Thursday, June 11, 2009

Friday Watch

Late-Night Headlines
Bloomberg:

- Most Senate Finance Committee members are “inclined” to support creation of member-run health cooperatives to bridge a partisan divide over revamping the nation’s health-care system, the panel’s chairman said. Chairman Max Baucus said lawmakers in both parties may embrace cooperatives as an alternative to a government-run health plan, supported by Democrats, to compete with private insurers. Most Republicans say a public plan threatens to undermine insurance companies. “I am inclined, and I think the committee is inclined, toward it,” Baucus told reporters today after a closed-door meeting of his panel to discuss the idea. He said lawmakers don’t want a broad effort to overhaul the U.S. health-care system to “crash” under partisan disputes as it did in 1994 under President Bill Clinton.

- President Barack Obama’s proposal to boost taxes on U.S. companies’ foreign profits would generate $55.5 billion less revenue over the next decade than the Treasury Department projected, a nonpartisan congressional panel said. Obama’s overall tax plan would add $2.9 trillion to the federal budget deficit over the next decade, the tax committee estimated.

- Japanese Finance Minister Kaoru Yosano said his government is confident about the outlook for U.S. Treasuries, signaling the second-biggest foreign holder of the securities will keep buying them amid record sales. “We have complete trust in the fact that the U.S. views its strong-dollar policy as fundamental,” Yosano, 70, said in an interview in Tokyo on June 10 before attending a Group of Eight meeting of finance ministers starting today in Italy. “So our trust in U.S. Treasuries is absolutely unshakable.”

- Washington Post Co. union members approved a new two-year contract today that will protect 25 percent of newspaper employees from future job cuts without taking their seniority into account. The Washington-based publisher may identify 25 percent of employees it wants to protect from job cuts without regard to length of tenure, a switch from contracts that stipulated the newest hires must be let go first, according to the union’s Web site. “It seems that the Washington Post is trying to chip away at seniority rules,” said Gary Chaison, a professor of industrial relations at Clark University in Worcester, Massachusetts. “The newspaper could protect only the lower paid employees, for instance.”

- The U.S. House passed legislation to triple economic and development aid to Pakistan and increase military assistance as part of a plan to stabilize a nation vital to the U.S. war in neighboring Afghanistan. The measures, which provide the legal authority and rules for $1.5 billion a year of aid, are dependent on separate budget legislation for the actual amounts.

- Mexican Central Bank Governor Guillermo Ortiz said Latin America’s second-largest economy will maintain its pace of decline in the second quarter and inflation will slow at a “rapid rate.” A recent rise in global commodities prices is “less threatening” than when those costs reached their peak, Ortiz said in an interview in Montreal. Gross domestic product will shrink in the second quarter by about the same amount as it did in the first quarter, when it contracted 8.2 percent, he said.

- European governments have approved $5.3 trillion of aid, more than the annual gross domestic product of Germany, to support banks during the credit crunch, according to a European Union document.

- China’s anti-pornography software that will be loaded in all personal computers sold in the country blocks anti-government Web sites and restricts users from typing in keywords unrelated to sex, a researcher said.

- Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad faces a serious challenge in tomorrow’s election as two rivals favoring better relations with the West and a former Revolutionary Guards commander try to deny him a second term.


Wall Street Journal:

- It was a sobering breakfast with one of the smartest Republicans on Capitol Hill. We can fix a lot of bad stuff President Barack Obama might do, he told me. But if Mr. Obama signs into law a "public option," government-run insurance program as part of health-care reform we won't be able to undo the damage. I'd go the Republican member of Congress one further: If Democrats enact a public-option health-insurance program, America is on the way to becoming a European-style welfare state. To prevent this from happening, there are five arguments Republicans must make.

- The European Union and the U.S. will jointly file suit against China at the World Trade Organization this month in a bid to stop the Asian giant from hoarding key minerals and to set a precedent for other big producers of raw materials, people familiar with the issue said Thursday. For more than two years, China has been using tariffs on exports to keep important industrial ingredients like zinc, tin and silicon for use at home. At the same time, Beijing has aggressively bought up large quantities of minerals from resource-rich African countries. Western governments say the policy gives Chinese chemical firms, steelmakers and other producers an unfair advantage. EU and U.S. trade negotiators have prepared a list of 20 materials, mainly chemicals and metals, they believe are subject to illegal export restrictions, though it is unclear how many of these will be part of the WTO complaint, a European diplomat said. One restriction that has provoked strong objections from the EU and the U.S. is an export duty on yellow phosphorous, the diplomat said. China imposes a 95% duty on the material, which is used to make numerous industrial chemicals, far above limits on such duties that China accepted when it joined the WTO, the diplomat said. China also places quotas on the amount of certain raw materials that can be exported, another potential violation of WTO rules, the diplomat said.

- Is the carry trade back on? Back in the days before the financial crisis, investors made fortunes borrowing in low-interest-rate currencies such as the yen and investing the proceeds in higher yielding foreign currencies and assets. Indeed, the trade played a key role in fuelling the boom, helping to drive down the cost of borrowing around the world. Now some investors think that with interest rates in most developed countries at record low levels it is time to put on the carry trade again.

- EBay Inc.(EBAY) Chief Executive John Donahoe said he sees stability in the economy, with the company not experiencing further growth declines since February. In an interview Thursday, the head of the online retailer said that he didn't have any "statistically significant" data to share about an overall recovery, but he is "cautiously optimistic" about the economy. Mr. Donahoe said he watched growth in the business decline from this past August through February but that it has since stabilized.

- Big banks are expected to start repaying government bailout funds next Wednesday, according to people familiar with the matter. J.P. Morgan Chase & Co., Morgan Stanley and American Express Co. are among the firms that are expected to repay the funds that they received from the Troubled Asset Relief Program, these people said. The firms received $25 billion, $10 billion and $3.4 billion, respectively.

- The White House is gearing up to launch a Spanish-language version of its Web site, whitehouse.gov, by the end of the year.

- Economists expect U.S. unemployment to remain above 9% through the end of 2010, and most believe the Federal Reserve won't raise interest rates until next spring at the earliest. The latest Wall Street Journal forecasting survey found the 52 economists, on average, foresee economic growth returning in the third quarter of this year, with the recession ending in August.

- The Obama administration is being drawn into the drama over Bank of America Corp. because of notes taken by bank executives suggesting Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner and Lawrence Summers, the president's top economic adviser, supported efforts last year to pressure the bank to consummate its merger with Merrill Lynch & Co.

- Farm Belt lawmakers said Thursday that the climate legislation in the House may not get the votes to pass unless it is made more farm-friendly. The warning, sounded by Agriculture Committee Chairman Collin Peterson (D., Minn.), presents a new obstacle to the White House's effort to get a bill passed this year.

- There is one idea for fixing the health-care system that lawmakers in both parties agree on: a bigger government role in disease prevention. Yet previous government prevention efforts aimed at costly chronic diseases have had little success in reducing illness or costs. "It is not going to cut costs," said Louise Russell, a research professor in the Institute for Health at Rutgers University who has studied the issue. "We already do a lot more prevention than other countries. We are not healthier."

MarketWatch.com:
- BlackRock Inc.(BLK) said late Thursday it has agreed to acquire Barclays Global Investors, including its iShares division, in a cash-and-stock deal that would create the world's largest fund manager, with over $2.7 trillion in assets, and drastically alter the financial industry.

CNBC.com:
- Anthony Polini, bank analyst of Raymond James & Associates, said the hearing is more of a clearing of grievances—and recommended investors buy BofA stock. “I’ve been following banks for more than 20 years and I’ve never seen a company come out of a recession with so much core earnings power and so much strength,” Polini told CNBC. “Bank of America(BAC) looks like an easy double in a year and it looks like a triple in 2 years from this level.”

NY Times:

- Responding to remarks by Defense Secretary Robert M. Gates, a top Russian diplomat said Thursday that Russia would not collaborate with the United States on missile defense unless Washington scrapped plans to deploy elements of the shield in Poland and the Czech Republic.

- More than four decades after the surgeon general declared smoking a health hazard, the Senate on Thursday cleared the final hurdle to empowering federal officials to regulate cigarettes and other forms of tobacco for the first time.

- There was more evidence Thursday that the United States economy might be stabilizing, if not rebounding, even as economic reports in Europe remained gloomy. The American news — showing slight growth in retail sales and a dip in first-time jobless claims, as well as rising stocks — was not enough to end the disagreement between bulls and bears over how soon the economy would improve. But the apparent divergence of fortunes between America and Europe highlighted the different approaches to solving the financial crisis, and why some economists say the more aggressive American strategy may be working better, at least for now.

- With about 2,000 Chrysler and General Motors dealers losing their franchises as the companies retrench, the dealers are pressing Congress to reverse what they see as an unfair process forcing some profitable businesses to close or stop selling new autos, with no explanation from the manufacturers of why they were singled out. “We have never gotten one,” said Rick Shaub, the owner of Montrose Dodge in Germantown, Md. He was with fellow dealers outside the office of the House majority leader, Steny H. Hoyer, on Wednesday, the day after his family’s three-generation relationship with Chrysler came to an end. As they lobby Congress, angry dealers are finding an increasingly receptive audience in the House and Senate, where lawmakers say the mass termination of franchises by the bankrupt car companies is threatening tens of thousands of jobs, not to mention the civic fabric of communities where car dealerships are often a chief local institution.


Business Week:
- Chrysler won't be liable for product defect claims on vehicles sold before it emerged from bankruptcy. Will the "new" GM win the same protection?


CNN:

- Gas Prices Menace Battered Economy. The national average is up 28% over the last month and a half, straining wallets and threatening the economic recovery.


Fox News:

- U.S. intelligence officials have warned President Obama and other senior American officials that North Korea intends to respond to the looming passage of a U.N. Security Council resolution this week -- condemning the communist country for its recent nuclear and ballistic missile tests -- with another nuclear test, FOX News has learned.


Politico:

- A group of senators called on President Barack Obama to issue an executive order prohibiting torture photos from being made public, just as House and Senate negotiators were set to remove language from a war funding bill that would have blocked the photos' from being released. “The president should be publicly speaking out now,” Sen. John McCain (R-Ariz.) told reporters this afternoon. “He’s been strangely quiet.”

- House Minority Whip Eric Cantor (R-Va.) suggested Thursday that President Obama's handling of the auto industry resembled the corrupt, oligarchic government of Vladimir Putin's Russia, AP reports. AP: "The House Republican whip, Rep. Eric Cantor of Virginia, tells The Associated Press that Obama is micromanaging the auto industry to win points with Democratic allies and labor unions. "Cantor said Thursday that Obama's plans for the auto industry are, in his words, 'almost like looking at Putin's Russia.' "Cantor says the normal rights of secured creditors have been taken away and given to political cronies and the auto workers unions."


Economist Intelligence Unit:

- Saudi Arabia economy: Oil to spare. Saudi Arabia has just announced the start of production at the giant Khurais oilfield, which will push up OPEC's total spare capacity to about 8% of world oil consumption. The Khurais field has the capacity to produce 1.2m b/d of Arabian Light crude, and is the final element in Saudi Aramco's plan to increase its capacity to 12.5m b/d by end-2009. The company's next big oilfield development is Manifa, a mainly offshore field that is scheduled to start up producing about 1m b/d in 2013. The completion of Saudi Aramco's oil capacity expansion programme more or less on schedule, and the progress being made with both the Jubail refinery and the multibillion dollar Karan gasfield seem to belie the concerns that have been expressed about a slowdown in investment. Indeed, the fall in prices of equipment and services required for such projects appears to have prompted something of a revival in investment, at least in the Middle East and North Africa—the first tenders have just been issued for an estimated US$10bn sour gas development in Abu Dhabi, Algeria's Sonatrach and its international partners have reeled off half-a-dozen major oil and gas contract awards over the part two months, and Egypt had a notably strong response to its latest exploration bid round in May. At end-April, according to Oil Market Intelligence, and industry newsletter, around 130m barrels of oil was being stored at sea, in tankers. The contango in the market has since flattened somewhat (removing the incentive to store), but there is still a considerable amount of oil "at sea"; if a large amount of this oil were to be released at one time, it could lead to a very sharp drop in the spot price. The IEA reckons that OPEC's total spare capacity in May was just over 6m b/d, based on an assumption of Saudi total capacity of 11m b/d. Taking into account Khurais and two other fields that have recently started up at a rate of 350,000 b/d in total, OPEC's current spare capacity is over 7m b/d. The IEA has made a small upward revision to its demand forecast for 2009, but it still envisages a 2.9% year-on-year contraction to 83.3m b/d, compared with 85.8m b/d last year and 86m b/d in 2007. OECD stocks are now sufficient to cover 62 days of consumption, compared with 55 days this time last year. The oil market is still oversupplied, and prices are vulnerable to any fraying of OPEC discipline and to a shift in the pattern of crude storage. There is no sign of the kind of vigorous recovery in global economic activity that would be needed to push up demand significantly in the medium term. The BP reserve figures also have to be looked at in their proper context: the end-2008 figure for proved oil reserves is 1,258bn barrels; this is just 0.2% down in the previous year, and follows more than two decades of continuous increases in reserves, from just under 1,000bn barrels in 1986. The global reserves-to-production ratio actually increased slightly in 2008 to 42 years, according to BP. The Economist Intelligence Unit does not expect the recent oil price rally to continue in the second half of the year, although we have increased our forecasts for the average price of Dated Brent to US$59/b in 2009 and US$65/b in 2010.


MSNBC:

- It seems like a paradox: Demand for oil, which almost always rises, is likely to drop by 3 percent in 2009 — the worst decline in almost 30 years. Stockpiles are so high that an ocean of oil is building up around the world in tankers or in depots. Yet since hitting a low of $34 per barrel on Feb. 12, the price of light, sweet U.S. crude has more than doubled, to $71 per barrel. Why are prices soaring? "Hedge funds and asset managers who have been sitting on cash now feel it's time to buy (oil)" says Göran Trapp, head of global oil trading at Morgan Stanley in London. Some $3.8 billion has flowed into oil and gas exchange traded funds this year, vs. $1.4 billion in the first half of 2008. Worries about the falling dollar and rising inflation are also a driving force. Commodities like oil, along with currencies such as the euro and British pound, are seen as good hedges against a possible collapse of the greenback under the weight of mushrooming U.S. debt. Prices could fall if the bullish mood fades. And many observers think prices are ahead of where they should be. Even some OPEC officials believe a price closer to $50 is realistic in today's economic climate. The current price "is all based on perception," said a senior delegate at the recent OPEC meeting in Vienna.


Reuters:

- U.S. consumers fell further behind on their debts last month, and consumer bankruptcies continue to increase at a double-digit rate, but the rate of mortgage and credit card delinquencies may have peaked, a top credit bureau executive told Reuters on Thursday.


Commercial Times:

- AU Optronics Corp. will raise the monthly capacity of its so-called 8.5-generation flat-panel plant to more than 60,000 units by year’s end, citing CEO Chen Lai-Juh. The central Taiwan factory, which can cut glass screens measuring 50 inches, currently has a monthly capacity of 10,000 units, the island’s largest maker of LCDs said. Seperately, Chunghwa Picture Tubes Ltd. may start operation of its second 4.5-generation plant in the third quarter due to increasing orders, citing CFO James Wu.


Late Buy/Sell Recommendations
Citigroup:

- Reiterated Buy on (RIMM), target $100.

- Reiterated Buy on (QCOM), raised estimates, boosted target to $56.

- Reiterated Buy on (MSFT), boosted target to $28.


Night Trading
Asian Indices are -.25% to +.75% on average.

Asia Ex-Japan Inv Grade CDS Index -.96%
S&P 500 futures -.01%.
NASDAQ 100 futures unch.


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Earnings of Note
Company/EPS Estimate
- None of note


Economic Releases

8:30 am EST

- The Import Price Index for May is estimated to rise 1.4% versus a 1.6% gain in April.


10:00 am EST

- The Preliminary Univ. of Mich. Consumer Confidence reading for June is estimated to rise to 69.5 from 68.7 in May.


Upcoming Splits
- None of note


Other Potential Market Movers
- The Treasury’s Geithner speaking at the G-8 Meeting 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.

Stocks Higher into Final Hour on Lower Long-Term Rates, Short-Covering, Technical Buying

BOTTOM LINE: The Portfolio is higher into the final hour on gains in my Financial longs, Technology longs, Biotech longs and Medical longs. I covered all my (IWM)/(QQQQ) hedges and my (EEM) short this morning, thus leaving the Portfolio 100% net long. The tone of the market is positive as the advance/decline line is higher, most sectors are rising and volume is above average. Investor anxiety is high. Today’s overall market action is bullish. The VIX is falling 4.08% and is high at 27.30. The ISE Sentiment Index is slightly below average at 128.0 and the total put/call is slightly below average at .78. Finally, the NYSE Arms has been running about average most of the day, hitting .90 at its intraday peak, and is currently .83. The Euro Financial Sector Credit Default Swap Index is rising 2.29% today to 103.17 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 .77% to 124.94 basis points. This index is also well below its Dec. 5th record high of 285.99. The TED spread is falling 1.57% to 46 basis points. The TED spread is now down 417 basis points since its all-time high of 463 basis points on October 10th. The 2-year swap spread is declining 2.25% to 46.06 basis points. The Libor-OIS spread is rising .03% to 42 basis points. The 10-year TIPS spread, a good gauge of inflation expectations, is falling 9 basis points to 2.0%, which is down 64 basis points since July 7th. The 3-month T-Bill is yielding .17%, which is unch. today. It is a large positive to see the 10-year yield reverse 15 basis points lower from its session high. The (XLF) is pushing up through its 200-day moving average for the first time in about 2 years, which is a major broad market positive. The AAII % Bulls fell to 39.25% this week, while the % Bears rose to 39.25%, which is also a positive considering recent gains. One of my longs, (ISRG) is breaking convincingly higher through its 200-day moving average on above average volume after (CHDX) made positive comments regarding sales of the da Vinci surgical system in China. I still see substantial upside to the shares from current levels. Nikkei futures indicate an +100 open in Japan and DAX futures indicate an +7 open in Germany tomorrow. I expect US stocks to trade modestly higher into the close from current levels on short-covering, technical buying, lower long-term rates, less economic fear and investment manager performance anxiety.

Today's Headlines

Bloomberg:

- Treasuries gained as the highest yield on a 30-year U.S. bond auction in almost two years attracted investors concerned that record government spending and debt sales will lead to inflation. “At 4.7 percent, 30-year Treasuries are compelling,” said Nils Overdahl, a bond-fund manager at New Century in Bethesda, Maryland, which oversees $500 million. “You are really picking up a lot.” The bonds drew a yield of 4.72 percent at the auction, the highest since August 2007. Benchmark 10-year note yields reached 4 percent earlier for the first time since October on concern the budget deficit and a falling dollar will prompt investors to reduce holdings of U.S. debt. The yield on the 10-year note fell 11 basis points, or 0.11 percentage point, to 3.84 percent, after climbing as high as 4.0038 percent, at 1:19 p.m. in New York, according to BGCantor Market Data.

- Former Federal Reserve Chairman Paul Volcker said the global economic slump is easing “most clearly” in the U.S. and the U.K.

- The cost of protecting corporate bonds in the U.S. from default fell after jobless claims slowed and retail sales climbed for the first time in three months. Credit-default swaps on Gap Inc., the largest U.S. clothing retailer, fell to the lowest since November 2004, according to CMA DataVision. Contracts on Bentonville, Arkansas-based Wal- Mart Stores Inc. declined to the lowest in eight months.

- North Korea demanded South Korean companies quadruple wages at their jointly operated manufacturing plants as the United Nations prepares to curb financial flows to the communist nation. Kim Jong Il’s regime asked South Korea to pay $300 a month for each of 38,000 North Korean workers at the South-funded Gaeseong Industrial Complex, according to a Unification Ministry official who briefed reporters in Seoul. North Korea also demanded $500 million in rent for use of the facility on its territory starting next year, the official said, without specifying if the amount was an annual figure.

- Michael Hasenstab is betting on Iraqi and Malaysian debt to boost returns for his top-ranked Templeton Global Bond Fund, while shunning U.S. Treasuries, U.K. gilts and Japanese bonds.

- Crude oil climbed above $72 a barrel and gasoline jumped to an eight-month high after the International Energy Agency raised its global demand forecast.

- Russia’s economy contracted the most in 15 years in the first quarter after industrial production plunged and the government’s 3 trillion rubles ($97 billion) in stimulus spending failed to boost companies and banks. Gross domestic product tumbled an annual 9.8 percent, compared with growth of 1.2 percent in the previous quarter, the Moscow-based Federal Statistics Service said in a statement on its Web site today. The preliminary estimate on May 15 was a 9.5 percent contraction.

- The vacancy rate in Dubai’s residential property market could double to about a third by the end of 2010 as the population declines and new buildings add to a glut of homes, UBS AG said. The amount of empty houses and apartments may increase from as much as 15 percent at the moment, Saud Masud, a Dubai-based analyst at UBS, said in an interview today. About 30,000 homes will be competed by 2011, Masud estimates.


Wall Street Journal:

- U.S. authorities have resettled four Chinese Uighurs to Bermuda from the prison at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, the Justice Department said Thursday. The detainees had been in the prison for years despite being cleared for release by U.S. national security officials and the courts. President Barack Obama has ordered the prison closed and government officials are trying to determine what to do with the more than 230 detainees who remain at Guantanamo.

- Some things in politics you can't make up, such as President Obama's re-re-endorsement Tuesday of "pay-as-you-go" budgeting. Coming after $787 billion in nonstimulating stimulus, a $410 billion omnibus to wrap up fiscal 2009, a $3.5 trillion 2010 budget proposal, sundry bailouts and a 13-figure health-care spending expansion still to come, this latest vow of fiscal chastity is like Donald Trump denouncing self-promotion. Check that. Even The Donald would find this one too much to sell. But Mr. Obama must think the press and public are dumb enough to buy it, because there he was Tuesday re-selling the same "paygo" promises that Democrats roll out every election.


CNBC:

- Inflation? Fugheddaboudit. With signs the recession is almost over and no end in sight to the government’s borrowing binge, inflation hawks are circling the market. Well, they better keep looking, say skeptics of the inflation spike scenario. "I think it’s blown entirely out of proportion," says economist David Jones of DMJ Advisors. "Inflation is going to stay lower than expected for awhile," adds Ram Bhagavatula, managing director at the hedge fund, Combinatorics Capital. Unlike in past recovery periods, inflation is unlikely to rear its ugly head anytime soon; in fact, it may be years before it becomes a legitimate threat to the economy.


MarketWatch:
- Forget green shoots. We've seen a veritable hothouse of economic, market and political vegetation sprouting in the past several days that clearly shows the worst of the financial crisis is over.


IBD:

- Cisco Systems' (CSCO) entry into the server market is creating surprisingly sudden headaches for the network gear maker as longtime server partners — now rivals — steer sales to Brocade Communications Systems. According to market tracker Dell'Oro Group, Brocade (BRCD) gained a sizable 14 points of market share from Cisco between January and March in high-end storage area network switches, which connect data storage systems.

Philly.com:

- Overlooked signs the US housing market is turning. In the Sacramento Delta suburbs east of San Francisco - where home prices soared and fell as viciously as anywhere in the country - a housing market rebound is feverishly under way.

Washington Post:

- The Obama administration will announce plans today to tighten scrutiny of mountaintop coal mining, in an effort to reduce environmental damage from operations that shear off peaks and fill Appalachian valleys, federal officials said.


Economist:

- Caught Short. Returns have improved but hedge funds still face a lot of problems.


TheDeal.com:

- In what should not surprise longtime readers of The Deal, J.P.Morgan Chase & Co. (NYSE:JPM) agreed to acquire the rest of hedge fund manager Highbridge Capital Management LLC as of July 1.


NorthJersey.com:

- While national foreclosure filings are on the rise, New Jersey filings dropped 41 percent in May from a year ago, RealtyTrac said Wednesday.


Politico:

- President Barack Obama Thursday made his strongest pitch yet for sweeping health-care reform by year’s end, drawing on campaign-style tactics and rhetoric and taking sharp aim at critics of his proposed “public option” plan. In remarks prepared for a town meeting here at Southwest High School, the president said he believes “strongly” that health care reform should include “a public insurance option.” “If the private insurance companies have to compete with a public option, it will keep them honest and help keep prices down,” Obama said.


RTTNews:

- Thursday, Chindex International Inc. (CHDX), a U.S.-based healthcare company with main operations in China, reported a profit in its fourth quarter, compared to prior year's loss, boosted by strong revenues mainly from Medical Products division. Revenue for the fourth quarter increased 72% to $59.66 million from $34.62 million last year. Quarterly revenue from the Medical Products division surged 130% year-over-year to $39.5 million, and revenue from the Healthcare Services division increased 16% to $20.2 million. According to the company, the revenue growth reflected the recognition of revenue for certain government-backed loan programs, as well as higher medical products sales such as daVinci units, and growth in inpatient and outpatient revenues in the hospital division.


Reuters:
- Iraq’s South Oil Co. is seeking to boost crude output by as much as 500,000 barrels a day by 2012, citing the company’s new head Fayad al-Nema.
South Oil, which exports about 1.5 million barrels of oil a day through the southern port of Basra, is in talks with companies such as Halliburton Co., Schlumberger Ltd., Baker Hughes Inc. and Weatherford International Ltd. to boost production.

- Qualcomm Inc (QCOM) raised its current-quarter profit and revenue targets on stronger sales of mobile phone chips, but its warning that shipments would fall next quarter dampened investor enthusiasm.

- Ford Motor Co (F) Chief Executive Alan Mulally said on Thursday that the U.S. economy is on the right track to begin improving in the second half of the year."We think we are right on track to start this recovery in the second half," Mulally told reporters on the sidelines of an an event promoting the Taurus sedan.

- The two primary U.S. financial market regulators are drafting legislation to implement the Obama administration's proposed crackdown on over-the-counter derivatives, said sources familiar with discussions at the agencies late on Wednesday. In another sign that a merger is unlikely between the Securities and Exchange Commission and the Commodity Futures Trading Commission, the sources said the agencies could split oversight of OTC derivatives under the legal language they are working on for eventual submission to Congress. The SEC, the larger and older of the two agencies, may take charge of regulating credit default swaps, a type of OTC derivative, for publicly traded companies, one source said.

- The International Monetary Fund has raised its global growth estimates for 2010 to 2.4 percent from 1.9 percent in April because of stimulus measures taken in recent months, a G8 source who has seen the latest figures said. The recovery will be gradual, however, and the risks to the outlook are on the downside, the source told Reuters on Thursday, speaking on condition of anonymity.


FinanzNachrichten.de:

- BHP Billiton(BHP) and Japanese steelmakers including Nippon Steel Corp and JFE Holdings Inc have agreed to about a 33 percent cut in the 2009 iron ore price, a source familiar with the matter said on Thursday.

Bear Radar

Style Underperformer:
Small-cap Value (+1.19%)

Sector Underperformers:
Homebuilders (-1.08%), REITs (-.99%) and Restaurants (-.65%)

Stocks Falling on Unusual Volume:
CBEY, EVEP, UNH, LULU, FUQI, TNDM, CNQR, VPRT and OXPS

Stocks With Unusual Put Option Activity:
1) XLU 2) UNH 3) SWN 4) WYE 5) VRSN

Bull Radar

Style Outperformer:
Large-cap Value (+1.20%)

Sector Outperformers:
Banks (+2.28%), Computer Hardware (+2.12%) and Drugs (+2.03%)

Stocks Rising on Unusual Volume:
BAC, BCS, SNP, GSK, PFE, CHDX, SCHS, ZEUS, CFSG, BCSI, CTRN, PALM, PLXS, WATG, PICO, PSYS, ASCMA, CDZI, WSBC, DNBK, FFIV, ISRG, MPWR, DRIV, BBOX, PVD, IXP, TOD, EMG, WWW, MTX, IGN, CXG and AA

Stocks With Unusual Call Option Activity:
1) VMC 2) CTV 3) CA 4) CSC 5) LULU

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