Friday, September 17, 2010

Today's Headlines


Bloomberg:

  • Irish Government Bond Spread, Swaps Jump to Record on Renewed Bank Concern. Irish bonds led declines by the debt of so-called peripheral euro-region countries on renewed concern the nation’s banks may require further government aid. The cost of protecting Irish government debt from default jumped to a record. Yields on the nation’s 10-year debt rose to the highest relative to similar-maturity benchmark German bunds since at least 1991, and the Portuguese-German yield spread was near the most on record. John Gormley, leader of Ireland’s Green Party and a member of the ruling coalition, said spreads would widen should Ireland consider renegotiating with Anglo Irish Bank Corp. bondholders, as suggested by the opposition. “When you get spread-widening pressures, Ireland tends to widen more than the rest because it’s seen as the weakest link,” said Padhraic Garvey, head of developed-market debt strategy at ING Groep NV in Amsterdam. “There’s a lot of negative news out there. There’s concern about the banking sector, about further budget cuts that may hurt the economy. These things add up.” The yield on the 10-year Irish bond climbed 29 basis points to 6.40 percent as of 2:25 p.m. in London. The spread with bunds widened to as much as 387 basis points, or 3.87 percentage points, the most on record, according to Bloomberg generic data. Portugal’s 10-year securities yielded 366 basis points more than bunds, while investors demanded a 178 basis-point yield premium to hold Spanish securities instead of German debt, up from 172 basis points yesterday. Contracts insuring against default on Ireland rose 38 basis points to 428.3 basis points, according to data-provider CMA. German bonds climbed as investors favored the region’s safest assets. The yield on the bund fell 6 basis points to 2.42 percent, with French 10-year yields also sliding 6 basis points, to 2.78 percent. The euro snapped a four-day gain, trading at $1.3071, after strengthening to $1.3159. The Greek 10-year spread over bunds widened 5 basis points to 912 basis points, with the Italian-German yield premium increasing 6 basis points to 149 basis points.
  • U.S. Consumer Sentiment Unexpectedly Declines. Confidence among U.S. consumers unexpectedly dropped to a one-year low in September, indicating the biggest part of the economy is being handcuffed by a struggling labor market. The Thomson Reuters/University of Michigan preliminary index of consumer sentiment fell to 66.6 from 68.9 in August, the group said today. This month’s reading was less than the most pessimistic forecast in a Bloomberg News survey. Flagging optimism with unemployment close to a 26-year high may increase the risk consumers will cut back on their purchases, which account for 70 percent of the economy. The University of Michigan gauge of consumer expectations for six months from now, which more closely projects the direction of consumer spending, decreased to 59.1, the lowest since March 2009. About 67 percent of Americans in the Michigan survey said they anticipate “bad financial conditions” in the coming year, according to the report.
  • Sovereign Default Swaps at Record Over Companies on Deficits. Investors are paying record-high premiums to insure against default on European sovereign bonds relative to corporate notes as governments struggle to reduce fiscal deficits while companies repair balance sheets. An index of credit-default swaps on 15 European governments now exceeds a gauge of investment-grade credit risk by about 50 basis points, according to data from CMA and JPMorgan Chase & Co. Corporate swaps are historically more expensive than sovereign contracts. The gap between the indexes “highlights the difference between how fundamentally strong non-financial corporate credit is versus how weak governments are,” said Aziz Sunderji, a credit strategist at Barclays Capital in London. The Markit iTraxx SovX Western Europe Index is trading at 156.5 basis points, near an all-time high, while the Markit iTraxx Europe Index has more than halved from its 2008 peak to 106.25.
  • Discover(DFS) Agrees to Buy Citigroup's(C) Student Loan Corp.(STU). Discover Financial Services agreed to buy Citigroup Inc.’s Student Loan Corp. in a deal valued at $600 million to become the third-biggest U.S. provider of private student loans. Discover, the No. 4 U.S. payment-card network, will pay $30 a share for the Stamford, Connecticut-based lender, the companies said today in separate statements. The price was about 40 percent higher than the closing value yesterday on the New York Stock Exchange.
  • Crude Oil Falls a Fourth Day on Concern U.S. Economy Will Be Slow to Recover. Crude oil fell for a fourth day on speculation that the U.S. economic recovery is slowing, reducing fuel demand in the world’s biggest oil-consuming country. Oil slipped as much as 1.5 percent after the Thomson Reuters/University of Michigan preliminary September index of consumer sentiment fell to 66.6 from 68.9 a month earlier. Crude oil for October delivery declined 90 cents, or 1.2 percent, to $73.67 a barrel at 10:54 a.m. on the New York Mercantile Exchange. Futures touched $73.48, the lowest level since Sept. 8. U.S. gasoline consumption in August averaged 9.23 million barrels a day, down from 9.3 million in August 2009, the American Petroleum Institute said today in a report. Demand averaged 9 million barrels a day during the first eight months of 2010, down 0.2 percent from the same period a year earlier. “I expected that gasoline demand would be stronger by now,” John Felmy, chief economist with the Washington-based API, said in a telephone interview. “We saw some signs of improvement earlier this year, but that’s no longer the case. The overall economy isn’t that robust and that’s being reflected in driving behavior.”
  • Gold Gains to Record on Wealth Demand; Silver Near 30-Year High. Gold futures climbed to a record for the third time this week as investors stepped up demand for a haven from financial turmoil. Before today, gold gained 16 percent this year, outperforming stocks, bonds and many commodities as sovereign- debt concerns and an uneven economic recovery roil financial markets. Silver was little changed after approaching the highest price since 1980. “Gold is accelerating,” said Adam Klopfenstein, a senior market strategist at Lind-Waldock in Chicago. “We’re getting to a point where the public is getting spooked by the instability in financial markets. Gold is going to be the asset of choice when investors are seeking safe havens.”
  • SEC Proposes Short-Term Borrowing Disclosure to Discourage Masking Debt. U.S. regulators voted to propose rules that may make it harder for companies to mask debt after Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc. was accused of misleading investors by temporarily moving assets off its books. U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission members voted 5-0 today to seek rules that would expand what firms must disclose about short-term borrowing arrangements. Under the proposal, banks would have to tell shareholders the maximum amount of debt they had each quarter and the average amount of debt.
  • Paychecks Could Be Whacked If U.S. Tax Vote Slips. Americans may pay higher income taxes next year, at least temporarily, even if Congress decides not to let rates rise. Unless Congress votes by November to extend tax cuts enacted under President George W. Bush, the Internal Revenue Service will advise employers to increase deductions from paychecks beginning Jan. 1, payroll experts said. The reason: The IRS needs time to prepare and distribute tables used to calculate withholding taxes, and employers need time to implement them. Even though the Bush-era tax cuts don’t expire until Dec. 31, the bureaucracy has to act sooner.
  • Household Worth in U.S. Declined $1.5 Trillion in Second Quarter, Fed Says. Household wealth in the U.S. fell 2.8 percent in the second quarter as share prices were depressed by the European debt crisis, marking a setback for Americans’ efforts to repair finances battered by the recession. Net worth for households and non-profit groups declined by $1.5 trillion to $53.5 trillion, according to the Federal Reserve’s Flow of Funds report issued today in Washington.
  • Citadel May Lower Its Management Fees as Hedge-Fund Industry Seeks Clients. Citadel LLC is considering cutting fees on its two main funds as it attempts to attract clients during the worst climate for raising money in two decades, said two people with knowledge of the firm’s plans. The Kensington and Wellington hedge funds at Chicago-based Citadel, the $11.1 billion firm founded by Ken Griffin, are among a handful that pass along all expenses to clients rather than charging the industry-standard 2 percent annual management fee. Expenses at the firm have reached as much as 8 percent of assets, and typically range from 4 percent to 6 percent. Citadel lost 55 percent of assets as markets tumbled in 2008, and when investors sought to take out $1.2 billion the firm suspended redemptions before restoring them in late 2009.
  • Peripheral Nations Should Restructure Debt, MIT's Johnson Says: Tom Keene. European sovereigns such as Ireland that are dealing with unsustainable budget deficits should restructure debt rather than seek international bailouts, said Massachusetts Institute of Technology professor Simon Johnson. “The pressure is very much on Ireland right now,” Johnson said in a radio interview today on “Bloomberg Surveillance” with Tom Keene. “Ireland, in terms of its fiscal position and in term of the sustainability of those policies and the external support polices from the ECB and others, looks pretty fragile.”

Wall Street Journal:
  • Consumer Bureau Gets Launch Deadline. Treasury Department officials plan to transfer existing enforcement, examination and rule-writing powers from federal banking regulators to the new Bureau of Consumer Financial Protection by July 2011, people familiar with the matter said.
CNBC:
MarketWatch:
New York Post:
  • Mortgage Giants Freddie, Fannie to Cost Government $53 Billion Next Decade. Federal mortgage giants Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac will cost the U.S. government $53 billion over the next decade under so-called "fair-value" accounting, the Congressional Budget Office (CBO) estimated Thursday. The fully government-owned agencies own masses of U.S. mortgages that have dropped in value amid the housing crisis. The CBO estimate contrasted sharply with that of the Obama administration, which forecasted $44 billion in savings from the lenders under a different forecasting method. "The fair-value approach...provides a more comprehensive measure of cost because it recognizes the cost to taxpayers when the government assumes financial risk," CBO Director Douglas W. Elmendorf wrote.
  • NBC's Fall Guys. NBC Universal is looking at a new fall lineup -- not just on the screen but in the executive suite. Sources said Comcast, which is awaiting regulatory approval, is preparing to put a new regime in place sometime in October or November before it closes on the NBC deal, expected by the end of the year.
Business Insider:
Zero Hedge:
  • The Foreign Exchange Market and CDS Spreads. We are continually amazed at movements in the foreign exchange market that come as a direct consequence of moves in peripheral 5-Year Credit Default Swaps (CDS). The chart below details the relative correlation of a GDP weighted basket of the relevant countries within the Euro.
Forbes:
  • LA Agencies Got $111 Million Stimulus, Created Few Jobs. Despite lingering unemployment, audits released by the Los Angeles city controller found that two departments that received $111 million in federal stimulus dollars have only created 55 jobs so far. The reports released by City Controller Wendy Greuel looked at how the Department of Transportation and Department of Public Works used millions in American Recovery and Reinvestment Act funds. The two departments received the largest amount of the $594 million in federal funding that was awarded to the city in March. Of that, the transportation department received $40.8 million and created or retained 9 jobs while public works received $70 million and created 45 jobs. Greuel, who released the audits Thursday, said she was "disappointed" by the low number of job created. "With our local unemployment rate over 12 percent we need to do a better job cutting the red tape and putting Angelenos back to work," she said.
Chicago Tribune:
  • Retirement Perks Cost Towns Millions. Government officials add thousands to their pensions, as suburbs face budget woes. Lax pension rules are costing suburban taxpayers millions of dollars by allowing job perks and hefty pay hikes to inflate retirement checks for local leaders, the Tribune has found. In Glencoe, a free Jeep, bonuses and other perks to an outgoing parks director cost local taxpayers an extra $350,000.
    Joliet officials literally wrote pension spiking into the employee handbook, costing taxpayers there nearly $500,000 extra on the outgoing city manager alone. And in Evanston, four administrators cashed in their careers' worth of unused sick and vacation time in a way that helped boost their pensions, costing an extra $1.2 million in pension payments. Even with governments struggling to provide basic services, the tab for inflated pensions grows as Illinois does not take on reforms other states adopted years ago.
Rasmussen Reports:
Politico:
  • Nancy Pelosi Keeps Losing Democrats on Tax Cuts. If the House works its will, the top income tax brackets will enjoy at least one more year of the Bush tax cuts — a development that would be a sharp rebuke of House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) and President Barack Obama. At least 38 House Democrats have now come out publicly in favor of at least a short-term extension of current income tax rates for couples earning more than $250,000 and individuals over the $200,000 threshhold — bucking calls from Obama and Pelosi to let taxes increase on wealthier Americans.
Reuters:
  • China's imports of liquefied natural gas in August doubled from a year earlier to a record of about 1 million metric tons, citing an official who had seen the August trade data.
  • Banks May Disappoint Hopes for Hybrid Redemptions. Investors betting European banks will promptly redeem high volumes of subordinated debt could be disappointed, as some look likely to keep the bonds for as long as regulators will let them, to preserve their capital ratios. Banks have used hybrid Tier 1 bonds in the past to maintain obligatory capital levels to cushion against bad loans, but these bonds will no longer count as capital under new rules unveiled at the weekend by the Basel Committee on Banking Supervision.
Financial Times:
  • A Year in the Life of Sovereign CDS. With Ireland spreads widening on Friday, it’s an apt time to turn to Fitch’s latest edition of its annual survey of credit derivative traders. Not least because it offers some revealing insights on how sovereign CDS contracts are actually used in the market. Or at least, on bank desks:
Dziennik Gazeta Prawna:
  • Luxembourg Prime Minister Jean-Claude Juncker said that the financial crisis isn't over yet and that he sees "first signs" of a recovery. The end of public stimulus is a possible danger for the euro, he said. Juncker, who chairs meetings of euro-region finance ministers, said he couldn't rule out that some banks may face "serious trouble with financial liquidity" in case the recovery stops, Juncker said.
Diario de Noticias:
  • Portugal may need aid from the IMF to solve its foreign debt problems, citing three former finance ministers.

Bear Radar


Style Underperformer:

  • Large-Cap Value (-.20%)
Sector Underperformers:
  • 1) Coal -1.82% 2) Steel -1.25% 3) Airlines -.83%
Stocks Falling on Unusual Volume:
  • CLF, BCS, CRK, SWC, STD, TOT, SUN, REP, EPIQ, SI, CHSI, URS, VCO, BCA, RNE, PW, AEL and TSN
Stocks With Unusual Put Option Activity:
  • 1) IRM 2) ECA 3) TXN 4) WFMI 5) ORCL
Stocks With Most Negative News Mentions:
  • 1) ED 2) MEE 3) AEP 4) MF 5) EEP

Bull Radar


Style Outperformer:

  • Small-Cap Growth (+.75%)
Sector Outperformers:
  • 1) Education +4.0% 2) Software +1.45% 3) Defense +1.40%
Stocks Rising on Unusual Volume:
  • PEGA, ORCL, ORB, STU, CRXL, ALKS and TITN
Stocks With Unusual Call Option Activity:
  • 1) HUN 2) IAG 3) ORCL 4) ECA 5) PWER
Stocks With Most Positive News Mentions:
  • 1) RIMM 2) ORCL 3) BA 4) IBM 5) AAPL

Thursday, September 16, 2010

Friday Watch


Evening Headlines

Bloomberg:

  • Junk Bonds Reach Par For First Time Since '07 on Upgrades: Credit Markets. Investors in U.S. junk bonds are wagering they’ll be fully repaid for the first time since before the credit market seizure, dismissing concern the economy will go back into recession and trigger a rise in corporate defaults. Average prices on high-yield debt rose above 100 cents on the dollar today for the first time since June 2007 after falling as low as 55 cents in December 2008, Bank of America Merrill Lynch index data show.
  • Consumers Resist Smart Meters After $3.4 Billion Stimulus Push. PG&E Corp., Cisco Systems Inc. and General Electric Co. are all betting that energy-monitoring devices will catch on in homes. Convincing consumers that they’re a good thing is turning out to be a tough sell. Power companies have traditionally relied on workers walking house to house to monitor electricity use. Smart meters are designed to give utilities a real-time picture of electricity consumption, eventually allowing them to create pricing plans that will encourage conservation during peak hours. About 43 percent of U.S. homes will have the new meters by 2014, up from 14 percent at the end of last year, according to Dallas-based market researcher Parks Associates. Even with $3.4 billion in U.S. stimulus funds behind it, the race to install smart meters is starting to lose momentum, Bloomberg Businessweek reports in its Sept. 20 issue. “The meters don’t benefit the consumer; they cost a lot of money, and we can’t opt out,” says Joshua Hart, the California- based director of Scotts Valley Neighbors Against Smart Meters.
  • Hewlett-Packard(HPQ) Said to Be Near Decision on Hurd's Successor.

Wall Street Journal:
Bloomberg Businessweek:
  • China Is Set to Lose 2% of GDP Cleaning Up Decades of Pollution. China, the world’s worst polluter, needs to spend at least 2 percent of gross domestic product a year -- 680 billion yuan at 2009 figures -- to clean up 30 years of industrial waste, said He Ping, chairman of the Washington-based International Fund for China’s Environment. Mun Sing Ho, a senior economist at Dale W. Jorgenson Associates and a visiting scholar at Harvard University in Cambridge, Massachusetts, put the range at 2 percent to 4 percent of GDP. Failure to spend that much -- equivalent to the annual GDP of Vietnam -- may cost the Chinese economy half as much again in blighted crops, health costs and pollution-related expenses, He said: “The cleanup can’t catch up with the speed of pollution” if spending is less.
  • Noda Defends Intervention Step Amid U.S., European Criticism. Japanese Finance Minister Yoshihiko Noda defended his decision to intervene in currency markets for the first time since 2004 after the move spurred criticism from policy makers in the U.S. and Europe. “I’m aware of the various comments, but with deflation, our economy is in a severe situation and it’s undesirable that the strong yen be prolonged,” Noda told reporters in Tokyo today.
IBD:
Business Insider:
  • Thank Heavens For All Those Foreigners Who Keep Lending Us Money. (graph) International holdings of Treasury bonds have nearly doubled since the start of the financial crisis, Asha Bangalore at Northern Trust notes--from $2.2 trillion to $4.1 trillion. On behalf of the debtor-nation US, we thank you, world. That's another $2 trillion we owe you. On top of the original $2 trillion.
  • The West Is Losing Its Grip On A Key Middle East Lynchpin. The west may be losing its appeal to a key Middle East ally, if the new Transatlantic Trends is correct. The report suggest Turkey is moving away from its traditional pro-Europe, pro-U.S. stance, in favor of a renewed focus in its own backyard.
NY Times:
CNNMoney.com:
The Detroit News:
  • On Obamacare, Wilson Was Rude But Right. The president, who told Congress and the American people his bill would, "slow the growth of health care costs for our families, our businesses, and our government," now admits this isn't true. "As a consequence of us getting 30 million additional people health care, at the margins that's going to increase our costs -- we knew that," Obama said last week. Of course he knew, but he wasn't saying so as he lobbied for the bill's passage. In his 2009 speech, Obama assured Americans the expense of extending coverage to the uninsured would be covered through cost cutting reforms.
Daily Finance:
LA Times:
  • Home Sales in California Fall a Second Straight Month. Purchases were down 2.7% in August from July and 14% from a year earlier. The median price last month was $260,000, down 3% from July but up 4.4% from August 2009. California home sales stumbled for a second consecutive month in August and home prices slipped from July, according to data released Thursday. The housing market's softening reflects the expiration of a popular federal tax credit and consumer concern that the economy is weakening, experts said. "The magnitude of the sales slowdown suggests that, among other things, many would-be buyers are holding off for further price cuts," said John Walsh, president of MDA DataQuick, the San Diego research firm that released the data.
The Daily Beast:
  • Why The Gulf Misses BP(BP). Locals thought it was hard getting money out of the oil giant—until they had to deal with the government. Rick Outzen on the Gulf’s cash flow crisis—and anger with the federal “claims czar.”
Rasmussen Reports:
Politico:
  • Dem Hopeful Asks Pelosi to Step Down. Tennessee congressional candidate Brett Carter is taking what has become a move typical of Democrats this election season – distancing oneself from party leaders – and taking it a step further by calling on House Speaker Nancy Pelosi to step down. In an interview with POLITICO Thursday evening, Carter slammed Pelosi as a polarizing figure whose leadership of the Democratic caucus imperiled the party’s House majority, and said it was time for someone else to take her place.
USA Today:
Reuters:
  • China Must Confront Risks of Yuan Rise - China Economist. China risks "negative shocks" if its yuan currency appreciates, threatening a "hollowing out" of export-driven industry, a Chinese economist said in an official newspaper on Friday, following rising pressure from Washington.The warning about an abrupt rise in the yuan appeared in the overseas edition of the People's Daily, a day after U.S. Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner told Congress he would press Beijing to let the yuan strengthen faster. In a commentary for the Chinese paper, Sun Lijian, a professor of economics at Fudan University in Shanghai, said Beijing should ready for a yuan appreciation by accelerating domestic reforms and considering curtailing stimulus spending. Sun said that moving too fast on the yuan could be a shock to Chinese manufacturers. "The negative shock from an appreciation of the renminbi exchange rate following an increase in its elasticity is something the Chinese government and central bank must consider," Sun said in the paper, which serves as the chief mouthpiece of China's ruling Communist Party.
  • Oracle(ORCL) Profit Beats Street Forecasts, Stock Jumps. Oracle Corp (ORCL) posted a 25 percent surge in software sales that sharply beat forecasts and a pickup in its new hardware business, underscoring robust tech spending by corporations and boosting its shares more than 4 percent.
  • North America August Chip-Gear Orders Fall 1.1% vs. July. North American semiconductor equipment makers posted $1.82 billion in average worldwide bookings in August, down 1.1 percent from July, its first fall since October 2009.
  • TI(TXN) Plans $7.5 Billion Buyback, Raises Dividend. Shares in Texas Instruments (TXN) rose 3.5 percent after the company said on Thursday that it had authorized a buyback of $7.5 billion worth of its stock and was increasing its dividend by 8 percent.
Financial Times:
  • Hedge Funds Hit by Yen Intervention. Japan’s surprise intervention in currency markets has caught some of the world’s largest hedge funds by surprise, with big names suffering sharp reversals as the yen tumbled. London-based hedge funds such as AHL, the $21bn fund run by the FTSE 100-listed Man Group, the $5bn Winton Capital Futures fund and the $1bn Aspect Diversified fund all suffered on their bullish yen positions, according to people familiar with the funds’ performances. All three funds use computer models to automatically spot and ride market trends, making them vulnerable to unexpected events including surprise action by governments and central banks. Other funds understood to have been hit by the intervention include several large global macro hedge funds and currency trading specialists.
  • US Banks Braced for Further Bad News. Big US banks are nearing the end of another disappointing quarter for their trading businesses that has deepened fears over job losses on Wall Street. The first two weeks of September failed to deliver a meaningful pick-up in trading activity on markets, hitting bank profits at a time when they are already under pressure from a sluggish economy. Analysts’ expectations have started to reflect the more difficult conditions. The average earnings estimate for Goldman and Morgan Stanley have each slipped 2 cents a share in the past month, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. “The third quarter is shaping up to be another very slow period for client activity across most markets,” Richard Staite, an analyst with Atlantic Equities, wrote in a client note this month as he slashed his earnings estimates on Goldman and Morgan Stanley. “July and August were particularly weak and September is unlikely to make up for the shortfall.” A surge in bond market volume, as measured by Finra’s Trace data, has not materialised. Daily trading on the New York Stock Exchange has slowed since late August. In a presentation to investors this week, Jamie Dimon, JPMorgan chief executive, said trading “has been fairly stable for us”, and “not that dissimilar” to the second quarter, when the bank reported a drop in revenue from a year earlier. Senior bankers said the third-quarter showing, coming after poor trading results in the previous three months, underlined how the boom of a year ago was unlikely to be repeated. At the time, banks capitalised on pent-up investor demand following the crisis and higher prices due to less competition.
  • Impact of Bank Rules Likely to be 30% Tougher. The full impact of the new global bank capital rules announced at the weekend is likely to be 30 per cent tougher than the headline ratio suggests, according to regulators and industry participants who have studied private banking data. The data submitted to the committee suggest the real impact of the change could be equivalent to raising the minimum capital requirement from 2 per cent to 10 per cent for many banks. The deductions are likely to cut many banks’ equity totals by between 30 per cent and 40 per cent, according to people who have seen the data. That compares with estimates of 10-15 per cent projected by many banking analysts based on publicly available data. The difference lies in the fact that many banks do not break out some statistics critical for calculating the full impact of the deductions. Most big international banks can meet the 8 per cent standard with relative ease, but an effective 10 per cent ratio is much more of a stretch for some institutions. “The deductions are definitely the iceberg here. The impact is going to vary colossally from country to country and bank to bank,” said Bob Penn, attorney at Allen & Overy, who has not seen the data.
Telegraph:
Yonhap News Agency:
The Standard:
  • Weak Tone to Grip Hong Kong Exports. The SAR's export growth momentum is slowing, the Hong Kong Trade Development Council said after the export index for the third quarter fell for the first time in 1 year. The index - which reflects the city's confidence in export prospects - dropped to 56.2 in the third quarter, from 59.1 in the previous quarter. "The decline in export confidence was mainly due to rising labor costs in the mainland and weak spending in the United States and Japan," said Edward Leung, TDC chief economist. He warned export growth in the fourth quarter is likely to be the slowest this year. A TDC survey last month found that 79 percent of 500 traders polled raised wages in the previous three months - nearly half of them by more than 10 percent. To offset cost hikes, 64 percent of local manufacturers boosted their average selling price, while 54 percent rejected orders.
Securities Daily:
  • People's Bank of China may raise interest rates after consumer prices rise more than 3 for at least three months, citing a person familiar with the situation.
Edaily:
  • Samsung Electronics Co. Chairman Lee Kun Hee said he's concerned about possible weakness in the chip and liquid-crystal display industry next year, he said.
Evening Recommendations
Citigroup:
  • Reiterated Buy on (STZ), target $21.
  • Reiterated Buy on (M), target $33.
Piper Jaffray:
  • Rated (PWR) Overweight, target $24.
Night Trading
  • Asian equity indices are unch. to +1.0% on average.
  • Asia Ex-Japan Investment Grade CDS Index 117.5 +1.0 basis point.
  • Asia Pacific Sovereign CDS Index 113.25 unch.
  • S&P 500 futures +.37%.
  • NASDAQ 100 futures +.51%.
Morning Preview Links

Earnings of Note
Company/Estimate
  • None of note
Economic Releases
8:30 am EST
  • The Consumer Price Index for August is estimated to rise +.3% versus a +.3% gain in July.
  • The CPI Ex Food & Energy for August is estimated to rise +.1% versus a +.1% gain in July.
9:55 am EST
  • Preliminary Univ. of Mich. Consumer Confidence is estimated to rise to 70.0 versus a reading of 68.9 in August.
Upcoming Splits
  • (SXCI) 2-for-1
Other Potential Market Movers
  • The (AGP) Analyst Meeting and the Stifel Nicolaus Healthcare Conference could also impact trading today.
BOTTOM LINE: Asian indices are mostly higher, boosted by technology and automaker shares in the region. I expect US stocks to open modestly higher and to weaken into the afternoon, finishing mixed. The Portfolio is 75% net long heading into the day.

Stocks Slightly Higher into Final Hour on Tech Sector Optimism, Short-Covering, Technical Buying


Broad Market Tone:

  • Advance/Decline Line: Lower
  • Sector Performance: Most Sectors Declining
  • Volume: Below Average
  • Market Leading Stocks: Performing In Line
Equity Investor Angst:
  • VIX 22.24 +.63%
  • ISE Sentiment Index 134.0 -11.84%
  • Total Put/Call .81 -11.96%
  • NYSE Arms .86 -5.53%
Credit Investor Angst:
  • North American Investment Grade CDS Index 104.51 bps -.26%
  • European Financial Sector CDS Index 111.83 bps +1.40%
  • Western Europe Sovereign Debt CDS Index 153.47 bps -.55%
  • Emerging Market CDS Index 237.14 bps -1.86%
  • 2-Year Swap Spread 19.0 unch.
  • TED Spread 14.0 unch.
Economic Gauges:
  • 3-Month T-Bill Yield .15% unch.
  • Yield Curve 229.0 +6 bps
  • China Import Iron Ore Spot $139.50/Metric Tonne -.43%
  • Citi US Economic Surprise Index -7.90 +2.3 points
  • 10-Year TIPS Spread 1.81% +2 bps
Overseas Futures:
  • Nikkei Futures: Indicating +36 open in Japan
  • DAX Futures: Indicating +10 open in Germany
Portfolio:
  • Higher: On gains in my Tech, Retail and Ag long positions
  • Disclosed Trades: Added (IWM)/(QQQQ) hedges, added to (EEM) short
  • Market Exposure: Moved to 75% Net Long
BOTTOM LINE: Today's overall market action is mildly bullish as the S&P 500 trades near session highs and remains slightly above its 200-day moving average despite mounting headwinds. On the positive side, Education, Semi, Gold and Coal shares are especially strong, rising .75%+. Most tech shares have traded well throughout the day. The 10-year yield is +4 bps higher despite mixed economic data. Copper is rising +.76%. The Spain sovereign cds is falling -1.34% to 230.12 bps and the Japan sovereign cds is declining -2.62% to 65.26 bps. On the negative side, REIT, Homebuilding, HMO, Hospital, Disk Drive and Oil Service shares are lower on the day. Small-caps are under pressure. (XLF), (XHB) and (IYR) are underperforming, as well. Oil is continuing its recent divergence from equities and lumber is falling -3.17% today. Moreover, the Shanghai Composite fell another -1.89% overnight and broke down below its 50-day moving average for the first time since April. The AAII % Bulls surged to 50.89% this week, while the % Bears fell to 24.26, which is a large negative. One of my longs, (AAPL), continues to trade very well and is helping to lift the entire market off its lows today. The stock still has substantial upside over the intermediate-to-longer term, in my opinion. Another one of my longs, (MOS), is also having a good day and is poised for further intermediate-term gains. The market is ignoring quite a bit of negative news again today, which remains a big positive. However, breadth and volume are poor. The S&P 500 remains near a critical technical level as headwinds mount. I expect US stocks to trade mixed-to-lower into the close from current levels on profit taking, China trade tensions, mounting US housing concerns and China bubble worries.