Thursday, March 26, 2009

Stocks Soaring into Final Hour on Short-Covering, Declining Economic Fear, Lower Credit Market Angst, Lower Long-term Rates

BOTTOM LINE: The Portfolio is higher into the final hour on gains in my Technology longs, Medical longs, Retail longs and Biotech longs. I haven’t traded today, thus leaving the Portfolio 100% net long. The tone of the market is very positive as the advance/decline line is substantially higher, almost every sector is gaining and volume is above average. Investor anxiety is high. Today’s overall market action is very bullish. The VIX is falling 3.22% and is very high at 40.83. The ISE Sentiment Index is low at 99.0 and the total put/call is slightly above average at .89. Finally, the NYSE Arms has been running high most of the day, hitting 2.29 at its intraday peak, and is currently 1.49. The Euro Financial Sector Credit Default Swap Index is falling 2.18% today to 158.67 basis points. This index is down from its record March 10th high of 208.75. The North American Investment Grade Credit Default Swap Index is falling 1.35% to 178.95 basis points. This index is still below its Dec. 5th record high of 285.99. The TED spread is rising 4.4% to 109 basis points. The TED spread is now down 354 basis points since its all-time high of 463 basis points on October 10th. The 2-year swap spread is falling .85% to 58.50 basis points. The Libor-OIS spread is rising .14% to 99 basis points. The 10-year TIPS spread, a good gauge of inflation expectations, is rising 10 basis points to 1.50%, which is down 114 basis points since July 7th. 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 .14%, which is down 4 basis points today. The bears attempted to take down (XLF) late this afternoon and failed, which appears to have spurred another round of short-covering. (IYR), which is where the bears are focusing most of their attention right now, is seeing another late-day surge to session highs, rising 2.6%. It is a large positive that the major averages are able to rally meaningfully today as the financials digest recent outsized gains. The Transportation Index is soaring 7.2% today, breaking up through its 50-day moving average on volume, which is a major positive. I suspect many underinvested or bearish portfolio managers are starting to feel serious performance anxiety right about now. As well, put/call readings are showing a significant uptick in bearishness, which bodes well for an extension of recent gains. Nikkei futures indicate an +150 open in Japan and DAX futures indicate a +30 open in Germany tomorrow. I expect US stocks to trade modestly higher into the close from current levels on short-covering, diminishing credit market angst, bargain-hunting, lower long-term rates and declining economic fear.

Today's Headlines

Bloomberg:

- U.S. stocks rose, extending the market’s best monthly gain since 1987, on better-than-estimated earnings at Best Buy Co.(BBY) and ConAgra Foods Inc.(CAG) and prospects for lower labor costs at General Motors Corp.

- Treasuries rose as the government’s record $24 billion sale of seven-year notes drew a yield of 2.384 percent. The yield was close to the 2.385 percent forecast in a Bloomberg News survey of 10 bond-trading firms. Treasuries rose before the auction, the third in the government’s record $98 billion sale of notes this week. The benchmark 10-year note’s yield fell four basis points, or 0.04 percentage point, to 2.77 percent at 1:03 p.m. in New York, according to BGCantor Market Data.

- The U.S. 30-year fixed mortgage rate fell to 4.85 percent, the lowest on record, on a government plan to increase purchases of mortgage-backed bonds and buy as much as $300 billion of Treasuries. The average rate is the lowest in the Freddie Mac weekly survey dating to 1971, the McLean, Virginia-based mortgage buyer said today in a statement. The rate fell from 4.98 percent a week earlier, Freddie Mac said. Housing prices “aren’t that far from where we need to be if the economy stabilizes and starts growing again,” Susan Wachter, professor of real estate finance at the University of Pennsylvania’s Wharton School, said in a Bloomberg Radio interview on March 24. The Mortgage Bankers Association’s index of applications to purchase a home or refinance a loan soared 32 percent to 1,159.4 in the week ended March 20 from 876.9 the prior week. The group’s refinancing gauge surged 42 percent and its purchase index gained 4.2 percent.

- The cost to protect North American corporate debt from default using a benchmark credit-default swaps index fell for a fourth day. Credit-default swaps on the Markit CDX North America Investment-Grade Index Series 12, linked to 125 companies in the US and Canada, declined 3.5 basis points to 178.25 basis points as of 9:07 am in NY, according to Barclays Capital. The index has fallen more than 20 basis points since March 23.

- GameStop Corp.(GME), the world’s largest video-game retailer, said fourth-quarter profit rose 22 percent on holiday sales of “Guitar Hero” and Nintendo Co.’s Wii console. Net income increased to $232.3 million, or $1.39 a share, from $189.8 million, or $1.14, a year earlier, the Grapevine, Texas-based company said today in a statement distributed by Business Wire.

- Best Buy Co.(BBY), the largest U.S. electronics retailer, posted fourth-quarter profit that fell less than analysts estimated, helped by mobile-phone sales in Europe. The stock climbed 13 percent in New York trading. Sales rose 9.7 percent to $14.7 billion in the three months ended Feb. 28, the Richfield, Minnesota-based company said today in a statement.

- China, the world’s second-largest energy user, will face a power surplus in most regions this year as the slowing economy curbs demand, the nation’s top economic planner said. Power generators’ utilization rate will drop further this year, the National Development and Reform Commission said in a statement on its Web site today.

- American International Group Inc. will be subpoenaed today by New York Attorney General Andrew Cuomo for its credit-default swap contracts, according to a person familiar with the investigation. AIG’s Financial Products, the unit that sold credit-default swaps blamed for crippling the company, has been under fire after paying out $165 million in retention bonuses earlier this month while taking taxpayer bailouts of $182.5 billion. Cuomo started probing the credit-default swap market in September to see whether it was manipulated by short sellers to spread false rumors about financial companies.

- Lawmakers called for a federal investigation into $50 billion in payments to banks after the government bailed out American International Group Inc. “We would like to know if the AIG counterparty payments, as made, were in the best interests of the taxpayers,” said 27 members of Congress. Banks that bought credit-default swaps from AIG got $22.4 billion in collateral and $27.1 billion in payments from a U.S. entity to retire the derivatives, the insurer said earlier this month. Goldman Sachs Group Inc., Deutsche Bank AG., and Societe Generale SA were among the largest recipients.

- U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission Chairman Mary Schapiro said she will impose new rules on money managers to safeguard client holdings after Bernard Madoff’s $65 billion fraud shattered investor confidence. The SEC will propose that all investment advisers who have custody of customer assets undergo annual audits that are “unannounced,” Schapiro told members of the Senate Banking Committee today. Money managers may also be subject to compliance audits by professional examiners to make sure they are adhering to securities laws, she said.

- President Barack Obama said he plans to outline his strategy for the automobile industry and suggested he is open to providing automakers with more aid. “We need to preserve a U.S. auto industry,” Obama said today as he answered questions at a White House Internet town- hall event. “We will provide them with some help” even though “it’s not popular” right now to assist automakers. The “current economic model of the U.S. auto industry is unsustainable,” he said.

- US stocks have their best intraday returns starting at 2 pm in NY as institutional money managers begin buying, according to an analysis by Bespoke Investment Group LLC. “This could be a sign that the institutional money has been doing a lot of buying,” Bespoke co-founder Justin Walters wrote. “It’s a common belief on Wall Street that the institutional money(smart money) trades at the end of the day, while the individual money(dumb money) trades at the beginning of the day.”


Wall Street Journal:

- The volume of international air cargo fell in February at a similar rate as it did in the previous two months, offering faint hope that freight traffic, a key economic indicator, is stabilizing, albeit at a low level.

- The home electricity meter is getting a high-tech makeover, and chip makers stand to benefit. With a shove from the Obama Administration's stimulus package, utilities are replacing rusty electricity meters in favor of digital "smart meters" as part of a much broader update of U.S. energy infrastructure. The update of meters alone could represent billions in revenue for chip makers over the next decade, though how quickly utilities will roll out the new products remains unclear. Analog chip companies in particular - such as TI, Analog Devices Inc. (ADI), STMicronelectronics NV (STM), Freescale Semiconductor Inc. and others - will see most of the gains as the market expands. Smart meters use communications chips such as short distance radios, measurement devices, signal processors and microcontrollers to coordinate the different functions.

- Shares of solar companies soared Thursday following a media report that the Chinese government is open to supporting the local development of solar energy in China. Asian technology newspaper DigiTimes said in an article Thursday that China hasn't yet designed a program or set a schedule for solar energy subsidies as costs of solar power generation are still too high. DigiTimes attributed the comments made at a Taiwan-China photovoltaic industry convention to officials from the Chinese Department of Renewable Energy.

- New life is being pumped into the beaten-down hedge fund industry as laid-off workers from the banking sector, and others looking for a fresh start, try their hand at lead-managing other people's money. This new batch of fund managers is taking advantage of a view held by many that being new to the field can be a good thing. Investors see them as being untainted by the problems that plagued the hedge fund industry in 2008 - everything from negative returns to corruption scandals like the one involving Bernard Madoff.

- The Senate Budget Committee began debating amendments to the Senate's budget framework for next fiscal year as tensions persist between congressional Democrats and President Barack Obama on his $3.6 trillion budget plan. Wednesday, Mr. Obama urged Democrats to maintain party unity and preserve his fiscal priorities, and congressional leaders are largely doing so. But important differences are emerging over issues such as climate change and health care, as well as spending.

- North Korea has mounted a rocket on a launchpad on its northeast coast, U.S. officials said, putting Pyongyang well on track for a launch the U.S. and South Korea warned Thursday would be a major provocation with serious consequences.


CNBC:

- Schork Oil Outlook: The Bulls Will Run Out of Gas.

- Business groups and a senior Democratic lawmaker are pressuring the U.S. auditing watchdog to get in line with likely changes to a controversial mark-to-market accounting rule that has forced banks to record billions of dollars of writedowns. The Financial Accounting Standards Board, which sets U.S. accounting rules, has already bowed to congressional demands and proposed giving banks more flexibility to value their toxic assets in the current frozen markets. Now business groups are turning up the heat on the Public Company Accounting Oversight Board, the Washington D.C.-based audit watchdog, to do its part to be more flexible in its application of the accounting rule. "We don't want to get into a situation where one-half of financial reporting world is making a lot of changes and the other is not," said Thomas Quaadman, executive director of reporting policy at the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, the largest business lobbying group. "If (the PCAOB) is not on the same wavelength, it will all be for naught," he said. If the PCAOB does not act expeditiously, Congress may get involved as it did with FASB.

- Private equity risk appetite is beginning to build after months of extreme caution, say industry players, who see opportunities even as the economic climate appears bleak. "One of the truths about private equity is the best time to invest is during the downturn," said Simon Walker, chief executive of the British Venture Capital Association (BCVA), at the Reuters Hedge Funds and Private Equity Summit in London. The views come a day after Larry Kantor, head of research at Barclays Capital, said it was time for investors to be more aggressive. "Expectations have been driven down to extremes, and the beginnings of a global economic recovery are evident," Kantor said.


Chicagotribune.com:
- Before its portfolio of bad loans helped trigger the current housing crisis, mortgage giant Freddie Mac was the focus of a major accounting scandal that led to a management shake-up, huge fines and scalding condemnation of passive directors by a top federal regulator. One of those allegedly asleep-at-the-switch board members was Chicago's Rahm Emanuel—now chief of staff to President Barack Obama—who made at least $320,000 for a 14-month stint at Freddie Mac that required little effort. As gatekeeper to Obama, Emanuel now plays a critical role in addressing the nation's mortgage woes and fulfilling the administration's pledge to impose responsibility on the financial world. Emanuel's Freddie Mac involvement has been a prominent point on his political résumé, and his healthy payday from the firm has been no secret either. What is less known, however, is how little he apparently did for his money and how he benefited from the kind of cozy ties between Washington and Wall Street that have fueled the nation's current economic mess.


NY Times:

- Executives at Goldman Sachs(GS) made it clear that they wanted to give back the government aid the firm had received. A bill winding its way through Congress that would impose a 90 percent tax on bonuses for banks that receive government assistance reinforces that desire. So let’s assume that regulators give Goldman the go-ahead. The question would be, would the firm want to replenish some of the money by selling new stock to the public? But Goldman still needs to reckon with Warren Buffett. Berkshire Hathaway, led by Mr. Buffett, injected $5 billion into Goldman last September in return for preferred shares. That, combined with a common stock offering, helped bolster Goldman’s capital in the wake of the Lehman Brothers bankruptcy. But Mr. Buffett’s involvement came with a condition that could qualify him for some kind of compensation.

- Gov. David A. Paterson and New York legislative leaders have reached an agreement to dismantle much of what remains of the state’s strict 1970s-era drug laws, once among the toughest in the nation. The deal would repeal many of the mandatory minimum prison sentences now in place for lower-level drug felons, giving judges the authority to send first-time nonviolent offenders to treatment instead of prison. The plan would also expand drug treatment programs and widen the reach of drug courts at a cost of at least $50 million.

- Tempers are flaring across Europe as the economic pain deepens and more people lose their jobs.

- After several gloomy months, experts say that the stimulus package is beginning — just beginning — to revive interest in wind and solar power.


Forbes.com:

- Wilbur Ross, Mortgage King? The housing market’s still sliding, but he’s doubling down on a massive subprime bet – and picking fights along the way.


Fox Business:

- Pepco Holdings, Inc. (NYSE:POM) today announced contracts to purchase the first of what could be nearly 2 million smart meters for installation in the homes and businesses of customers in three states and the District of Columbia over the next five years. The new digital meters are a critical component of PHI's plan to build a smart grid network that could eventually serve the company's 1.9 million customers in Delaware, the District of Columbia, Maryland and New Jersey.


AppleInsider:

- An interesting but at times erratic patent filing from Apple published for the first time this week describes a proprietary in-car navigation system focused on maintaining driver safety while a vehicle is in motion. The 11-page filing starts off by noting that the use of a conventional navigation system in a moving vehicle often raises safety concerns, particularly if the driver of the vehicle is attempting to operate the navigation system while simultaneously operating the vehicle.Apple's solution to the problem calls for a smarter touchscreen-based navigation system that may be either a self-mounted handheld device like an iPhone or one that's hardwired into the car. Either could tie into various forms of sensors and I/O devices such as a speaker and a microphone to facilitate voice-enabled functionalities, such as navigation, stereo, and phone functions. A loud speaker could also be included to facilitate hands-free voice command functionalities, such as voice activated entry for requesting driving directions.


NewTeeVee:

- We’ve heard from multiple sources that RIM is planning to announce a full-episode television service for BlackBerry users as early as next week at CTIA. Here’s what we’ve heard so far:


The NY Observer:

- The New York Times is expected to make an announcement later today that editors will be taking a pay cut, and members of the Times’ Guild—who makes up the majority of the reporters in the newsroom—will be asked to do the same. For the time being, there aren’t expected to be layoffs.


Politico:

- House Republicans have begun unveiling detailed alternatives to President Barack Obama’s policies — a concerted effort to push back against Democratic efforts to label them “the Party of No.” On Wednesday, it was a housing plan. Thursday, it will be a big, TV-friendly stack of budget blueprints, “The Republican Road to Recovery.” That’s to match the president’s own platitudinous budget title, “A New Era of Responsibility.” The House Republicans’ budget document, provided to POLITICO ahead of its release, makes sure no one can miss the point: Each chapter begins “The Republican Plan,” and each section is divided into “The President’s Budget” and “Republicans’ Solution.”


Moneynews.com:

- George Soros has no worries about the global recession. He and a handful of others in the arcane and virtually unregulated world of hedge funds have made a bundle off the global recession. “I'm having a very good crisis,” Soros says, quoted by the U.K. Daily Mail. As the Obama administration sets its sets on reining in the industry, Soros and others literally made billions by taking contrarian bets against stocks. As stocks fell in half, pension funds collapsed and millions of savers watched their 401(k)s founder, Soros made $1.1 billion last year. “It is, in a way, the culminating point of my life’s work,” Soros told The Australian.


Reuters:
- China's sparring with the West has inspired its own angry best-seller, lashing foreign targets and the country's own elite with scorn popular with some readers but worrying for a government wanting to tether nationalism. "China is Unhappy" has sold quickly since its publication earlier this month, but some state-run newspapers have fretted over its scathing assaults on the United States and the West -- blasts that also spatter doubt on Beijing's own policies. Chinese President Hu Jintao goes to London next week for a G20 summit aimed at steadying the battered global economy. But Washington has behaved no better than a crime gang boss, write the five authors of this polemic. The American people "were not entirely duped. They just wanted big houses without working for them," he adds. But the book, which is in the Chinese language, also lacerates China's own policies, accusing officials of incompetence and stifling conservatism. And the book's assault on these home targets may help explain the prominent criticism of it that has spread in official media. "In fact, a key focus of the book is domestic problems," Huang Jisu, one of the authors, told Reuters.

- IBM's (IBM) talks to acquire Sun Microsystems Inc (JAVA) are continuing and may extend beyond next week, according to a person with knowledge of the matter. The source, who requested anonimity as the person was not authorized to speak about the talks, said IBM was still examining Sun's business as part of its due diligence process.

- The U.S. recession could end around mid-year, giving way to a subdued recovery before "healthy" growth kicks in from mid-2010, Gary Stern, Minneapolis Fed President, said on Thursday. Stern, in a speech to the Economic Club of Minnesota, said the threat of deflation resulting from the downturn in global economic activity should fade as the economy recovers. "I am guardedly optimistic that many pieces are now in place to contribute to improvement in financial market conditions and in business activity," Stern said. "There is reason to think that improvement is not too far off."

- When small U.S. defense subcontractor Axsys Technologies (AXYS) put itself up for sale this month, it sparked talk of another round of consolidation in the defense technology market. Shifting priorities in defense spending toward intelligence and surveillance, and away from big-ticket weapons programs, have resulted in cash-rich defense contractors such as Lockheed Martin Corp (LMT), Boeing Co (BA) and Northrop Grumman Corp (NOC) scouting for smaller players with niche technologies. Industry experts said companies such as American Science and Engineering Inc (ASEI), which makes X-ray detection systems, and Comtech Telecommunications Corp (CMTL), known for its communications products, are attractive targets. Other well-placed companies are Argon ST (STST) and Applied Signal Technology Inc (APSG), the only listed firms that sell signal intelligence gear.

- Barclays Capital on Thursday named banks that may benefit the most and those who may gain the least from the slew of recent government actions to prop up the financial markets. According to Barclays estimates, Citigroup Inc (C) and JPMorgan Chase & Co (JPM) are among banks that will emerge the top winners, while regional banks, like Fifth Third Bancorp (FITB), may see the least benefit.


Financial Times:
- The US has told its Nato partners that funds from individuals in Gulf states such as Saudi Arabia now rival drug money as a source of financing for Taliban insurgents in Afghanistan. The US launched a high-profile push to reduce Gulf funding for the Taliban, al-Qaeda and other militant groups operating out of Afghanistan in the immediate aftermath of the September 11 attacks in 2001. As a result, in recent years insurgent links to Afghanistan's burgeoning heroin trade have become the principal focus. But Richard Holbrooke, US special representative for Afghanistan and Pakistan, expressed fresh concerns to Nato ambassadors during a briefing this week on the US's strategic review of Afghan-Pakistan policy, which is expected to be announced tomorrow. "He said that the prime source of funding for the Taliban is not from narcotics but from private individuals in the Gulf region," said a western diplomat, without giving further details. "There is real concern about funding for extremists in the Afghanistan-Pakistan region coming from the Gulf, which we understand rivals or exceeds the money they are getting from drugs," said another diplomat, quoting estimates of $150m-$300m for insurgents' drugs cash. The US has for some time been pushing Saudi Arabia to ensure that funds raised for charities do not ultimately finance Islamist militants.

- Obama’s bank plan could rob the taxpayer. The Geithner-Summers plan, officially called the public/private investment program, is a thinly veiled attempt to transfer up to hundreds of billions of dollars of US taxpayer funds to the commercial banks, by buying toxic assets from the banks at far above their market value. It is dressed up as a market transaction but that is a fig-leaf, since the government will put in 90 per cent or more of the funds and the “price discovery” process is not genuine. It is no surprise that stock market capitalization of the banks has risen about 50 per cent from the lows of two weeks ago. Taxpayers are the losers, even as they stand on the sidelines cheering the rise of the stock market. It is their money fuelling the rally, yet the banks are the beneficiaries. The plan’s essence is to use government off-budget money to overpay for banks’ toxic assets, perhaps by a factor of two or more. This is done by creating a one-way bet for private-sector bidders for the toxic assets, then cynically calling it “private sector price discovery”.

Bear Radar

Style Underperformer:
Large-cap Value (+.77%)

Sector Underperformers:
Tobacco (-.82%), Banks (+.01%) and Foods (+.21%)

Stocks Falling on Unusual Volume:
VE, CONN, SNDA, SYNA and BPL

Stocks With Unusual Put Option Activity:
1) EXPD 2) STP 3) UTHR 4) STLD 5) BAX

Bull Radar

Style Outperformer:
Small-cap Growth (+1.66%)

Sector Outperformers:
Alternative Energy (+5.51%), Road & Rail (+4.45%) and Homebuilding (+4.34%)

Stocks Rising on Unusual Volume:
TSL, FORM, RTP, RTN, CLF, STP, PETS, ELP, CTRN, CONN, ARST, SCHL, PNFP, TNDM, RVBD, WGOV, MTXX, FSYS, ENER, BRCM, PRGO, GMKT, ASIA, HOTT, MYGN, KALU, BCPC, ODFL, DSC, BBY, TXI, ZNH, PWO and ALV

Stocks With Unusual Call Option Activity:
1) ASH 2) LDK 3) CY 4) MU 5) BCS

Links of Interest

Market Snapshot Commentary
Market Performance Summary
Style Performance
Sector Performance
WSJ Data Center
Top 20 Biz Stories
IBD Breaking News
Movers & Shakers
Upgrades/Downgrades
In Play
NYSE Unusual Volume
NASDAQ Unusual Volume

Hot Spots

Option Dragon

NASDAQ 100 Heatmap

Chart Toppers
Real-Time Intraday Quote/Chart
HFR Global Hedge Fund Indices

Wednesday, March 25, 2009

Thursday Watch

Late-Night Headlines
Bloomberg:

- Yields on bonds backed by commercial mortgages fell relative to benchmark interest rates after the government announced that its $1 trillion program to unfreeze credit markets would include older securities. The spread on AAA commercial real estate debt was about 9.8 percentage points more than the benchmark swap rate today, down 2.53 percentage points since U.S. Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner released details of the plan on March 23, Bank of America Corp. data show. The Treasury will include commercial mortgage bonds in its Term Asset-Backed Securities Loan Facility and extend the program beyond newly issued bonds to revive lending and resuscitate the economy by cleansing financial institutions of so-called legacy assets that have clogged bank balance sheets. Expanding the facility to older debt is “incredibly important” for commercial-mortgage backed securities, said Kenneth Hackel, head of fixed-income strategy at RBS Greenwich Capital. The cost to protect top-rated commercial mortgage debt from default is about 565 basis points, according to a note to clients today from Goldman Sachs Group Inc. in New York, compared with about 747 basis points on March 20. Top-rated commercial mortgage-bond spreads may narrow by as much as 500 basis points in “coming months,” JPMorgan Chase & Co. analysts led by Alan Todd in New York said in a report yesterday.

- Red Hat Inc.(RHT), the biggest seller of the Linux operating system, met analysts’ estimates with its fourth-quarter profit and first-quarter forecast, sending the shares up 8.7 percent in late trading. Profit was 22 cents a share in the period ended Feb. 28, excluding stock-based compensation and other expenses, Raleigh, North Carolina-based Red Hat said today in a statement. That compared with the 20-cent average estimate of analysts in a Bloomberg survey. Sales rose 17 percent to $166.2 million.

- The cost of protecting Asia-Pacific corporate and government bonds from default declined after unexpected growth in US durable-goods orders and new-home sales spurred optimism of an end to the global recession. The Markit iTraxx Japan index of credit-default swaps fell 15 basis points to 385 at 10:12 am in Tokyo, Barclays Capital prices show. The Markit iTraxx Australia index was quoted 5 basis points lower at 3455 as of 12:16 pm in Sydney, Citigroup Inc. prices show.

- Traders trimmed bets the euro will gain versus the dollar on speculation the European Central Bank will lower interest rates to bolster the region’s economies, options show. The euro’s one-month 25-delta risk-reversal rate against the dollar shows that premiums on euro call options over put options fell from record highs. The rate slid to as little as 0.55 percent yesterday, a one-week low, Bloomberg data show. It stood at 0.72 at 11:20 a.m. in Tokyo, from 1.17 on March 20, the most since Bloomberg started compiling the data in 2003. “Risk-reversals have been skewed to euro bulls,” said Koji Fukaya, a senior currency strategist at the Tokyo unit of Deutsche Bank AG. “The European currency should naturally be sold after a sharp surge and may weaken in the long run,” as the pace of Europe’s economic recovery is likely to be slower than in the U.S., he said.

- The collapse of the Czech government threatened a new setback for the European Union’s stalled governing treaty, distracting the bloc’s leadership just as President Barack Obama presses for bolder European steps to confront the recession. Czech Prime Minister Mirek Topolanek is set to tender his resignation today after losing a March 24 no-confidence vote, raising a new hurdle to passage of the treaty by lawmakers in Prague. A setback there may undercut a referendum in Ireland, the only other country that still hasn’t ratified it. The defeat also hamstrung the Czech government midway through its six-month EU presidency, opening a political vacuum in the run-up to European Parliament elections and a battle over top EU appointments in June. “The European Union over the next three months risks being where the United States was in the last three months of 2008 -- a lame duck waiting for elections and a new setup, institutionally and politically,” said Antonio Missiroli, chief analyst at the European Policy Centre, a Brussels research group.

- China Shipping Container Lines Co., the country’s second-largest cargo-box carrier, said 2008 profit tumbled 99 percent as a global recession caused rates to tumble. Net income fell to 42.97 million yuan ($6.3 million), from a restated 3.23 billion yuan a year earlier, the Shanghai-based company said in a statement to Hong Kong’s exchange today. That compares with the 443.4 million yuan average of seven analyst estimates complied by Bloomberg.


Wall Street Journal:

- A top official in organized labor acknowledged that some changes to controversial legislation that would make it easier for unions to organize might be needed in order to attract more support from lawmakers.

- Intel Corp.'s(INTC) next chip for server systems, expected to be formally introduced Monday, is arriving at a critical time for recession-wary technology companies.

- President Barack Obama urged Democrats on Capitol Hill Wednesday to maintain party unity and preserve his fiscal priorities, as the House and Senate began moving on companion versions of a $3.6 trillion budget that would make good on his promise to cut the federal deficit in half. Congressional leaders are sticking broadly to the priorities outlined by Mr. Obama in a budget message sent earlier this month to Capitol Hill. But important differences are emerging, as tensions simmer among Democrats over issues such as climate change and health care, as well as spending. Notably, Democratic leaders in both chambers are pushing packages that call for narrower deficits and less spending than proposed by the White House. And those levels could go lower, especially in the Senate, where moderate Democrats from conservative states will be an important factor in the debate on the floor next week.


MarketWatch.com:
- NYSE Euronext (NYX) announced that its wholly-owned subsidiary, NYSE Arca, today began trading the IQ Hedge Multi-Strategy Tracker ETF under the ticker symbol "QAI." The ETF is sponsored by IndexIQ Advisors LLC. The IQ Hedge Multi-Strategy Tracker ETF is the first ETF to track hedge fund replication and the first product by IndexIQ Advisors to list on NYSE Arca.


NY Times:

- The Obama administration will detail on Thursday a wide-ranging plan to overhaul financial regulation by subjecting hedge funds and traders of exotic financial instruments, now among the biggest and most freewheeling players on Wall Street, to potentially strict new government supervision, officials said. The Treasury secretary, Timothy F. Geithner, will outline the broad revamping of the regulatory system, which goes further than expected, in a hearing on Thursday. The plan, which would require Congressional approval, would give the government vast new powers over “systemically important” banks and other financial institutions that are so big that their collapse would jeopardize the economy as a whole. The government would have the power to peer into the inner workings of companies that currently escape most federal supervision — insurance companies like the American International Group, multibillion-dollar hedge funds like the Citadel Group and private equity firms like the Carlyle Group or Kohlberg, Kravis & Roberts. If regulators decided that a company had become “too big to fail,” as was the case with A.I.G. in September, they would subject it to much stricter capital requirements than smaller rivals and much closer scrutiny of its borrowing levels and its trading partners, or counterparties. But the most striking new proposals, and the ones that may provoke the most heated opposition from the industry, would regulate so-called private pools of capital — hedge funds, private equity funds and venture capital funds — and the gigantic market in financial derivatives, including instruments like credit-default swaps, the insurancelike instruments that allow investors to hedge against bond defaults. Under the administration proposal, hedge fund, private equity and venture capital fund advisers would for the first time have to register with the S.E.C. They would be required to provide the government — on a confidential basis — information on how much they borrow to leverage their investments as well as information about their investors and trading partners. the administration would regulate trading in more exotic derivatives that trade privately, like the credit-default swaps that were used both to hedge against and to speculate on high-risk mortgage-backed securities. These more exotic products have been traded almost entirely in the informal, over-the-counter market that lies outside regulatory scrutiny. The administration would require that all standardized derivatives be traded through a regulated clearinghouse. Traders would be required to provide documentation on their collateral and borrowings. They would also be subject to new eligibility requirements, and their trading and settlement practices would be subject to new standards.


IBD:

- Botox maker Allergan (AGN) shot up Tuesday on reports that drug giant GlaxoSmithKline (GSK) may bid for it.


Politico:

- House Minority Leader John A. Boehner snarled at moderate Democrats Wednesday, but the real bite came from liberal groups frustrated by centrist opposition to Barack Obama’s budget priorities. As Boehner accused Blue Dog Democrats of being “lap dogs” for Obama, MoveOn.org and Americans United for Change, the labor-backed organization that serves as the White House’s chief third-party operation, began airing ads Wednesday urging moderate Democrats in both the House and the Senate to get on board with the president’s budget. Among the targets of Americans United for Change is Sen. Mark Pryor (D-Ark.), who declared the ads “not very helpful.” “The liberal groups need to understand that we are not elected to represent the president,” Pryor said. “We’re elected to represent our states, and we are trying to reflect the attitudes and values of the people who sent us to Washington.” Sen. Evan Bayh (D-Ind.) is also unhappy with the friendly fire. Bayh announced last week that a group of centrist Democrats had come together to negotiate as a bloc with the White House and party leaders on major legislation. He promptly found himself targeted by an ad accusing him of “standing in the way of President Obama’s reforms.”


The Hedge Fund Journal:

- SunGard has launched an online market data service that will help corporate executives anticipate if short sellers are targeting their share price. SunGard’s Short Insights will help CEOs, CFOs and investor relations professionals stay informed of lending activity in the shares of their company, which is often viewed as a proxy for short selling, and also the shares of their competitors on a daily basis.


Reuters:

- U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton said on Wednesday that an "insatiable" appetite in the United States for illegal drugs was to blame for much of the violence plaguing Mexico.

- Intel Corp (INTC) Chief Executive Paul Otellini said IBM's (IBM) discussions to acquire Sun Microsystems Inc (JAVA) are likely to succeed for one ringing reason: Money Talks. During a chat with Intel employees on Monday, Otellini said it is no surprise International Business Machines Corp's interest in the high-end computer maker comes in the wake of a plunge in Sun's stock price.

- The U.S. government's plan to help private investors buy bad bank assets may be a boon for big banks, particularly those that bought rivals last year, but smaller lenders are much less likely to benefit. The plan, known as the Public-Private Investment Program, gives government help to private investors looking to buy loans and securities from banks. But banks are most likely to sell assets they have already written down substantially. That typically means bank loans acquired from another bank, or securities portfolios, two classes of assets that are abundant at some larger banks, and in short supply at smaller banks.

- Shares in Hynix Semiconductor Inc. extended gains by mid-morning Thursday to rise more than 12 percent, helped by a recovery in memory chip prices and the firm's improving outlook. Spot prices of key dynamic random access memory (DRAM) chips rose more than 4 percent on Tuesday, according to DRAMeXchange.


Financial Times:
- Short interest on the New York Stock Exchange rose to its highest level since the collapse of Lehman during the month to mid-March and at its highest rate in more than a year as hedge funds increased their bets against the rally in US equities during that period. From February 27 to Friday March 13, the benchmark S&P 500 index rose about 3 per cent, prompting talk among participants of a lasting rally in the US stock markets, which have been battered by the recession. But over that two-week period, as the equity market rallied, short interest rose to 4.2 per cent of all shares outstanding, up from 3.8 per cent at the end of February. The broader stock market rally was eclipsed by several prominent stocks, but short sellers took the view that the gains by these stocks, particularly those most affected by the crisis so far, were unsustainable. For example Citigroup©, which was down 79 per cent for the year to the end of February, rose 19 per cent over the first two weeks of March. But short sellers appeared to take the view that the gains were unsustainable and increased their short position in the stock by almost five times over that period. In fact Citigroup was the most shorted stock on the NYSE over the period with a short position of 998.7m shares. The second most shorted stock was Ford Motor(F) , followed by General Electric(GE), AIG(AIG) and Bank of America(BAC). US regulators are pondering the best way to regulate the activities of “naked” short sellers whom many blame for mounting bear raids on companies which can artificially drive down their share prices and even push them to failure.

- US retail investors poured close to $250bn (€184bn) into bank accounts in the first months of this year, sharply accelerating a flight to safety as they continued to flee volatile stock markets. Bank savings deposits rose by $246bn to a record $4,343bn in the nine weeks to March 9, according to data from the Federal Reserve. This is more than the whole of 2008, in which savings deposits rose by $229bn. It is not clear where all the deposits came from but in the first two months of the year investors pulled $20bn from stock mutual funds – almost half the total $43bn redeemed during the whole of 2008 – as they appeared to lose confidence in stock markets, according to data from Financial Research Corporation. During the first nine weeks of the year, investors pulled a small amount – $15bn – from savings accounts with a period of notice, in an apparent indication they were reluctant to lock up cash for even short periods of time. The previous record year for a rise in bank deposits was 2002, following the dotcom boom, when deposits rose by $465bn. “During hard times people worry about return of principal, not return on principal,” Mr Biderman said.

- A Citigroup(C) investment management unit is to start fundraising for a new fund that will look to buy up the debt of banks. The new fund under the bank’s fixed income investment management (FIIM) unit will start marketing to investors next week with the hope of raising about $250m, with a mandate for buying up undervalued bank bonds issued by the leading banks, according to people with knowledge of the situation.


TimesOnline:

- Britain’s ambition to become a global leader in renewable energy suffered a major setback last night when the world’s biggest investor in wind power said that it was slashing its investment program. The announcement comes less than two months after ministers backed a string of huge gas-fired power stations, prompting concern that the Government cannot fulfil its promise of a green energy revolution.


Late Buy/Sell Recommendations
Citigroup:

- Reiterated Buy on (CE), added to Top Picks Live list, target $15.


Night Trading
Asian Indices are unch. to +1.75% on average.
S&P 500 futures +.73%.
NASDAQ 100 futures +.73%.


Morning Preview
US AM Market Call
NASDAQ 100 Pre-Market Indicator/Heat Map
Pre-market Commentary
Pre-market Stock Quote/Chart
Global Commentary
WSJ Intl Markets Performance
Commodity Futures
Top 25 Stories
Top 20 Business Stories
Today in IBD
In Play
Bond Ticker
Economic Preview/Calendar
Earnings Calendar

Conference Calendar

Who’s Speaking?
Upgrades/Downgrades
Rasmussen Business/Economy Polling


Earnings of Note
Company/EPS Estimate
- (BBY)/1.40

- (TXI)/-.02

- (DPS)/.37

- (GME)/1.34

- (CAG)/.36


Economic Releases

8:30 am EST

- Final 4Q GDP is estimated to decline 6.6% versus a prior estimate of a 6.2% decrease.

- Final 4Q Personal Consumption is estimated to fall 4.4% versus a prior estimate of a 4.3% fall.

- Final 4Q GDP Price Index is estimated to rise .5% versus a prior estimate of a .5% increase.

- Final 4Q Core PCE is estimated to rise .8% versus a prior estimate of a .8% gain.

- Initial Jobless Claims for last week are estimated to rise to 650K versus 646K the prior week.

- Continuing Claims are expected to rise to 5475K versus 5473K prior.


Upcoming Splits
- None of note


Other Potential Market Movers
- The Fed’s Lockhart speaking, Fed’s Lacker speaking, Geithner Testifying on Financial Market Regulation, Fed’s Fisher speaking, Fed’s Stern speaking, Needham Healthcare Conference, (LXK) analyst meeting, (SRE) analyst meeting, Lazard Medical Device Tech Conference, (HIG) special meeting of shareholders and the Think Equity ThinkGreen Conference could also impact trading today.


BOTTOM LINE: Asian indices are mostly higher, boosted by financial and technology stocks in the region. I expect US equities to open mixed and to rally into the afternoon, finishing modestly higher. The Portfolio is 100% net long heading into the day.