finance conference in London. “We’re going to be negotiating on climate for the next 50 years,” said Liebreich, founder of New Energy Finance, which Bloomberg LP purchased in December.
  • China's Home Prices Unlikely to Plunge, Hong Kong Builders Say. China’s property prices won’t plunge this year, two of Hong Kong’s biggest developers with operations on the mainland said yesterday, as the World Bank joined economists and hedge fund managers warning of a bubble. “China’s home prices won’t drop too much, as the government can’t allow prices to plunge because the real estate market is an important pillar of the economy,” said Henry Cheng, managing director of New World Development Co. and son of its billionaire founder Cheng Yu-tung. Property prices in China rose 10.7 percent in February, the steepest gain in almost two years, even after banks raised mortgage rates. The surge -- along with a stock market rally, quickening economic growth and inflation -- led the World Bank to say China should raise interest rates to help contain the risk of a bubble, and sparked warnings of a potential crash from hedge fund manager Jim Chanos, Gloom, Boom & Doom publisher Marc Faber and Harvard University professor Kenneth Rogoff. China is in the midst of “the greatest bubble in history,” James Rickards, former general counsel of hedge fund Long-Term Capital Management LP, said this week, warning it “is a bubble waiting to burst.”
  • BRICs Rally Slows Amid Highest Equity Valuations Since 1995. The combination of record mutual fund inflows and the fastest economic growth are failing to lift shares in the largest developing nations with valuations at the highest level versus advanced countries since at least 1995. Emerging-market stock funds lured $86.6 billion in the year through January, the most in 14 years of data, according to Cambridge, Massachusetts-based researcher EPFR Global. MSCI’s developing nation index slid 2.2 percent from this year’s peak on Jan. 11 and pared an 80 percent rally in the previous 12 months that sent its price-to-book ratio to a record 17 percent over the MSCI World Index, data compiled by Bloomberg show. The MSCI emerging index’s 1.9 percent gain this year trails a 3 percent rise in the MSCI World and 4.5 percent climb in the Standard & Poor’s 500 Index. Brazil’s Bovespa has risen 2.6 percent, while the Micex in Russia is up 4.8 percent. India’s Bombay Stock Exchange Sensitive Index has advanced 0.1 percent and China’s Shanghai Composite Index is down 6.9 percent.
Wall Street Journal:
  • Roche CEO Touts Pipeline, Remains Open To More Deals. Roche Holding AG Chief Executive Severin Schwan said the integration of its $46.8 billion takeover of Genentech Inc.(DNA) is "by and large completed," expressed his confidence in the Swiss drug giant's pipeline, and said he remains open to yet more deal-making.
  • Finra's Susan Merrill to Exit as Enforcement Chief. The executive hired by Wall Street to enforce its rules is stepping down after nearly three years in which the organization's disciplinary actions and fines against the brokerage industry have declined, the group said. Susan Merrill, the head of enforcement at the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority, Wall Street's self-regulatory body, hasn't set a departure date and hasn't indicated whether she had another job lined up, people familiar with the matter said.
  • If You Liked Fannie and Freddie...You'll love Chris Dodd's latest reform proposal. It would make many more companies too big to fail and lead to far greater financial consolidation. Think ObamaCare for the financial system. That's one way to understand Sen. Chris Dodd's bill to reform financial regulation. If passed in its current form, the bill would give the government control over the financial system in roughly the same way, and to the same extent, that ObamaCare would take over the nation's health care. There isn't a public option, exactly, but the private firms involved would be so heavily regulated that they would be effectively controlled by the government. The threat comes primarily from the new powers granted to the Federal Reserve and a new regulatory grouping called the Financial Stability Oversight Council (FSOC). Although the Fed failed to anticipate the financial crisis, missed the significance of the developing housing bubble, and did not prevent our largest banks from taking excessive risks, it is rewarded in the bill with authority to control the rest of the financial system.
CNBC:
Fox News:
  • Fox News Exclusive: President Obama. Part 1: The President sits down with FNC's Bret Baier to discuss the health care reform bill. (video)
  • More Americans Disapprove of Obama's Performance Than Approve, Polls Finds. For the first time since President Obama took office, more Americans are unhappy with the job he's doing than are happy with it, according to the latest Gallup poll. In the poll, 47 percent of Americans disapprove of Obama's job performance compared to 46 percent who approve. Obama's job approval rating fell to 46 percent last week, an all-time low for the president. The deteriorating approval rating comes as the president struggles to push his increasingly unpopular health care plan across the finish line with a controversial maneuver that would avoid a GOP filibuster by allowing Congress to pass and adjust the Senate's bill with a simple majority. The plunging rating threatens to weaken the president's influence beyond the health care debate to pass a largely ambitious agenda that includes immigration overhaul, climate change legislation and education reform. It could also put distance between Obama and Democratic lawmakers up for re-election in November who see no benefit in having an increasingly unpopular president stump for them. Obama's campaigning efforts have already failed to help notch victories in gubernatorial races in Virginia and New Jersey and the Senate contest in Massachusetts in replace Ted Kennedy.
IBD:
  • Company's Software And Hardware Speed Up System Networks. That's where Blue Coat Systems (BCSI) comes in. The Sunnyvale, Calif., company sells application delivery network infrastructure. That's a fancy way of saying the software and systems that connect far-flung people and offices within an organization.
NY Times:
  • Google(GOOG) and Partners Seek TV Foothold. Google and Intel have teamed with Sony(SNE) to develop a platform called Google TV to bring the Web into the living room through a new generation of televisions and set-top boxes. The move is an effort by Google and Intel to extend their dominance of computing to television, an arena where they have little sway. For Sony, which has struggled to retain a pricing and technological advantage in the competitive TV hardware market, the partnership is an effort to get a leg up on competitors. The partners envision technology that will make it as easy for TV users to navigate Web applications, like the Twitter social network and the Picasa photo site, as it is to change the channel. Some existing televisions and set-top boxes offer access to Web content, but the choice of sites is limited. Google intends to open its TV platform, which is based on its Android operating system for smartphones, to software developers. The company hopes the move will spur the same outpouring of creativity that consumers have seen in applications for cellphones. Google is expected to deliver a toolkit to outside programmers within the next couple of months, and products based on the software could appear as soon as this summer. The three companies have tapped Logitech(LOGI), which specializes in remote controls and computer speakers, for peripheral devices, including a remote with a tiny keyboard.
  • Merkel Suggests Evicting Errant Countries From Euro. Chancellor Angela Merkel of Germany, adopting a harsher tone toward Greece than the one expressed by some other European leaders, said Wednesday that Europe needed better rules to police its members, and she tacitly endorsed a proposal to eject wayward countries from the group of countries that use the euro. Speaking before a session of Parliament in Berlin, Mrs. Merkel referred to a proposal made last week by Wolfgang Schäuble, the German finance minister. As she described the proposal, “It would even be possible to exclude a country from the euro zone when over the long term it no longer fulfills the conditions.” “Otherwise, we can’t work together,” Mrs. Merkel said, though she stopped short of explicitly endorsing the idea.
  • TheStreet.Com(TSCM) Says It's Being Probed By SEC. Investment news website TheStreet.com Inc said on Wednesday the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission was investigating the company over the way it recorded revenue at a former subsidiary.
NYPost:
  • O's Middle-Class Squeeze. President is wrong to claim health reform only hurts rich. The president has spent the closing days of the health-care debate making his case to the segments of Americans who will benefit under ObamaCare. But lots of other people will be squeezed under the scheme -- and not the rich folks that President Obama singles out in his stump speeches, but families who are decidedly middle class. Health reform will leave many of them newly priced out of a transformed market for health insurance. The hardest hit won't be those earning more than $250,000 a year -- the group that he says needs to "pay their fair share." Rather, it's families whose combined annual income is around $100,000 who could be crushed under this plan. These folks will be too "rich" to qualify for ObamaCare's subsidies, but probably too poor to easily afford the pricey insurance that the president's plan forces them to buy. Many of these $100K families will be obliged to buy a policy costing an average of $14,700 for the mid-level, "silver" health plan, according to the Congressional Budget Office's estimates. After income taxes, they'll be spending almost a quarter of their net income for health insurance. How can these families make out so badly under ObamaCare? The plan does two things to refashion the market for health insurance and inadvertently stacks it against these middle-class earners.
CNNMoney:
Forbes:
Rasmussen Reports:
  • 27% Say U.S. Heading in Right Direction. Twenty-seven percent (27%) of U.S. voters say the country is heading in the right direction, according to the latest Rasmussen Reports national telephone survey. This marks a slight uptick from the previous two weeks when voter confidence in the country's current course fell to 25%, the lowest level measured since just before President Obama took office in January 2009. A sizable majority (68%) still believe the nation is heading down the wrong track, but that's down three points from last week when 71% felt that way. The latter finding was the highest level of pessimism measured in 14 months.
  • Republicans Lead Democrats by 10 in Generic Ballot, Highest Lead Yet. Republican candidates have now stretched their lead over Democrats to 10 points in the Generic Congressional Ballot, their biggest lead ever in nearly three years of weekly tracking.
NYDailyNews.com:
Reuters:
Financial Times:
  • Beijing Warned of Business Damage from Text Crackdown. The warning by the company, which operates the world’s most popular instant messaging service and online games with titles such as Dungeon & Fighter, is an early indication that China’s strict censorship regime could start to damage the country’s internet boom. Over the past 15 months, the Chinese government has stepped up a crackdown on what it calls “harmful content” – a development Google cited as one reason for re-considering its presence in China. The authorities argue that the measures are aimed at pornography and spam, but website closures and text messaging blockages have also hit politically sensitive content. Tencent management said the government’s surprise decision in late November to halt WAP billing – a practice that allows consumers to buy online content and have it charged directly to their mobile phone bills – had also made a dent in the fourth quarter and would do more damage this year. Mr Lau added that attempts by China Mobile, the world’s largest mobile operator, to weed out “bad” content by blocking certain content providers from sending text messages had also produced collateral damage for the industry.
China Securities Journal:
  • China has banned banks from providing loans to developers found to be hoarding land or holding back sales of apartments to wait for higher prices.
Evening Recommendations
Citigroup:
  • Reiterated Buy on (NKE), boosted estimates, raised target to $80.
Night Trading
  • Asian indices are unch. to +.75% on average.
  • Asia Ex-Japan Investment Grade CDS Index 90.0 -1.0 basis point.
  • S&P 500 futures +.08%
  • NASDAQ 100 futures +.03%
Morning Preview Links

Earnings of Note
Company/Estimate
  • (FDX)/.73
  • (ROST)/1.16
  • (PALM)/-.42
  • (SPWRA)/.48
  • (CTAS)/.30
  • (GME)/1.27
Economic Releases
8:30 am EST
  • The Consumer Price Index for February is estimated to rise +.1% versus a +.2% gain in January.
  • The CPI Ex Food & Energy for February is estimated to rise +.1% versus a -.1% decline in January.
  • Initial Jobless Claims for last week are estimated to fall to 455K versus 462K the prior week.
  • Continuing Claims are estimated to fall to 4522K versus 4558K prior.
  • The Current Account Deficit for 4Q is estimated to widen to -$119.0B versus -$108.0B in 3Q.
10:00 am EST
  • Philly Fed for March is estimated to rise to 18.0 versus 17.6 in February.
  • Leading Indicators for February are estimated to rise +.1% versus a +.3% rise in January.
Upcoming Splits
  • (NETL) 2-for-1
Other Potential Market Movers
  • The Fed's Duke speaking, weekly EIA natural gas inventory report, (TQNT) Analyst Day, (GCI) Analyst Meeting, (FST) Analyst Meeting, (TREX) Analyst Meeting and the JPMorgan Gaming/Lodging/Restaurant/Leisure Conference could also impact trading today.
BOTTOM LINE: Asian indices are mostly higher, boosted by technology and financial shares in the region. I expect US stocks to open modestly lower and to rally into the afternoon, finishing modestly higher. The Portfolio is 100% net long heading into the day.

Wednesday, March 17, 2010

Stocks Higher into Final Hour on Less Economic Fear, Diminishing Financial Sector Pessimism, Short-Covering, Technical Buying


Broad Market Tone:

  • Advance/Decline Line: Higher
  • Sector Performance: Most Rising
  • Volume: Around Average
  • Market Leading Stocks: Underperforming
Equity Investor Angst:
  • VIX 16.75 -5.31%
  • ISE Sentiment Index 155.0 -3.13%
  • Total Put/Call .86 +17.81%
  • NYSE Arms .91 +68.59%
Credit Investor Angst:
  • North American Investment Grade CDS Index 81.87 bps -2.82%
  • European Financial Sector CDS Index 72.58 bps +.80%
  • Western Europe Sovereign Debt CDS Index 67.71 bps +.18%
  • Emerging Market CDS Index 211.02 bps -3.14%
  • 2-Year Swap Spread 17.50 bps -1.5 bps
  • TED Spread 12.0 bps +1 bp
Economic Gauges:
  • 3-Month T-Bill Yield .15% unch.
  • Yield Curve 272.0 bps -2 bps
  • Copper Days Demand 15.06 days -.35%
  • Citi US Economic Surprise Index +37.0 +.4 point
  • 10-Year TIPS Spread 2.25% unch.
Overseas Futures:
  • Nikkei Futures: Indicating -16 open in Japan
  • DAX Futures: Indicating unch. open in Germany
Portfolio:
  • Higher: On strength in my Financial, Retail and Tech long positions
  • Disclosed Trades: None
  • Market Exposure: 100% Net Long
BOTTOM LINE: Today's overall market action is neutral as the major averages build slightly on recent gains, but are trading near session lows despite strength overseas. On the positive side, (XLF) and (IYR) have outperformed throughout most of the day. Cyclical shares are outperforming. REIT, Restaurant, Bank, Networking, Semi, Software, Paper, Energy and Coal shares are especially strong, rising .75%+. Despite another rise in commodity prices, inflation expectations are stable and long-term rates are slightly lower. On the negative side, Steel, Disk Drive and Airline stocks are under pressure. Market leaders are underperforming again today, which remains a red flag. As well, given the gains overseas and recent technical breakout, today's performance is mildly disappointing. Citi lowered the financial sector to Neutral this afternoon, which is pressuring (XLF) a bit. So far, the weakness has been contained and the bears have been unable once again to gain any meaningful traction. Uncertainty over healthcare reform is also likely weighing on the broad market this afternoon. One of my longs, (RUE), beat estimates and raised guidance after the close yesterday, which is lifting the shares to a new high. I still think the stock has further near-term and intermediate-term upside. I expect US stocks to trade mixed-to-higher into the close from current levels on diminishing economic fear, short-covering and technical buying.