Thursday, January 15, 2009

Bull Radar

Style Outperformer:
Large-cap Growth (-2.06%)

Sector Outperformers:
Computer Services (-.41%), Retail (-.58%) and Computer Hardware (-.61%)

Stocks Rising on Unusual Volume:
RAI, HRB, STO, OZRK, WYE, JPM, BRLI, ASEI, AVAV, ASML, DLTR, AXYS, ECL, APH, CLC and FRX

Stocks With Unusual Call Option Activity:
1) SQNM 2) EMR 3) JNPR 4) CRM 5) CX

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Wednesday, January 14, 2009

Thursday Watch

Late-Night Headlines
Bloomberg:

- Hedge-fund assets fell 48 percent in 2008 because of investment losses and client defections, lowering fees earned by most managers, according to TrimTabs Investment Research and BarclayHedge. Assets slumped to $998.4 billion at the end of December from $1.92 trillion a year earlier and were at their lowest level since July 2004, when they stood at $976.7 billion, the firms said in a statement today. Hedge-fund investors withdrew a record $148.8 billion in December. “Approximately two-thirds of industry revenue comes from performance fees and we estimate that 81 percent of hedge funds were under water last year,” Charles Biderman, chief executive officer of Sausalito, California-based TrimTabs said in the statement.

- Nortel’s Bankruptcy is ‘Blow to the Canadian Psyche,’ Investors Say.

- Foreign direct investment in China, the world’s fastest-growing major economy, fell 5.7 percent to $5.98 billion in December from a year earlier. The CSI 300 stock index has tumbled 66 percent in the past year, house prices in the nation’s 70 major cities fell for the first time on record in December, and exports are waning because of recessions in the U.S. and Europe. “Multinationals will become even more cautious in expanding,” said Ma Yu, a senior researcher at the Chinese Academy of International Trade and Economic Cooperation in Beijing. “A lot of the foreign investment that rushed to China over the past few years to gain from a stock and property boom is leaving.” The number of new companies set up by U.S. investors in China fell 32 percent in the first 11 months of last year, according to government data. For European investors, the decline was 23 percent.

- Hedge-fund assets fell a record 36 percent to $1.84 trillion in 2008 as tumbling global markets prompted investor withdrawals and fund liquidations, according to industry researcher HedgeFund.net. Hedge funds lost $512 billion through withdrawals and fund closures, while performance losses totaled $535 billion, the New York-based unit of Channel Capital Group Inc. said in an e-mailed statement. Assets managed by the funds plunged from a peak of $2.97 trillion in the second quarter of the year, said HedgeFund.net, whose database includes more than 8,200 hedge funds, fund of funds and managers that trade futures, known as commodity trading advisers or CTAs. Withdrawals and liquidations totaled $221 billion in December.

- Israeli officials head to Cairo today to consult on an Egyptian cease-fire proposal that could end a military operation against Hamas in the Gaza Strip that has reached its 20th day.

- Bank of America Corp.(BAC), the biggest U.S. bank by assets, may get more aid from the U.S. government to help absorb losses tied to this month’s purchase of Merrill Lynch & Co., three people familiar with the matter said.

- Apple Inc.(AAPL) Chief Executive Officer Steve Jobs, who said this month that he is being treated for a nutritional ailment, will take a medical leave of absence through the end of June. The shares fell 6.4 percent. Chief Operating Officer Tim Cook, who filled in during Jobs’s 2004 medical leave, has taken over Apple’s day-to-day operations, the Cupertino, California-based company said today in a statement. Jobs said he will remain involved in major strategic decisions. “During the past week I have learned that my health- related issues are more complex than I originally thought,” Jobs said in the statement. “In order to take myself out of the limelight and focus on my health, and to allow everyone at Apple to focus on delivering extraordinary products, I have decided to take a medical leave of absence.” Apple fell $5.48 to $79.85 in extended trading after closing at $85.33 on the Nasdaq Stock Market.

- An Indian economic recovery may be delayed as alleged fraud at Satyam Computer Services Ltd. undermines investment, one of two key growth drivers. “The financial irregularities at Satyam will deal a further blow to investor sentiment at a time when global and domestic risk appetite is already depressed,” said Tehmina Khan, an economist at Capital Economics Ltd. in London. “Overseas investors will be even more wary of returning to India.” The loss of confidence may make it harder for Indian companies to secure borrowings from overseas to fund investment, which accounted for about one third of economic growth in the quarter to Sept. 30. Some foreigners are already heading for the door. Overseas funds have sold 18.77 billion rupees ($384 million) of local shares since Satyam’s Raju admitted to the fraud, compared with purchases worth 9.75 billion rupees between Jan. 1 and Jan. 6, according to data from the Securities & Exchange Board of India.

- Two New Mexico pension funds lost $90 million investing in toxic debt sold by a firm whose employees and spouses contributed at least $15,100 to Governor Bill Richardson’s presidential campaign, according to a whistleblower suit unsealed today. Frank Foy, the former chief investment officer of New Mexico’s public schoolteachers’ fund, alleges that he was pressured by a Richardson appointee to purchase $50 million in collateralized debt obligations from Chicago-based Vanderbilt Capital Advisors LLC, according to a suit filed in State District Court in Santa Fe. New Mexico’s State Investment Council bought $40 million of the securities. The suit seeks to recover $300 million for New Mexico taxpayers. The investments proved “worthless,” the suit said. “The defendants sold the state of New Mexico a worthless combination of liars’ loans, lethal leverage and toxic waste,” the complaint, filed July 14, said. “The pressure to invest in Vanderbilt was motivated by illegal and improper inducements -- kickbacks or bribes in the form of campaign contributions.” Richardson, a Democrat, withdrew from consideration as President-elect Barack Obama’s commerce secretary on Jan. 4, citing a pending investigation of a bond advisory company that won $1.5 million in state work.

- The number of codes for medical billing will grow to more than 155,000 from 17,000, creating a “nightmare” for hospitals and doctors seeking reimbursement. Leavitt, who leaves office next week when President-elect Barack Obama takes office, pushed electronic record-keeping as a way to make health care more efficient and less expensive. Obama and his chief health official, Thomas Daschle, also have championed digital technology and urged increased federal spending to encourage broader use in medicine. Doctors and insurers say it will be expensive for them to follow the new billing rule and may lead to improper payments.

- St. Jude Medical Inc.’s(STJ) blood-flow meter cut the need for stents in patients with clogged arteries by a third and boosted their survival rate, a study found. The probe, which measures the severity of blockages, also cut the cost of care by an average of $675 a patient, according to the study, published online today in the New England Journal of Medicine. Heart attacks and deaths were trimmed 35 percent, the research found.

- Japanese machinery orders fell by a record 16.2 percent in November, twice as much as economists estimated, as businesses cut spending amid a deepening global recession. The drop in orders, an indicator of capital spending in the next three to six months, was the biggest decline since the current survey began in 1987.

- Rates to hire capsize vessels to haul iron ore have probably peaked after a rally this year, according to Rikard Vabo, a shipping analyst at Fearnley Fonds ASA. Capesizes, which carry loads of as much as 200,000 metric tons, cost about 3.8 times more to hire each day than smaller panamax vessels. The historical average is 2 to 2.1 times, Vabo said. “There is downside on cape rates in the short term,” he wrote in a research note.


Wall Street Journal:

- Harsh winter weather and frugal consumer spending may have cast a pall on most retail sales, but one product is proving recession-resistant: the snowblower. Across the country, manufacturers and retailers report robust sales -- and in some cases shortages -- of the do-it-yourself machines, many of which aren't inexpensive, running from a few hundred dollars to upward of $2,000. At Home Depot Inc., sales of the machines are up "high double digits" over last year, particularly among the heavier-duty big-ticket models. December storms were widespread and powerful enough that Lowe's Cos. for the first time shipped truckloads of snowblowers to the state of Washington the same day it sent them to Michigan and Maine. One major manufacturer, Ariens Co. of Brillion, Wis., was hamstrung by broader economic woes when its main engine supplier halted production in mid-December; while Ariens had already increased production 25%, demand has skyrocketed 50%.

- When President-elect Barack Obama nominated Mary Schapiro to lead the Securities and Exchange Commission, he criticized regulators for having "dropped the ball" in a "failure of oversight" in the markets meltdown and the Bernard Madoff scandal. But a close examination of Ms. Schapiro's record as a regulator shows she has infrequently pursued tough action against big Wall Street firms.

- New Yahoo Inc. (YHOO) Chief Executive Carol Bartz told employees on Wednesday that she needs to better understand the pros and cons of selling the struggling Internet giant's search business, but her gut instinct was not to.

- A federal judge denied another bid by prosecutors to jail disgraced financier Bernard Madoff pending trial. At a hearing Wednesday, U.S. District Judge Lawrence M. McKenna in Manhattan declined to overturn a magistrate judge's ruling on Monday extending bail for Mr. Madoff. The government had appealed that order. Prosecutors had sought to jail Mr. Madoff, the founder of Bernard L. Madoff Investment Securities LLC, after he mailed more than $1 million in watches, diamond jewelry and other valuables to relatives and others late last month.


MarketWatch.com:
- While emphasizing that they never "pre-commit" to a policy move, ECB officials usually offer relatively easy-to-read signals on future rate moves. Not this time.

ECB President Jean-Claude Trichet and fellow members of the central bank's rate-setting Governing Council meet in Frankfurt this week under a cloud of uncertainty. After slashing the ECB's key lending rate by an unprecedented 75 basis points, or three-quarters of a percentage point, to 2.5% in December, Trichet signaled that the ECB might be content to stand pat in January to reflect on the impact of 175 basis points worth of cumulative rate cuts since October. An unrelenting stream of dire economic data, however, likely won't afford the ECB the luxury of caution, most economists say. A majority expect the ECB to cut its key rate by a further 50 basis points to 2%, surveys show.


NY Times:

- President Hugo Chávez, buffeted by falling oil prices that threaten to damage his efforts to establish a Socialist-inspired state, is quietly courting Western oil companies once again. Until recently, Mr. Chávez had pushed foreign oil companies here into a corner by nationalizing their oil fields, raiding their offices with tax authorities and imposing a series of royalties increases. But faced with the plunge in prices and a decline in domestic production, senior officials have begun soliciting bids from some of the largest Western oil companies in recent weeks — including Chevron, Royal Dutch/Shell and Total of France — promising them access to some of the world’s largest petroleum reserves, according to energy executives and industry consultants here.


Forbes:

- The 21 Youngest CEOs at the Nation’s Biggest Companies.


Lloyd’s List:

- Global container traffic growth may slow to 2.8% this year as the worldwide recession curbs consumer demand, citing a report from Drewry Shipping consultants. Shipments from Asia to the US may drop 3.2% in 2009, while those on the Asia to Europe route may shrink by 4.1%, the report said.


Commercial Times:

- Intel Corp.(INTC) plans to cut computer-chip prices by as much as 25% from Jan. 18 to boost sales and clear inventory. The chipmaker intends to reduce prices by 10% to 25% on six models in January, before its usual twice-yearly adjustments in April and October.


The Economic Times:

- India’s government is unlikely to bail out Satyam Compute Services Ltd. as it will set a bad precedent, citing a person at the Prime Minister’s office. A bailout may also make the government liable to pay damages arising out of lawsuits against Satyam.


Late Buy/Sell Recommendations
Citigroup:
- Reiterated Sell on (DIS), target $20.


Night Trading
Asian Indices are -4.75% to -1.50% on average.
S&P 500 futures -.90%.
NASDAQ 100 futures -1.52%.


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Earnings of Note
Company/EPS Estimate
- (BGG)/.04

- (APH)/.50

- (JPM)/.01

- (MI)/.14

- (DNA)/.97

- (INTC)/.18


Economic Releases

8:30 am EST

- The Producer Price Index for December is estimated to fall 2.0% versus a 2.2% decline in November.

- The PPI Ex Food & Energy for December is estimated to rise .1% versus a .1% gain in November.

- Initial Jobless Claims for last week are estimated to rise to 503K versus 467K the prior week.

- Continuing Claims are estimated to rise to 4620K versus 4611K prior.

- Empire Manufacturing for January is estimated to rise to -25.0 versus a reading of -25.76 in December.


10:00 am EST

- Philly Fed for January is estimated to rise to -35.0 versus a reading of -36.1 in December.


Upcoming Splits
- None of note


Other Potential Market Movers
- The Fed’s Lockhart speaking, Fed’s Evans speaking, weekly EIA natural gas inventory data, (MTW) Analyst Day, (MON) Pipeline Review, (AYI) Annual Meeting, Needham Growth Conference, Goldman Sachs Healthcare Conference, Citi Entertainment/Media/Telecom Conference and JPMorgan Tech Forum could also impact trading today.


BOTTOM LINE: Asian indices are sharply lower, weighed down by financial and commodity stocks in the region. I expect US equities to open lower and to rally into the afternoon, finishing mixed. The Portfolio is 75% net long heading into the day.

Stocks Finish Sharply Lower, Weighed Down by Commodity, Gaming, Homebuilding and Banking Shares

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In Play

Stocks Sharply Lower into Final Hour on Financial Sector and Economic Pessimism

BOTTOM LINE: The Portfolio is lower into the final hour on losses in my Financial longs, Internet longs and Medical longs. I added (IWM)/(QQQQ) hedges and added to my (EEM) short today, thus leaving the Portfolio 75% net long. The tone of the market is very bearish as the advance/decline line is substantially lower, every sector is declining and volume is below average. Investor anxiety is very high. Today’s overall market action is very bearish. The VIX is rising 14.24% and is elevated at 49.46. The ISE Sentiment Index is below average at 114.0 and the total put/call is high at .91. Finally, the NYSE Arms has been running at an exceptionally high level most of the day, hitting 7.74 at its intraday peak, and is currently 2.72. The Euro Financial Sector Credit Default Swap Index is rising 2.98% today to 109.33 basis points. This index is up from a low of 52.66 on May 5th, but down from 157.81 on Sept. 16th. The North American Investment Grade Credit Default Swap Index is rising 4.7% to 228.16 basis points. The TED spread is dropping another 1.2% to 98 basis points. The TED spread is now down 368 basis points in just over three months. The 2-year swap spread is rising 4.33% to 54.25 basis points. The Libor-OIS spread is falling 2.20% to 91 basis points. The 10-year TIPS spread, a good gauge of inflation expectations, is down 15 basis points to .48%, which is down 227 basis points in just over six months and at the lowest level since Bloomberg record-keeping began in August 1998. The 10-year TIPS spread bottomed at .65% in October 1998 during the Asian financial crisis and at 1.24% in October 2001 during the technology bubble-bursting meltdown. The 3-month T-Bill is yielding .10%, which is down 1 basis point today. Recent expected bad news is still impacting stock prices negatively on low volume with high investor angst. The US dollar is holding its recent trading range against the yen, which is a positive. The ECB should announce a 75+ basis point cut tomorrow. As well, tomorrow’s (JPM) earnings report should also remove some uncertainty, which could help lift stocks. Nikkei futures indicate a -313 open in Japan and DAX futures indicate an +5 open in Germany tomorrow. I expect US stocks to trade mixed-to-lower into the close from current levels on more economic and financial sector pessimism.

Today's Headlines

Bloomberg:

- President-elect Barack Obama, looking to get his administration off to a fast start when he takes office next week, is drawing fire from members of his own party on Capitol Hill. Democratic criticism of the stimulus package and the nomination of Leon Panetta as intelligence chief shows lawmakers intend to flex their muscle.

- Bets against shares of Caterpillar Inc.(CAT) reached their highest level since April on doubts that the world’s largest maker of construction equipment will get a boost from President-elect Barack Obama’s public-works spending plan. Short interest in Peoria, Illinois-based Caterpillar rose 25 percent to 27.5 million shares from April 30 through Dec. 31 2008, according to New York Stock Exchange data released this week and compiled by Bloomberg.

- Democrats in Congress may cut the share of the economic stimulus package dedicated to tax cuts below the $300 billion or more that President-elect Barack Obama is asking for, House Ways and Means Committee Chairman Charles Rangel said.

- Man Group Plc, the largest publicly traded hedge-fund manager, said assets under management fell 21 percent in the last three months of 2008, more than expected, as it reduced leverage and wrote down Bernard Madoff investments.

- The most detailed proposal yet by industry and environmentalists to reduce U.S. greenhouse-gas emissions will call for raising the costs of new coal plants and rewarding nations for protecting forests. Rio Tinto Group(RTP), General Electric Co.(GE) and U.S. electricity producers will present the proposal tomorrow to a Congressional committee and recommend “urgent” action, according to a copy of the report by the 32-member coalition obtained by Bloomberg News.

- Panera Bread Co.(PNRA), the chain of 1,250 bakery-cafes, plans to take advantage of its debt-free balance sheet and the U.S. real-estate slump to open as many as two locations a week in 2009, Chief Executive Ronald Shaich said.

- Illinois Governor Rod Blagojevich called into session today the state Senate that may remove him from office.

- Brazil’s real may fall 10% against the US dollar this year and the central bank will cut its benchmark interest rate by as much as 4 percentage points because the economy is in a recession, CM Capital Markets said. “Growth is in a nosedive and the central bank is going to have to react,” Tony Volpon, the chief economist and strategist at CM Capital in Sao Paulo, said. Volpon says a collapse in industrial production is the strongest signal Brazil’s economy is now contracting. Industrial production fell 6.2% in November from the year-earlier period.

- As many as half of publicly traded commodity shipping lines may breach their loan covenants by April after a record collapse in hire rates, according to Royal Bank of Scotland Group Plc, the third-largest lender to the industry.

- Crude oil fell after a U.S. government report showed that stockpiles climbed to a 16-month high as fuel demand tumbled. Inventories at Cushing, Oklahoma, where oil that’s traded on Nymex is stored, climbed 2.5 percent to 33 million barrels last week, the highest since at least April 2004, when the department began keeping track of supplies there. “When you get a 6 million-barrel build in distillate during the dead of winter, you are looking at a grim demand picture,” said John Kilduff, senior vice president of energy at MF Global Inc. in New York.


Wall Street Journal:

- State and local governments would benefit from more than $160 billion in federal aid under a plan pushed by House Democratic leaders in negotiations over the economic-recovery package taking shape on Capitol Hill. The House has taken the lead on the issue in closed-door discussions on the broader recovery package, which is sought by President-elect Barack Obama and is expected to have an overall price tag approaching $800 billion.

- Walgreen Co.(WAG) plans to announce on Wednesday a network of pharmacies, in-store clinics and company health centers it will market to corporate and government employers nationwide. Under the drugstore chain's "Complete Care and Well-Being" program, participating employees at work would be able to get checkups, preventive care and other services, such as dentistry and optometry. Walgreen's Take Care health clinics would be available for basic services outside of business hours, and the chain would offer discounted prescriptions at Walgreen pharmacies. Retirees and employees' family members also would be eligible for the services.


NY Times:

- President-elect Barack Obama spent Tuesday evening at a dinner party with several prominent conservative columnists, including William Kristol and David Brooks of The New York Times, according to an Obama transition pool report.

- Gulf Arab governments' funds are billions of dollars poorer despite record oil prices because of losses in stocks and other investments, a report due out Wednesday said. The Council on Foreign Relations' paper also suggests that the world's largest such fund is considerably smaller than some earlier estimates have claimed.


San Francisco Chronicle:

- President Obama will end the 15-year-old "don't ask, don't tell" policy that has prevented homosexual and bisexual men and women from serving openly within the U.S. military, a spokesman for the president-elect said.


Washington Post:

- Regular mobile phone use does not appear to increase a person's risk of getting a type of cancer called melanoma of the eye, German researchers said on Tuesday. The study involving about 1,600 people detected no link between the time a person spent using a cell phone over about a decade and their chances of developing melanoma of the eye, they wrote in the Journal of the National Cancer Institute. The findings contradicted an earlier, smaller study by the same researchers that had raised concern about such a link.


Delta Farm Press:

- U.S. farmers and their commodity organizations won’t have to spend as much time defending farm programs from claims they’re no longer needed because of high grain prices this year. That’s about the only good news to come out of a crop outlook seminar held in conjunction with the American Farm Bureau Federation’s 90th annual meeting, which kicked off Sunday in San Antonio. After enjoying record high farm income in 2008 due, in part, to unheard of prices for corn, soybeans and wheat, farmers will probably see lower receipts for those commodities and for cotton, according to economists speaking at the seminar.


LA Times:

- As Barack Obama builds his administration and prepares to take office next week, his political team is quietly planning for a nationwide hiring binge that would marshal an army of full-time organizers to press the new president's agenda and lay the foundation for his reelection. The organization, known internally as "Barack Obama 2.0," is being designed to sustain a grass-roots network of millions that was mobilized last year to elect Obama and now is widely considered the country's most potent political machine. Organizers and even Republicans say the scope of this permanent campaign structure is unprecedented for a president. People familiar with the plan say Obama's team would use the network in part to pressure lawmakers -- particularly wavering Democrats -- to help him pass complex legislation on the economy, healthcare and energy. The plan could prompt tensions with members of Congress, who are unlikely to welcome the idea of Obama's political network targeting them from within their own districts. Already, Democratic Party officials on the state level worry that it could become a competing political force that revolves around the president's ambitions while diminishing the needs of down-ballot Democrats. Though the plan still is emerging, one source with knowledge of the internal discussion said the organization could have an annual budget of $75 million in privately raised funds. As described by one source knowledgeable with the discussions, the nonprofit arm would be used to help victims of natural disasters, but would do so under the Obama umbrella while continuing to build the overall network's massive e-mail database. Democratic lawmakers in Republican-leaning districts might resist voting for an Obama-backed global warming bill. In that case, the White House or DNC could use the new network for phone campaigns, demonstrations or lobbying trips to push lawmakers to stick with Obama. "You can pretty much target the list to people who haven't always voted with Democrats," said a House Democratic leadership aide familiar with the plan.


Boston Globe:

- Google Inc.(GOOG) is offering financial incentives to expand the sales network for the software it sells to businesses while restricting the use of a free alternative in its quest to make money on something besides Internet advertising. Under a new program to be unveiled Wednesday, Google will sell a package of e-mail, word processing and other office applications to third-party software resellers at a 20 percent discount in the United States. It will be up to the participating merchants whether the savings are passed along to their corporate customers, said Dave Girouard, who runs Google's business software division.

- Massachusetts Governor Deval Patrick announced yesterday a goal of building enough wind turbines in the state by 2020 to supply energy to 800,000 homes.


Reuters:
- Former Iowa Gov. Tom Vilsack said Wednesday he will promote renewable energy like biofuels and work for "more nutritious food produced in a sustainable way" if confirmed as U.S. agriculture secretary.


Financial Times:
- Oil companies and traders are storing enough oil in supertankers to supply the world for one day, in one of the most striking signs of supply outstripping demand as the impact of the economic crisis overshadows a string of Opec production cuts, the FT reported. According to Deutsche Bank’s oil trading desk “over 80m barrels of oil is now on floating storage”, double the industry assessment of about 40m-50m last month. Investment banks are joining oil companies and traders and entering into floating storage deals.

- Iran on Wednesday signed a $1.7bn worth of oil contract with China bypassing international sanctions over the country’s nuclear program. Jiang Jiemin, the president of CNPC, China’s largest oil and gas company, and the head of National Iranian Oil Company, Seifollah Jashnsaz, signed the contract to develop part of North Azadegan oil field.


TimesOnline:

- A tidal wave of discontent threatens China. The most famous Chinese dissident predicts the Government will be trapped between the angry poor and the powerful rich. China has a $2 trillion foreign currency reserve but it also suffers from a huge disparity between the rich and poor: while 0.4 per cent of the people hold 70 per cent of the wealth of the country, a fifth of the population - more than 300 million Chinese - have daily incomes of less than one dollar. This extreme concentration of wealth is a serious problem for the Chinese Government and threatens its grip on power.


Vedomosti:

- Russia may base their 2009 budget on $32 oil.


recast to "

Estado:

- Sao Paulo industrial output fell 14% in December.