Bloomberg:
- The cost to protect North American corporate bonds from default fell to the lowest in two weeks, trading in a benchmark credit-default swaps index shows. Credit-default swaps on the Markit CDX North American Investment-Grade index of 125 companies in the US and Canada dropped seven basis points to 229 basis points as of 12:49 pm in NY, according to broker Phoenix Partners Group. Contracts tied to General Electric’s finance arm declined the equivalent of 13 basis points to 700 basis points, Phoenix prices show. Default swaps on Citigroup Inc. fell 23 basis points to 511 basis points, according to CMA Datavision in London. Contracts on Bank of America fell 28 basis points to 272 basis points, and Wells Fargo of San Francisco dropped 11 to 206.
Wall Street Journal:
CNBC.com:
- China probably won’t dump dollar assets because it doesn’t want to risk hurting its massive holdings of US currency or its competiveness, Goldman Sachs International Vice Chairman Robert Hormats said.
NY Times:
CNNMoney.com:
- President Barack Obama’s approval ratings are slipping as Americans fret about the economy, a CNN poll found. Obama’s approval rating declined to 64 percent in a March 12-15 survey conducted for CNN by Opinion Research Corp. That’s down from 76 percent in a Feb. 7-8 poll. The new president’s disapproval rating climbed to 34 percent from 23 percent.
LA Times:
FINalternatives:
Miami Herald:
The Hill:
USAToday.com:
- Advertising is falling off a cliff, viewers are tuning out and debt is nearly impossible to refinance. No wonder most media stocks have been horrible bets. The exception? The Discovery Channel. Discovery Communications Inc (DISCA), which also owns the Animal Planet and Science Channel cable networks, was the target of far more new money from hedge funds than any other U.S. company in the last quarter, according to Thomson Reuters Ownership data.