Thursday, May 14, 2009

Friday Watch

Late-Night Headlines
Bloomberg:

- Michael Price, who said the market now is “ideal for a stock picker,” said he bought shares of BB&T Corp. and that community banks are attractive investments. “This is what you wait for: Being prepared on valuations and waiting for the market to hand you things at big discounts,” Price, who managed some of the best-performing mutual funds during the 1980s and 1990s and now runs New York- based MFP Investors LLC, said in an interview with Bloomberg Radio.

- Prudential Financial Inc., Hartford Financial Services Group Inc. and Allstate Corp. are among six insurers approved by the U.S. government for bailout funds after investment declines eroded capital across the industry. Hartford won preliminary approval for $3.4 billion from the Treasury Department’s capital purchase program, the Connecticut- based insurer said today in a statement. A person familiar with the matter said five other carriers won preliminary approval, including Lincoln National Corp., Principal Financial Group Inc. and Ameriprise Financial Inc.

- Nordstrom Inc.(JWN), the U.S. department- store chain with more than 100 namesake locations, raised its annual forecast and said first-quarter profit fell less than analysts estimated after it controlled inventories. Earnings this year will be as much as $1.50 a share, compared with the company’s previous projection for as much as $1.40. The average of analysts’ estimates compiled by Bloomberg is $1.26. Nordstrom rose 4.2 percent in late New York trading after the earnings were released. Earlier, the shares rose 68 cents, or 3.4 percent, to $20.95 in New York Stock Exchange composite trading. They have surged 57 percent this year.

- China’s stock-market boom is as clear a bubble as you will find, the conventional wisdom says. With the U.K., Germany and much of the euro area in recessions, feel free to engage in the fiction that China’s $3.2 trillion economy will save the world. Far from that happening, global trends will increasingly close in on export-driven China. The flaw in this assumption is that it takes for granted that all those stimulus yuan will be spent wisely and productively on worthy projects and companies. It assumes that those investments, much of them funded with debt, will morph into well-paying jobs that generate wealth for China’s people. An even more fantastic assumption is that little of China’s stimulus efforts will be squandered by corruption. It’s hard to know how China can avoid vast amounts of public money being siphoned off by local government officials to speculate on stocks or property or to make luxury-good purchases. Even if China ekes out healthy growth this year, the question is what it will cost. China may be setting the stage for a Japan-like bad-loan crisis a few years from now. One also has to wonder if China is moving fast enough to rebalance its economy away from exports toward domestic demand. China’s public-relations machine is working overtime to spin this story. Its success in getting the global media to play along explains why investors are rushing into Chinese shares. Just because China has built a more sustainable bubble, supported by the promise of ever more government largess, doesn’t explain away the challenges facing the fastest-growing major economy.

- A gene test performed on colon cancer samples may identify patients with a higher risk of relapse, giving doctors a new tool to decide whether early-stage patients should undergo chemotherapy after surgery, researchers said. The test, called Oncotype DX by its developer, Genomic Health Inc., of Redwood City, California, found patients who showed a pattern of 18 selected genes had more than a two-fold greater chance of cancer coming back, compared with patients who had lower-risk genes, according to a research preview reported today by the American Society of Clinical Oncology. The test failed to find genes that predict whether two standard chemotherapy drugs could prevent recurrance. Doctors can’t predict when colon cancer, diagnosed in 146,970 people yearly in the U.S., will return in early stage patients. While the new test may be useful “as a tie-breaker” in patients whose need for chemotherapy is unclear, it isn’t the final answer, said Alan Venook, professor of medicine at the University of California San Francisco.

- OSI Pharmaceuticals Inc.’s(OSI) tumor- fighting drug Tarceva slowed the progression of lung cancer when given earlier in treatment for the disease, a study found, though the benefits were deemed modest in initial reviews by investors and physicians. Tarceva, a once-a-day pill that OSI markets in the U.S. with Roche Holding AG’s Genentech unit, increased the time it took for patients’ cancer to worsen compared with those on a placebo, when given immediately after chemotherapy, according to data released today in advance of a medical meeting. The Saturn study involved 889 patients with advanced lung cancer.

- U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton said North Korea won’t be offered concessions to return to six-nation nuclear talks and called on the communist state to abide by its commitments to disarm. “The ball is in the North Korean court,” Clinton told reporters yesterday. “We are not concerned about chasing after North Korea, about offering concessions to North Korea.”

- Foreign direct investment in China fell for a seventh month from a year earlier as companies cut spending to weather the world’s worst financial crisis since World War II. Investment dropped 22.5 percent to $5.89 billion in April, the commerce ministry said at a briefing in Beijing today. That compares with a 9.5 percent decline in March. For the first four months of this year, spending fell 21 percent to $27.67 billion.


Wall Street Journal:

- This week Congress is set to release the details of the Waxman-Markey American Clean Energy and Security Act, a bill that purports to combat global warming by setting strict limits on carbon emissions. I'm not a candidate for any office -- now or ever again -- and I've approached the "climate change" debate with an open-mind. But it's clear to me that the nation, and in particular Indiana, my home state, will be terribly disserved by this cap-and-trade policy on the verge of passage in the House. The largest scientific and economic questions are being addressed by others, so I will confine myself to reporting about how all this looks from the receiving end of the taxes, restrictions and mandates Congress is now proposing. Quite simply, it looks like imperialism. This bill would impose enormous taxes and restrictions on free commerce by wealthy but faltering powers -- California, Massachusetts and New York -- seeking to exploit politically weaker colonies in order to prop up their own decaying economies. Because proceeds from their new taxes, levied mostly on us, will be spent on their social programs while negatively impacting our economy, we Hoosiers decline to submit meekly.

- Iraq expects to award the contract to develop the giant Nassiriyah oil field in the southern part of the country to one of three competing international companies in June, Iraq's oil minister said Thursday. He also said his ministry is planning to invite international companies to compete for developing the southern portion of the East Baghdad oil field near the Iraqi capital. Italy's Eni SpA (E), Japan's Nippon Oil Corp. (5001.TO) and Spain's Repsol YPF SA (REP) have submitted bids to develop the Nassiriyah oil field, located in the Dhi Qar region. Iraq had invited the three companies in January to compete for the field, which has estimated crude oil reserves of around 4 billion barrels. Shahristani previously has said the field could produce 100,000 barrels a day within 18 months from the start of development. The East Baghdad oil field currently produces only about 17,000 barrels a day, and the ministry is planning to further develop the field, which has estimated reserves of 7.5 billion barrels. Iraq has announced two rounds of bidding, offering 19 oil and gas fields for development to international oil companies with the aim of boosting crude oil output to 6 million barrels a day in five years, from about 2.4 million barrels a day currently. The oil ministry wants to develop the Nassiriyah oil field and the southern portion of the East Baghdad field as quickly as possible and so it is offering these two areas outside of the bidding process under engineering, procurement and construction, or EPC, contracts, Shahristani said. One of the conditions set by the ministry for these contracts is that the companies should have done joint studies with the ministry or worked in the field before. He said Iraq's crude oil production has risen by 30,000 barrels to 2.43 million barrels a day in the last few days following the drilling of new oil wells and the repair of oil installations at southern oil fields.

- Investments in US junk bonds are at a six-year high, citing AMG Data Services. The four-week moving average of money flowing into high-yield funds was about $1.17 billion as of yesterday. For the week ended yesterday, inflows were $885.3 million for high-yield funds.

- The Obama administration is expected Friday to announce plans to retool military commission trials for some terrorism suspects now detained at Guantanamo Bay, aiming to expand legal rights for defendants while stopping short of the due-process protections provided to defendants in civilian courts. Administration officials have deliberated for weeks over how to restart the trials, which were begun during the George W. Bush administration. The system garnered criticism from human -- rights and civil -- liberties groups, and from President Barack Obama himself before he became president.

- YRC Worldwide Inc.(YRCW), one of the nation's largest trucking companies, will seek $1 billion in federal bailout money to help relieve pension obligations, the chief executive said Thursday. The move comes as the trucking giant struggles to shore up its finances. The company's ability to weather the recession will have significant implications for the trucking industry and large customers across the country. Chief Executive William Zollars said the company will seek the money to help cover the cost of its estimated $2 billion pension obligation over the next four years. Under a complicated system that Mr. Zollars labeled unfair, roughly half of YRC's contributions to a multi-employer union pension fund cover the costs of retirees who never worked for the Overland Park, Kan., company.

- Hewlett-Packard Co.(HPQ), seeking to revive the sagging desktop-computer business, has tried to woo consumers with sleek personal computers with glossy, touch-sensitive screens. But the touch-screen PCs, which can cost twice as much as typical machines, have been slow to catch on. H-P only sold about 400,000 of its TouchSmart desktops last year, compared with 54 million traditional desktops and laptops, estimates research firm IDC. So H-P is embarking on a new strategy to find commercial uses for the technology. Last month, H-P installed 50 touch-screen PCs in Chicago's O'Hare International Airport for travelers to access online maps and restaurant listings.

- Egypt's Muslim Brotherhood is on the defensive, its struggles reverberating throughout Islamist movements that the secretive organization has spawned world-wide. Just recently, the Brothers' political rise seemed unstoppable. Candidates linked with the group won most races they contested in Egypt's 2005 parliamentary elections, gaining a record 20% of seats. Across the border in Gaza, another election the following year propelled the Brotherhood's Palestinian offshoot, Hamas, into power.

- Asked this week about Mrs. Pelosi's variable recollections, Senator Feinstein, who chairs the Intelligence Committee, responded: "I think it's a tempest in a teapot really to say, Well, Speaker Pelosi should have known all of this, she should have stopped this, she should have done this or done that. I don't want to make an apology for anybody, but in 2002, it wasn't 2006, '07, '08 or '09. It was right after 9/11, and there were in fact discussions about a second wave of attacks." Indeed there were discussions about a second wave of attacks in 2002. In an interview two years ago, former CIA Director George Tenet said of that post-attack period: "I've got reports of nuclear weapons in New York City, apartment buildings that are going to be blown up, planes that are going to fly into airports all over again." It was precisely in this atmosphere, months after the initial, horrific attack on the World Trade Center and Pentagon, that the CIA asked the Justice Department for legal guidance on the now-famous "EITs," or enhanced interrogation techniques at the center of this current tempest. Bush lawyers such as John Yoo and Jay Bybee produced memorandums carefully setting out the legal limits of what the CIA could do. Also in 2002, the CIA began the briefings of Congress on these interrogations that now haunt Speaker Pelosi.


IBD:

- In a gaming industry where many contenders are on a losing streak, slot machine maker WMS Industries (WMS) keeps hitting the jackpot. Armed with novel games popular with casino operators and players, WMS has been on a roll. Earnings have climbed by at least 24% the past 10 quarters.


CBS:

- CBS News has learned that two attorneys at the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) are under "active" criminal investigation by the FBI for trading stocks based on inside information.


TheDeal.com:

- OTC regulation possible winners & losers.


Politico:

- House Speaker Nancy Pelosi’s claim Thursday that CIA officials lied to her about waterboarding prompted a sharp rebuke from Republicans some pushback from intelligence officials and a lukewarm response from at least one high-ranking member of her own party.


Silicon Alley Insider:

- Facebook Investor Peter Theil’s Hedge Fund Misses April Rally(Leaked Docs).


Seeking Alpha:

- Swap spreads have accurately forecast conditions in the economy and in the financial markets. They started rising in 2007, well before the financial storm of 2008 hit. They peaked in early October '08, months before the bottom in equity prices in early March '09. They have now returned almost to what might be considered normal. Meanwhile, the debate over the current state of the economy rages, with some (including moi) arguing we've seen the worst and the economy is on the mend, and others arguing that the worst is yet to come. I think this dramatic improvement in swap spreads is really significant. It reflects the return of liquidity to the bond market; the return of confidence in counterparty risk; the return of an appetite for risk; and a significant reduction in uncertainty.


Washington Post:

- The Obama administration's plan to reshape the opaque world of derivatives trading, unveiled on Wednesday, is only a preview of sweeping financial reform proposals that may be announced as soon as next week. The White House and Treasury, responding to the global financial crisis, have firm ideas about tightening oversight of hedge funds, streamlining bank regulation, shaking up executive pay standards and protecting consumers. But two key components of the administration's approach -- policing "systemic risk" and winding down troubled financial firms -- are dividing senior officials and lawmakers, which will likely cause delays in getting broad reforms enacted.


Reuters:

- General Motors Corp said on Thursday night it would most likely pursue the same legal strategy as Chrysler if it spirals into bankruptcy, while Chrysler unveiled details for slashing its dealer network. Rattling the industry further, the Financial Times reported on its website that Toyota Motor Co is planning one of the most drastic management shakeups in its 70-year history next month when Akio Toyoda, grandson of the company's founder, takes over as chief executive. Toyota will replace 40 percent of its senior managers and is said to be preparing a sweeping reorganization of its North American business that would unify sales and manufacturing arms, the report said. In a bright spot, Ford Motor Co, the only Detroit automaker not taking government bailout funds or dogged by bankruptcy or bankruptcy expectations, assured shareholders it is on track to at least break even in 2011, sending shares higher.

- Shares in Sony Corp. gained 5 percent on Friday after the Japanese electronics maker forecast a smaller loss than expected for this year, showing it was making progress in its restructuring.

- The biggest seawater desalination plant in the Western Hemisphere, north of San Diego, can begin construction by year's end after a six-year effort to win regulators' approval, the developer said on Thursday. The San Diego Regional Water Quality Control Board voted unanimously on Wednesday to approve permit revisions for the $300 million facility, which will produce 50 million gallons of drinking water daily, enough for 110,000 households. That volume represents about 10 percent of the drinking water needs of San Diego County, home to roughly 3 million people in a region facing freshwater shortages due in part to a prolonged drought.


Financial Times:

- Barclays(BCS) is in talks about selling asset management arm Barclays Global Investors for about $10bn, with potential bidders including US money manager BlackRock(BLK), according to people familiar with the matter. Talks on the potential sale of BGI are the outcome of an initial auction for iShares, the fast-growing exchange-traded funds unit of BGI, which Barclays agreed to sell to CVC Capital Partners, the private equity group, for $4.2bn last month.


China Securities Journal:

- China’s electricity production in early May fell 3.9% from a year earlier, citing sources at China State Grip Corp.


Sankei:

- Japan’s Cabinet Office will probably upgrade its economic assessment in a report to be released this month. The Japanese government, which last month said the economy was worsening rapidly, may say that the pace of deterioration is moderating. The upgrade would be the first since February 2006.


Late Buy/Sell Recommendations
Citigroup:

- Reiterated Buy on (APH), target $37.

- Rated (CNQR) Buy, target $35.

- Reiterated Buy on (AMAT), target $14

- Reiterated Buy on (COV), target $42, added to Top Picks Live list.


Night Trading
Asian Indices are +1.0% to +2.0% on average.
S&P 500 futures +.21%.
NASDAQ 100 futures +.20%.


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
- (ANF)/-.14

- (JCP)/.10


Economic Releases

8:30 am EST

- The Consumer Price Index for April is estimated unch. versus a .1% decline in March.

- The CPI Ex Food and Energy for April is estimated to rise .1% versus a .2% gain in March.

- Empire Manufacturing for May is estimated at -12.0 versus -14.65 in April.


9:00 am EST

- Net Long-term TIC Flows for March are estimated to rise to $35.0B versus $22.0B in February.


9:15 am EST

- Industrial Production for April is estimated to fall .6% versus a 1.5% decline in March.

- Capacity Utilization for April is estimated at 68.8% versus 69.3% in March.


10:00 am EST

- Preliminary Univ. of Mich. Consumer Confidence for May is estimated at 67.0 versus 65.1 in April.


Upcoming Splits
- None of note


Other Potential Market Movers
-
The Fed’s Fisher speaking, (MFE) Investor Day and the (M) Shareholders Meeting could also impact trading today.


BOTTOM LINE: Asian indices are 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.

Stocks Finish Higher, Boosted by Financial, Technology, Insurance, REIT, Education and Airline Shares

Evening Review
Market Summary

Top 20 Biz Stories

Today’s Movers

Market Performance Summary

WSJ Data Center

Sector Performance

ETF Performance

Style Performance

Commodity Futures
S&P 500 Gallery View

Timely Economic Charts

GuruFocus.com

PM Market Call

After-hours Commentary

After-hours Movers

After-hours Real-Time Stock Bid/Ask

After-hours Stock Quote

After-hours Stock Chart

In Play

Stocks Higher into Final Hour on Short-Covering, Bargain-Hunting, Falling Credit Market Angst, Investment Manager Performance Anxiety

BOTTOM LINE: The Portfolio is higher into the final hour on gains in my Technology longs, Financial longs, Retail longs and Medical longs. I covered all my (IWM)/(QQQQ) hedges this morning, 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 rising and volume is about average. Investor anxiety is above average. Today’s overall market action is very bullish. The VIX is falling 6.18% and is very high at 31.57. The ISE Sentiment Index is around average at 141.0 and the total put/call is slightly above average at .90. Finally, the NYSE Arms has been running around average most of the day, hitting 1.62 at its intraday peak, and is currently .61. The Euro Financial Sector Credit Default Swap Index is rising .61% today to 128.19 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 rising 1.06% to 154.44 basis points. This index is also well below its Dec. 5th record high of 285.99. The TED spread is falling another 2.59% to 70 basis points. The TED spread is now down 393 basis points since its all-time high of 463 basis points on October 10th. The 2-year swap spread is rising 2.66% to 43.38 basis points. The Libor-OIS spread is rising 8.74% to 65 basis points. The 10-year TIPS spread, a good gauge of inflation expectations, is unch. at 1.48%, which is down 116 basis points since July 7th. The 3-month T-Bill is yielding .16%, which is down 1 basis point today. REITs, Financials and Insurers are propelling the major averages higher today. Technology shares are also outperformers. I suspect many funds that had covered their financial shorts ahead of the bank stress test results reloaded upon their release, thus today’s gains are likely quite painful for many. Tomorrow is option expiration. The Dow has been up 5 of the last 7 May option expiration days. I suspect we will extend today’s gains tomorrow on better-than-expected economic data. Nikkei futures indicate an +107 open in Japan and DAX futures indicate an +24 open in Germany tomorrow. I expect US stocks to trade mixed-to-higher into the close from current levels on short-covering, diminishing credit market angst, investment manager performance anxiety and bargain-hunting.

Today's Headlines

Bloomberg:

- The cost of borrowing in dollars between banks fell the most in eight weeks as government and central bank efforts to unlock credit markets showed signs of bearing fruit and deposits at financial institutions grew. The London interbank offered rate, or Libor, for such loans fell almost three basis points to 0.85 percent today, according to the British Bankers’ Association. The so-called TED spread, the difference between what the U.S. Treasury and banks pay to borrow for three months, dropped to its lowest since the day before BNP Paribas SA halted withdrawals from three of its funds on Aug. 9, 2007, because of subprime-mortgage related losses. The Libor-OIS spread, a measure of the unwillingness of banks to offer each other cash, narrowed three basis points to 64 basis points today, its lowest level since June 16. The TED spread dropped three basis points to 69 basis points.

- Volkswagen AG, Europe’s largest carmaker, will build a bigger factory than planned in Chattanooga, Tennessee, to take advantage of slumping set-up costs while U.S. competitors struggle to survive. “This is great timing,” Frank Fischer, who will run the plant, said yesterday in an interview at the site as he prepared for the project’s wall-raising ceremony. “Construction prices are down and the availability of resources is immense.” Volkswagen is adding to assembly and body-shop facilities, expanding the plant’s area to 226,000 square feet (20,900 square meters) from 200,000 in the initial blueprint and enabling it to build 900 cars a day rather than the 560 vehicles planned. The worst is over in the U.S. car market, which may start to recover toward the end of this year, Fischer said.

- The US dollar will appreciate against the euro after the 16-nation currency was unable to break above $1.38 amid a pullback in US stocks and a rise in Treasury debt prices, according to Brown Brothers Harriman Inc.

- Ford Motor Co.(F), the only U.S. automaker to forgo federal aid, may return to profitability by 2011 because of progress in cutting costs and making cars more fuel-efficient, Chief Executive Officer Alan Mulally said. “We’re on a good glide slope to get back to profitability in 2011,” Mulally told shareholders today at the automaker’s annual meeting in Wilmington, Delaware. “We have sufficient liquidity, we’ve got a good product plan and we’ve got the restructuring in line with that product plan. Now it’s just staying on that plan.”

- President Barack Obama said there aren’t enough votes in the Senate to pass “card-check” legislation sought by labor unions and only a revamped measure would have a chance getting through Congress.

- The European Central Bank said inflation expectations for this year and next have declined. Professional forecasters surveyed by the ECB lowered their inflation projections to .5% for 2009 and 1.3% for 2010.

- European Central Bank policy makers clashed over the bank’s asset-buying program less than a week after President Jean-Claude Trichet engineered a truce.

- U.S. regulators may impose the same price reporting and transparency requirements on over-the- counter derivatives that reduced bank profits by almost half in the corporate bond market when the Trace system was adopted seven years ago. “I think it’s something we’ll look at very closely as a potential model,” Securities and Exchange Chairwoman Mary Schapiro said yesterday at a news conference in Washington, in which regulators laid out potential structural changes to improve policing of the $684 trillion OTC derivatives market.

- The 2009 Atlantic storm season will produce six hurricanes, down from an earlier prediction of eight, and 10 named storms rather than 13, AccuWeather.com said today. Cooler water temperatures in the Atlantic, a weak El Nino system in the Pacific and stronger winds across Africa will all combine for a less-severe hurricane season, AccuWeather’s Joe Bastardi said in an e-mailed statement. The season runs from June 1 to Nov. 30. “As we predicted in our early season forecast, we’re anticipating a major reduction in the number of overall storms compared to last year,” said Bastardi, the private forecaster’s chief long-range and hurricane forecaster.

- The U.S. Federal Reserve may revise rules that currently favor Moody’s Investors Service, Standard & Poor’s and Fitch Ratings, Fed Chairman Ben S. Bernanke said in a letter released today by Connecticut Attorney General Richard Blumenthal.

- U.S. prosecutors have subpoenaed New Mexico’s $11.8 billion state endowment funds for documents regarding investment activities, according to a state spokesman. The New Mexico Investment Council, which includes Governor Bill Richardson, received the request earlier this month, said spokesman Charles Wollman, in a telephone interview. He declined to describe the contents of the subpoena, issued by the U.S. Attorney in Albuquerque. The Justice Department is already investigating whether a California financial adviser was awarded $1.5 million in bond and interest-rate swap work in New Mexico in 2004 in exchange for $100,000 in donations to Richardson political committees.

- Thanks to the commonwealth of Massachusetts, crusading attorneys general throughout the land now have a road map for extracting multimillion-dollar checks from Wall Street banks such as Goldman Sachs Group Inc.: Don’t accuse them of anything at all. The big news from Goldman and Massachusetts Attorney General Martha Coakley this week was a $60 million settlement, under which the investment bank resolved her office’s investigation into its packaging of mortgage securities backed by subprime home loans. Per the usual custom in such accords, Goldman didn’t admit any wrongdoing. The odd part is that Coakley’s office didn’t accuse Goldman of any wrongdoing, either. It filed no lawsuit. And it made no allegations that Goldman had violated any statutes or rules. Why did Goldman pay if Coakley’s investigators couldn’t identify any infractions to allege?

- Elliott Management Corp., the hedge fund that almost pushed the government of Peru into default in 2000, is now seeking to profit from the failure of distressed companies. About 11 percent of Elliott’s $13 billion of assets were in so-called basis trades at the end of the first quarter, meaning it bought bonds and credit-default swaps that protect against losses on the debt, according to a report dated April 29 sent to investors and obtained by Bloomberg News. “These trades are among the most interesting arbitrage trades in our book, and they are especially attractive given their extra profitability in the event of default of the underlying referenced obligation,” Elliott said in the letter. New York-based Elliott, founded by Paul Singer in 1977, joins Deutsche Bank AG and Citadel Investment Group LLC in seeking to make money from the trades, pitting them against traditional creditors as defaults reach the highest since 2002.

- The International Energy Agency cut its oil-demand forecast for a ninth consecutive month, predicting consumption this year will fall the most since 1981 as the recession lingers. The Paris-based adviser to 28 nations cut its global oil demand estimate “slightly” to 83.2 million barrels a day this year, down 3 percent from 2008, it said today in its monthly report. That is 230,000 barrels a day lower than it forecast last month. The revision comes a day after OPEC reduced its 2009 forecast, predicting oil demand of 84.03 million barrels a day. “Demand continues to look very, very weak,” David Fyfe, head of the IEA’s oil industry and markets division, said in a phone interview from Paris. Demand is weakest in the world’s most developed nations, where consumption will drop by 5.1 percent this year, the IEA said. The IEA cited “very weak” demand data in April for the U.S., and to a lesser extent, Europe. Crude inventories in the industrial economies of the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development are at their highest since 1993, according to Fyfe. Stockpiles were equivalent to 62 days of consumption as of the first quarter of the year, according to the IEA. The energy adviser said it expects consumption in developing economies to contract for the first time since 1994 as China and Russia “continue to exhibit sustained weakness.” Demand in these economies will average 38.1 million barrels a day this year, a decline of 0.4 percent, or 140,000 barrels a day compared with 2008.


Wall Street Journal:

- Central and Eastern Europe are shaping up to be the European banking sector's very own subprime crisis. Results on Thursday from two of the biggest lenders to the region confirmed the crisis in these markets is getting worse.

- Intel’s(INTC) Venture Capital Arm Sees No Signs of Slowing Down

- Unions vs. Taxpayers.


CNBC:

- Chrysler & GM expect to close thousands of dealerships starting today. Discussing what this will mean for the industry, with Chris Ortiz, Great American Chevrolet and Jim Anderer, Jeep dealership. (video)

- Does anybody really believe that adding 50 million people to the public health-care rolls will not cost the government more money? About $1.5 trillion to $2 trillion more? At least. So let’s be serious when evaluating President Obama’s goal of universal health care, and the idea that it’s a cost-cutter. Can’t happen. Won’t happen. Costs are going to explode.


NY Times:

- Congressional Democrats are voicing growing unease over the Obama administration’s national security policies, including the seemingly open-ended commitment in Afghanistan and the nettlesome question of what to do with prisoners held at Guantánamo Bay, Cuba. “With respect to Afghanistan and Pakistan, I am extremely dubious that the administration will be able to accomplish what it wants to accomplish,” Mr. Obey said last week. “The problem is not the administration’s policy or its goals. The problem is that I doubt that we have the tools there that we need to implement virtually any policy in that region.” Some liberal Democrats are expressing outright opposition to continuing the operations in Iraq or Afghanistan, and are planning to vote against the spending bill. Representative John P. Murtha, Democrat of Pennsylvania and chairman of the defense appropriations subcommittee, said the administration had not provided a clear enough plan to reassure lawmakers about the operations in Afghanistan. “We keep asking for a plan,” Mr. Murtha said. “I think the Democrats are nervous just because they haven’t seen a plan yet.” “The public is not focused on the war at all,” Mr. Murtha said. “But they are going to be focused on it if it goes bad.”

MarketWatch:
- U.S. financial stocks stepped firmly into the green on Thursday as the banking sector caught a lift from a pair of industry upgrades by Morgan Stanley. Morgan's large-cap and mid-cap bank analysts, Betsy Graseck and Ken Zerbe, late Wednesday upgraded their industry views to attractive from in-line. The analysts believe that, "nonperforming loan growth will peak sooner, rather than later, due to stabilizing jobless claims; improved liquidity in credit markets and increased competition among lenders should lower corporate borrowing rates; and, pre-provision earnings are running above the bear case, which is accelerating capital repair."

NY Post:

- Hedge-fund bigwig Jim Simons, who won the title last year of top hedge-fund earner for pocketing a whopping $2.5 billion, is battling questions of poor performance in an equity fund set up for outside investors such as pension funds. Simons' Renaissance Institutional Equities Fund, known as RIEF, has been falling short of its mandate to beat the S&P 500 index this year. The fund's B shares are down roughly 17 percent through April, according to documents obtained by The Post. Investors say RIEF was tripped up by shorting stocks when the market unexpectedly surged in recent months. RIEF is marketed as a US equities fund that buys and shorts stocks. It's been down before -- including a 16 percent drop last year -- but in the past it tended to overcome criticism by generally outperforming the S&P 500. Simons, a mathematician who founded hedge fund firm Renaissance Technologies in 1982, took the unusual step of holding a conference call yesterday to address investors' concerns.


Naked capitalism:

- Stanford Law Review has a great interview with Warren Buffett's longstanding partner, Charlie Munger.


Seeking Alpha:

- This video, which I recently created, ignores Lehman's balance sheet and its long-term prospects, focusing instead on presenting evidence suggesting that the mid-September, 2008 sell-off which devastated Lehman's stock price -- directly resulting in the company's bankruptcy a few days later -- was a consequence of an enterprise designed to enrich a small handful of short-selling hedge funds. As I demonstrate, in place of gasoline, the perpetrators used a deluge of price-depressing naked short positions as their accelerant, with much the same results.


Politico:

- The CIA has rejected Dick Cheney's request to release classified information on interrogations -- info he believed would prove waterboarding and other techniques were effective in extracting information from terror detainees. The reason: The docs are the subject of pending litigation -- a reference to lawsuits filed by detainees.


delawareonline:

- Sports betting is officially the law of the land. Gov. Jack Markell signed the sports betting bill into law this morning at Delaware Park.


Reuters:
- Oscar-winning film director Steven Spielberg was so frustrated that no videogames catered for all of his seven children that he did what a entertainment maestro might do -- made his own game. "Boom Blox" was the first in a multi-franchise deal between Spielberg and videogame publisher Electronic Arts(ERTS) and has sold close to one million copies globally since it was released for Nintendo's Wii last May. On May 19, EA releases Spielberg's second game, "Boom Blox Bash Party."

- The family saga that's gotten the blogosphere riled up in recent days doesn't have to do with the president. It's the vice president's brother—Jim Biden—and his son, R. Hunter Biden, who've been drawing attention, thanks to a midsized, New York-based money-management firm they bought control of in 2006 called Paradigm Global Advisers. The Paradigm adventure has been a comedy of errors for Hunter and Jim Biden. They've been sued—and, in turn, countersued—by a man who was to be their partner in the venture. They're in litigation over it with a lawyer who once represented them (who's now in prison because of an unrelated conviction). They're facing still another lawsuit from one of Paradigm's other investors. Meanwhile, they've had to fend off queries about Paradigm's slight links with indicted financier Allen Stanford and a more tenuous connection with a failed hedge fund with which Paradigm shared office space. All of this has added up to headaches for the Bidens but to no clear improprieties. But the spotlight on Paradigm raises a fascinating question: Why did the Bidens want to run a hedge fund in the first place?

- U.S. steel companies are not too happy with President Barack Obama these days. Industry executives say that in the last 15 years, they have cut their carbon dioxide emissions by one-third. But now, they think the president's cap-and-trade rules, currently in Congress, would punish them for doing what they feel they have already done -- cut pollution. And they argue that the industry, recognized by the Environmental Protection Agency for making big strides in cutting emissions, is being lumped in with utilities and other heavy industries, which pump out much more pollution.

Financial Times:
- Anecdotal evidence suggests new hedge funds are raising an average of about $40m this year, compared with $200m to $250m two years ago. Leverage has been tamed, to about 1.3 times on average. Fees are sinking fast. The standard 2 per cent management fee and 20 per cent performance fee of the boom became 1 and 15 last year; management fees may now be 0.5 per cent, or lower. Performance fees could be halved, and subject to hurdles over Libor and clawbacks in the event of subsequent losses. Three-month redemption terms are becoming 30 days. For portfolio managers themselves, guarantees and signing bonuses are mostly history, replaced by “ghost shares”, or cuts of future profits.

Ramboell:

- The share of Danes wanting the euro fell to 43.7% from 49.8% in a January poll.


La Figaro:

- French Prime Minister Francois Fillon said “experts” see the country’s economy contracting around 3% this year. Fillon sees the jobs market worsening and said that Europe may see a slow economic recovery in 2010 after a “very difficult” 2009. He also said taxes will not be raised.

Zawya:
- The United Arab Emirates is prepared to invest in Iraqi oilfields, ambassador Sheikh Abdullah Ibrahim al-Zowi told Iraqi oil minister Hussein al-Shahrestani.

Haaretz.com:

- U.S. President Barack Obama has sent a message to Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu demanding that Israel not surprise the U.S. with an Israeli military operation against Iran. The message was conveyed by a senior American official who met in Israel with Netanyahu, ministers and other senior officials.

Bear Radar

Style Underperformer:
Large-cap Value (+.91%)

Sector Underperformers:
Utilities (-.23%), Computer Services (-.10%) and Drugs (+.25%)

Stocks Falling on Unusual Volume:
BT, CVLT, VNDA, MYL, CLF, ANW, ENS and BMA

Stocks With Unusual Put Option Activity:
1) FIG 2) CLF 3) WFMI 4) GOLD 5) MTW

Bull Radar

Style Outperformer:
Small-cap Value (+2.19%)

Sector Outperformers:
Homebuilders (+3.60%), Semis (+3.20%) and Education (+3.20%)

Stocks Rising on Unusual Volume:
RMBS, NVLS, PUK, BCS, UBS, PSMT, SU, STP, JACK, CSKI, AAWW, GOLD, CME, DDRX, CA, AMSF, SRDX, KNSY, HELE, WINN, MGLN, BEAT, FOSL, AIPC, CORE, CALM, GIL, EVN, YPF, IAI and URS

Stocks With Unusual Call Option Activity:
1) NVLS 2) PHM 3) GENZ 4) WFMI 5) KSS