Wednesday, June 17, 2009

Today's Headlines

Bloomberg:

- The U.S. government’s AAA credit rating isn’t likely to change in the “near term” as steps are taken to revive the economy and counter record deficits, Standard & Poor’s said. “Despite significant weakening in the near-term economic outlook, projected fiscal deficits, and the high fiscal costs of government support of the U.S. financial sector, we still believe that the U.S. government’s credit strengths continue to outweigh its weaknesses,” wrote Nikola Swann, an analyst at S&P in New York. The long- and short-term ratings and the outlook on the rankings are stable, S&P said.

- The Senate Finance Committee may delay consideration of a health-care overhaul until July as lawmakers work to bring the cost below $1 trillion and reach a bipartisan compromise, panel Chairman Max Baucus said.

- JPMorgan Chase & Co.(JPM) and four of the nation’s largest banks repaid $54.7 billion to the U.S. Treasury’s bailout fund in a step toward ridding themselves of government restrictions on lending and pay. JPMorgan repaid $25 billion, and New York-based Morgan Stanley and Goldman Sachs Group Inc. each gave back $10 billion. U.S. Bancorp, with its headquarters in Minneapolis, refunded $6.6 billion and Winston-Salem, North Carolina-based BB&T Corp. paid $3.1 billion, the banks said today in separate statements.

- Yields on Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac mortgage securities declined for a fifth day, tracking a drop in rates on benchmark U.S. Treasuries and suggesting further declines in borrowing costs for new home loans. Yields on Washington-based Fannie Mae’s current-coupon 30- year fixed-rate mortgage bonds fell 0.06 percentage point to 4.52 percent as of 10:55 a.m. in New York, the lowest since May 29, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. Treasuries and so-called agency mortgage bonds rallied after a government report showed the cost of living rose less than forecast in May. The mortgage-bond yields are down from 5.07 percent on June 10, the highest level since the Federal Reserve announced plans to buy home-loan bonds in November. “There is a large feeling that we hit the highs in yield last week because of supply,” said Adam Brown, a managing director and Treasury trader at primary dealer Barclays Capital Inc. in New York, referring to government notes.

- Cantillon Capital Management LLC, a $4.5 billion asset-management firm run by William von Mueffling, is closing its two hedge funds to focus on traditional investing, according to people familiar with the matter. The firm plans to return money to clients of its $2.7 billion Cantillon World fund and $800 million Cantillon European fund by the end of September.

- Federal Reserve officials are considering whether to use next week’s policy statement to suppress any speculation they’re prepared to raise interest rates as soon as this year. While policy makers have signaled they accept an increase in longer-term Treasury yields as the economy improves, some are concerned at any premature anticipation of rate rises. Fed staff have examined the Bank of Canada’s public intention of foregoing an increase until 2010, according to a person familiar with the matter, without concluding the statement has proven effective.

- Potash Corp. of Saskatchewan Inc.(POT) and competing crop-nutrient providers tumbled after the Canadian company trimmed output, bringing cuts this year to almost half its production capacity, and a European producer lowered prices. Potash Corp., the world’s largest producer of its namesake fertilizer, tumbled C$11.56, or 9.6 percent, to C$109.44 at 1:30 p.m. in Toronto Stock Exchange trading. Earlier, the shares dropped to C$109.29, the biggest intraday decline since March 2.

- Tens of thousands of supporters of Mir Hossein Mousavi, the defeated main challenger in the disputed Iranian presidential election, rallied in central Tehran, video on Iranian state television showed, after the biggest protest in 30 years led to as many as 15 deaths.

- Eastern Bay Investment Management’s James Zhong is selling China’s small-cap stocks after the steepest rally worldwide pushed valuations to the highest level since the shares peaked in January 2008. “We’re seeing a bubble in small-cap stocks,” said Zhong, who helps oversee $220 million in Hong Kong. Zhong predicts the CSI 500 Index, a benchmark for China’s 2.1 trillion-yuan ($307 billion) market for small-cap equities, will slide as much as 30 percent “in the near future” because he expects companies will report first-half results that disappoint investors.

- Rallies in commodity prices and mining company shares stem from a “bubble of belief” in China’s economy that is likely to burst, according to Albert Edwards, a strategist at Societe Generale. “I believe we will look back on the Chinese economic miracle as the sickest joke yet played on investors,” Edwards wrote in a report. He cited falling earnings at the country’s industrial companies. “The bullish group-think on China is just as vulnerable to massive disappointment as any other extreme example of bubble-nonsense I have seen over the last two decades,” his report said. “The fall to earth will be equally as shocking.”

- When Patricia McArdle volunteered for Barack Obama’s presidential campaign, her duties and goals were clear. Now she’s devoting her time to his health-care plan and says she’s confused and frustrated. Obama, who enlisted a 13 million-member grassroots army to help him win the White House, is trying to remobilize those people to build support for his proposed overhaul. That goal may prove elusive.


Wall Street Journal:

- President Barack Obama on Wednesday proposed sweeping changes to the way the U.S. government oversees financial markets and will push Congress to grant new powers to the Federal Reserve to oversee the economy. Mr. Obama detailed the reform proposals the White House says are necessary to avoid another financial crisis. The president blamed the turmoil on "a culture of irresponsibility" that he said had taken root from Wall Street to Washington. He attributed much of the country's current problem to "a cascade of mistakes and missed opportunities" that occurred over decades.

- The President yesterday denounced the "extent of the fraud" and the "shocking" and "brutal" response of the Iranian regime to public demonstrations in Tehran these past four days. "These elections are an atrocity," he said. "If [Mahmoud] Ahmadinejad had made such progress since the last elections, if he won two-thirds of the vote, why such violence?" The statement named the regime as the cause of the outrage in Iran and, without meddling or picking favorites, stood up for Iranian democracy. The President who spoke those words was France's Nicolas Sarkozy.

- Julius Genachowski, the man nominated to head the Federal Communications Commission, said Tuesday he favors using $7 billion of stimulus money to extend broadband Internet service to consumers who lack access now, a view backed by big telecommunications and cable companies. Mr. Genachowski also told a Senate committee he doesn't support reinstatement of the Fairness Doctrine, an FCC rule abandoned during the Reagan administration that required broadcasters to air both sides of an issue. He said he doesn't believe the FCC should be in the business of censoring political speech.

- Asustek Computer Inc. is launching a Disney-branded netbook aimed at children as the pioneering Taiwan computer maker seeks to expand its offerings of the low-priced machines.


IBD:

- Video killed the radio star, as the old song goes. Now, online video could make a killing for network gear makers over the next few years. When IBD recently asked Cisco Systems (CSCO) CEO John Chambers to offer some predictions about the future of technology, the networking pioneer didn't mince words.


NY Times:

- MLB.com, which sells the popular At Bat application for the iPhone and iPod Touch, said it will add live feeds of some games for no additional charge, at least for now.


Houston Chronicle:

- The oil and gas industry’s trade group has teamed up with 15 labor unions to lobby Washington for job creation through increased access to U.S. oil and gas reserves and discourage tax increases that could chill growth in activity. “Today is the first time the oil and natural gas industry and labor unions have agreed to work together to promote job growth and advance the economic future of America,” Jack Gerard, president of the American Petroleum Institute, said today. He said increased oil and gas exploration could add 160,000 jobs and $1.7 trillion in government revenues from royalties and leases through 2030.


Washington Post:

- President Obama's plan to expand health coverage to the uninsured is likely to dig the nation deeper into debt unless policymakers adopt politically painful controls on spending, such as sharp reductions in payments to doctors, hospitals and other providers, congressional budget analysts said yesterday. While popular measures such as increasing preventive care, expanding the use of electronic medical records and rewarding doctors for choosing more effective treatments have the potential to lower costs, "little reliable evidence exists about exactly how to implement those types of changes," Congressional Budget Office Director Douglas W. Elmendorf said in a letter to Senate budget leaders. "Without meaningful reforms, the substantial costs of many current proposals . . . would be much more likely to worsen the long-run budget outlook than to improve it," he said. The pronouncement from the influential budget office is likely to complicate the arduous task of enacting comprehensive changes this year. Cutting costs will require "real action," said Sen. Judd Gregg (R-N.H.), the senior Republican on the Senate Budget Committee. The CBO report "strips away the political posturing and gets down to the basic fact that it will require alternatives that are generally unacceptable to the people who have been putting forward health-care plans." Key Democrats in the Senate, including Finance Committee Chairman Max Baucus (D-Mont.), are advocating a new tax on the most generous employer-sponsored health benefits. But the White House is opposed to the idea, which has the potential to ensnare the middle-class workers Obama vowed to protect from tax increases. Senate aides said Baucus had been looking at options that could push the price past $1.6 trillion over 10 years, a figure that startled some Democrats on the Senate Finance Committee, who met yesterday to discuss their options. "It is clear there have got to be changes made to make the whole package affordable," Conrad said.


Housingwire.com:

- Foreclosure sales in California rose 31.9% in May after jumping 35% the month before, according to a survey by ForeclosureRadar. The service, which tracks each foreclosure in the state, noted 30% fewer foreclosures went to sale at auction from the same time last year.


Rassmussen:

- Forty-eight percent (48%) of U.S. voters say it is too easy to sue a doctor for medical malpractice in the United States today. The latest Rasmussen Reports national telephone survey finds that just 19% say it is too hard to sue for medical malpractice, while 18% believe the current legal situation is about right.


Politico:

- Angered by White House decisions on everything from greenhouse gases to car dealerships, congressional Democrats from rural districts are threatening to revolt against parts of President Barack Obama’s ambitious first-year agenda. “They don’t get rural America,” said Rep. Dennis Cardoza, a Democrat who represents California’s agriculture-rich Central Valley. “They form their views of the world in large cities.” Cardoza’s critique was aimed at Obama’s Environmental Protection Agency, but it echoes complaints rural-district Democrats have about a number of Obama administration decisions. “I wouldn’t say it’s a complete strikeout, but they’ve just got a few more bases to it when it comes to the rural community,” said Louisiana Democratic Sen. Mary Landrieu. A rural revolt could hamper the administration’s ability to pass climate change and health care legislation before the August recess.


Chicagotribune.com:

- Federal prosecutors have unsealed a wide-ranging indictment against Philip J. Baker, accusing the head of Chicago-based hedge fund Lake Shore Asset Management Ltd. of defrauding hundreds of investors out of roughly $312 million. U.S. Atty. Patrick Fitzgerald announced the 27-count indictment Tuesday and said it "was unsealed to facilitate international efforts to apprehend Baker." Baker is a 44-year-old Canadian citizen last spotted living in Hamburg, Germany, whose location is unknown, prosecutors said. The charges include fraud, obstruction of justice and criminal contempt.


Cleveland.com:

- Politicians for months have talked about green energy -- including wind and solar energy -- in Ohio. Time to shift the focus: Duke Energy on Thursday is expected to announce plans to build a nuclear power plant in Piketon, The Plain Dealer has learned. The southern Ohio region is economically depressed, needs jobs and, most importantly, is comfortable with handling uranium products.


USA Today:

- Overhauling the nation's health care system won't easily lead to the long-term budget savings that President Obama hopes to achieve, the director of the Congressional Budget Office says. Obama has said that "health care reform is entitlement reform," but he plans to use savings from Medicare and Medicaid over 10 years to extend health insurance coverage to millions of people. In an interview Monday with USA TODAY, CBO Director Douglas Elmendorf said the cost to insure those people will continue to rise, and savings from efforts to curb health care spending may be elusive. That's because some of the best ways to reduce costs — slashing Medicare payments to doctors and hospitals or limiting tax breaks for employer-provided health benefits — are politically difficult, Elmendorf said. Savings from changes sought by Obama and his allies in Congress — cutting costs in high-spending regions, expanding best practices and bundling services — won't be easy to achieve. Elmendorf's non-partisan agency will estimate the cost of every health care proposal. On Monday, it said insurance expansion proposed by Sen. Edward Kennedy, D-Mass., would cost $1 trillion and leave 37 million people uninsured. Top Republicans on the congressional budget panels, who are opposed to Obama's health care overhaul, said Elmendorf is being an honest broker. "The CBO has put up a lot of red flags about the whole approach to the health care reform effort," said Sen. Judd Gregg, R-N.H. "We're creating an entitlement here that could easily rival the size of Medicare," said Rep. Paul Ryan, R-Wis. "History shows the pay-fors evaporate, but the expenditures continue."


Reuters:
- The economy is closer to recovery as governments have taken steps to address the financial crisis, the chief financial officer of aircraft parts maker Goodrich Corp (GR) said on Wednesday. "The signs are there that at some point pretty soon we're going to get to the point where we have an upturn," Scott Kuechle told Reuters in an interview at the Paris Air Show. "It's hard to tell exactly when that is. I think we're past the biggest threat."

- Package delivery giant and U.S. economic bellwether FedEx Corp said the next two quarters will be "extremely difficult" as the recession and higher fuel prices bite into its bottom line, but said the pace of economic decline appears to be slowing.

- The benchmark S&P 500 index .SPX should surge back to its October 2007 record above 1,500 by the end of 2012, provided the U.S. economy sees a V-shaped recovery, JPMorgan Chase Chief U.S. Equity Strategist Thomas Lee said on Wednesday. "The global economy is in the midst of a synchronized recovery," Lee said at the Reuters Investment Outlook Summit. "If we end up with a V-shaped recovery, we could go back to our record high of 1,500 in 2011-2012," he added, referring to the S&P 500.

Financial Times:
- Hedge funds have used their most prominent annual gathering – the GAIM conference in Monaco – to speak out against ”disastrous” new regulatory proposals from the European Union. After a turbulent end to 2008 and an unhealthy start to 2009, managers and their investors are rallying round to fight off the new draft rules outlined in late April by the EU commission. The EU commission’s draft directive on alternative investment fund managers controversially proposes limits on fund leverage and would require funds to be registered in EU countries in which they have investors.

BBC:

- The head of the International Atomic Energy Agency says he believes Iran is mastering nuclear technology and it wants the option of a nuclear weapon.


Emirates Business 24/7:
- Dubai’s office vacancy rate is estimated at about 22%, citing Robin Pugh, Director of Agency Services at Jones Lang LaSalle.

Bear Radar

Style Underperformer:
Mid-cap Value (-.20%)

Sector Underperformers:
Coal (-2.70%), Oil Service (-2.48%) and Papers (-2.32%)

Stocks Falling on Unusual Volume:
WLL, HES, SFY, RTP, MDR, TCB, PCU, PCZ, CSIQ, VIP, FUQI, AAUK, PTEN, OKS, POT, ELP, TRP and GLP

Stocks With Unusual Put Option Activity:
1) ETFC 2) IPI 3) STSI 4) CIT 5) KMP

Bull Radar

Style Outperformer:
Large-cap Growth (+.18%)

Sector Outperformers:
Education (+5.67%), Medical Equipment (+1.83%) and Biotech (+1.78%)

Stocks Rising on Unusual Volume:
GENZ, BCR, ABT, BMY, PEP, UBSI, SVNT, CENT, TNDM, NFLX, BRLI, CPLA, BIDU, AMGN, QCOM, STRA, GWR, ATU, WPI, FSF and OMI

Stocks With Unusual Call Option Activity:
1) CI 2) HUM 3) MCK 4) ADBE 5) ANF

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Tuesday, June 16, 2009

Wednesday Watch

Late-Night Headlines
Bloomberg:

- The cost to protect U.S. corporate bonds from default rose the most since March as tumbling U.S. wholesale prices and industrial output further undercut optimism after a three-month rally in the riskiest assets. Credit-default swaps of Goldman Sachs Group Inc. rose to a four-week high, while contracts on Citigroup Inc. soared the most in almost two months, signaling a deterioration in the perception of credit quality. Best Buy Inc. swaps increased to the highest since May 22 after the electronics retailer posted a drop in quarterly profit. Corporate credit in the U.S. slumped for a second day on speculation the economy may not recover as fast as forecast from the longest recession since the 1930s and that the number of defaults and bankruptcies may not slow anytime soon. Credit-default swaps on the Markit CDX North America Investment-Grade Index Series 12 climbed 8.5 basis points to 137.5 basis points in New York following a 7-basis-point gain yesterday, the biggest two-day increase since March 3, according to CMA DataVision. Credit-default swaps on Goldman Sachs rose 20.7 basis points to 155 basis points, while contracts on JPMorgan increased 10.8 basis points to 105 basis points, the highest since May 21, according to CMA. Citigroup swaps jumped 61.5 basis points to 460 basis points, CMA prices show. Yields on junk bonds rose the most relative to benchmark rates since May 13, according to Merrill Lynch & Co. index data. The average spread on high-yield, high-risk debt widened 8 basis points today to 1,048 basis points more than Treasuries, according to Merrill’s U.S. High Yield Master II index.

- Eat the rich. Maybe that will work. Even a 100% payroll tax on people earning more than $200,000 a year wouldn’t completely plug the gap between what the US government takes in and what it intends to spend over the next three years. The deficit will reach about $1.8 trillion this fiscal year before declining to $1.3 trillion in 2010 and roughly $900 billion in 2011, according to President Obama’s recently proposed budget to Congress. The president wants to increase the top two marginal tax rates for people earning more than $200,000 to 36% and 39.6%, and to limit the value of certain deductions. Of the 138 million individual income tax returns filed in 2006, there were 3.85 million with adjusted gross incomes of $200,000 or more, according to the Internal Revenue Service’s Statistics of Income Bulletin. “I think the argument being made by those advocating a higher top marginal tax rate is that closing the budget gap is going to require lots of incremental pain, and those who are doing the best should be contributing something to the effort,” said Joshua Shapiro, chief US economist at MFR Inc., a NY-based consulting firm. However, “everyone knows the vast middle is where the bulk of the wage and salary income is.”

- Aluminum inventories monitored by the London Metal Exchange will jump 16% by the end of the year as producers resume output from idled smelters, said David Wilson, the director of metals research at Societe Generale. Stockpiles tallied by the LME will reach 5 million metric tons by the end of 2009, Wilson forecast. Warehouse supplies reached a record 4.32 million tons and are up 86% this year, LME data show. “There’s the huge potential of new supplies to come into the market in the next four or five years.” Aluminum prices have jumped 16% since the end of March, and some smelters have restarted production on speculation usage will rebound. “There is still a chronic level of oversupply as illustrated in reported stocks,” Wilson said. The aluminum market will be in a “significant” surplus this year, with production exceeding demand by about 2.28 million tons, Wilson said. Demand in china, the world’s biggest metals user, will ease as buyers stop adding to stockpiles, he said. “It’s highly unlikely we’ll see further restocking in China,” Wilson said. “There is a glut of metal in China.”

- Corn fell, erasing an earlier gain, on speculation that warmer weather and ample rainfall in the U.S. Midwest will boost prospects for the nation’s biggest crop. About 70 percent of the crop was in good or excellent condition as of June 14, compared with 57 percent a year earlier, the U.S. Department of Agriculture said yesterday. Warm, wet weather the next 10 days will aid plant development ahead of reproduction in July, said Dale Schultz, a commodity specialist for Gottsch Enterprises in Hastings, Nebraska.

- Reynolds American Inc. said North Carolina Governor Beverly Perdue is putting manufacturing jobs at risk with her proposal to raise cigarette taxes by $1 a pack. “We want more jobs, not taxes,” Daniel Delen, chief executive officer of Reynolds’ R.J. Reynolds Tobacco Co. unit, said today during a rally in Raleigh, North Carolina’s capital. “Taxes cause direct job losses.” More than 400 Reynolds employees gathered to urge legislators to reject raising cigarette taxes in the state that grows the most tobacco in the U.S. and is home to Reynolds and Lorillard Inc.

- Manufacturers, utilities and refineries expecting free handouts from the government in U.S. climate legislation may not be able to avoid the tax collector. Lawmakers are considering taxing $693 billion in pollution credits that the U.S. would give away to companies as part of a bill designed to cut emissions tied to global warming. If carbon allowances are sold or traded in the same way as commodities, taxes would be appropriate, the Joint Committee on Taxation said in a report presented to the Senate Finance Committee today. “That to me does not seem like a good direction to go,” James Miller, chief executive officer of Allentown, Pennsylvania-based PPL Corp., told reporters at a lunch meeting. “We are going to allocate allowances for certain periods of time and distribute them in a manner that we can reduce the impact on ratepayers to some degree,” Miller said. “I’m not sure what we are intending to accomplish then by taxing the allowances that are given to help the ratepayers see a reduced impact of CO2 legislation.”

- U.S. President Barack Obama praised Federal Reserve Chairman Ben S. Bernanke for doing an “extraordinary job” while declining to comment on whether he plans to nominate the central bank chief for a second term. Bernanke has “done an extraordinary job under extraordinary circumstances,” Obama said today in an interview with Bloomberg Television at the White House. On a potential reappointment, Obama said, “I’m not making news on that today.”

- Eastern Bay Investment Management’s James Zhong is selling China’s small-cap stocks after the steepest rally worldwide pushed valuations to the highest level since the shares peaked in January 2008. “We’re seeing a bubble in small-cap stocks,” said Zhong, who helps oversee $220 million in Hong Kong. Zhong predicts the CSI 500 Index, a benchmark for China’s $307 billion market for small-cap equities, will slide as much as 30% “in the near future” because he expects companies will report first-half results that disappoint investors. The jump in mainland-traded equities with a median value of 3.8 billion yuan pushed the price-to-earnings ratio for Shenzhen Topraysolar Co. to 110, data compiled by Bloomberg show. Xuzhou V V Food & Beverage Co. fetches 160 times profit, almost double its PE ratio of 87 at the top of the last bull market. Beijing Vantone Real Estate Co. shares rose 171% since Nov. 9, even as analysts cut their earnings estimates by 35%. Zhong, KBC Goldstate Fund Management’s Larry Wan and Hamon Asset Management Ltd.’s Nina Wu say the advance has gone too far after the CSI 500’s PE ratio jumped to 68, near the level of 69 when the index peaked at 5,487. Investors opened 8 million new brokerage accounts since Nov. 9, 30% more than the previous seven-month period. Shanghai Stock Exchange trading more than doubled to an average 12.8 billion share a day, Bloomberg data show. “Bubbles almost always occur as markets adjust to rapidly increasing liquidity and it’s obvious we’ve had a massive increase in liquidity in China,” said Michael Pettis, a finance professor at Peking University in Beijing and former head of emerging markets at NY-based Bear Stearns Cos. Companies are expected to post a 16.6% increase in 2009 earnings, according to analysts’ estimates compiled by Shanghai Wind Information Co. That compares with NY-based Morgan Stanley’s estimate for a 25% profit decline for companies in developing nations worldwide. KBC’s Wan said the valuations for Chinese small-cap stocks make them too risky to buy. “This is outright gambling,” he said. “I’m leaving this to those who can dance with wolves.”

- Goldman Sachs Group Inc.(GS), the fifth- biggest U.S. bank by assets, will repay $10 billion to the Treasury Department tomorrow, Chief Executive Officer Lloyd Blankfein wrote to congressional leaders.

- Sweden’s economy, enmeshed in the steepest recession in at least 15 years, will suffer a further blow from its banks’ decade-long expansion in the Baltic states. Writedowns for Swedish banks in eastern Europe, especially the Baltics, may cost 5 percent of Swedish gross domestic product, Fitch Ratings Ltd. estimates, even after Latvian lawmakers last night approved deep cuts in public spending to unlock the next part of a bailout loan and avert a devaluation.

- Japan plans to offer loans to power producers in the U.S. and Australia that buy so-called clean coal generators from Japanese manufacturers, according to a government document obtained by Bloomberg News.


Wall Street Journal:

- A backlash over plans for strict hedge fund regulations in Europe may bolster efforts by U.S. hedge funds to keep any new rules called for by the Obama administration from being overly strict. Earlier this month, London-based hedge funds warned the U.K. government's Treasury they may leave the country if a European Union plan is approved forcing managers to register with regulators and provide information on their holdings, fees and the amount of money they borrow. U.K. officials even backed them up over the weekend, with one reportedly saying he would fight "tooth and nail" in support of the U.K. funds to keep them from leaving. London is No. 2 in the world for hedge funds, after New York and its suburbs. The heavy resistance to hedge fund regulation in Europe comes just before President Barack Obama, on Wednesday, is set to announce major financial regulation reforms after a global crisis in markets that helped throw most of the world into recession. Increasing oversight of hedge funds is near the top of his list of reform plans, and observers say he will, at a minimum, want a law forcing hedge fund to register with the Securities and Exchange Commission. This would likely give the SEC the ability to check in on the funds and review their books to ensure the integrity and security of markets. But such a rule may not go far enough, say many analysts, who note Bernie Madoff, arrested last year for running a $50 billion Ponzi scheme, was registered with the SEC.

- General Motors Corp. (GMGMQ) plans to idle its plant in San Luis Potosi, Mexico, for seven weeks this summer to adjust for weak demand in the Mexican and international markets, the company's Mexican unit said Tuesday. The plant, which produces the compact Chevrolet Aveo and Pontiac G3, will be idled from July 1 to August 21, General Motors de Mexico said in a press release.

- Four power companies are expected to split $18.5 billion in federal financing to build the next generation of nuclear reactors -- the biggest step in three decades to revive the U.S. nuclear industry and one that could vault the utilities ahead of some of the sector's strongest players. UniStar Nuclear Energy, NRG Energy Inc., Scana Corp and Southern Co. are expected to share a set of federal loan guarantees to be awarded by the Energy Department. The guarantees would enable the companies to start building the reactors as early as 2011, with the plants likely to come online by 2015.

- Trade organizations representing an array of technology companies Tuesday criticized a Chinese mandate to require computer makers to install Web-filtering software on PCs sold in the country. The plan "raises significant questions of security, privacy, system reliability, the free flow of information and user choice," according to a letter sent by 19 organizations to Li Yizhong, China's Minister of Industry and Information Technology, a copy of which was reviewed by The Wall Street Journal. "We urge the Chinese government to reconsider implementing the requirements," the letter said.

- The U.S. House of Representatives voted Tuesday to approve a $106 billion bill to pay for the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq through September, in a vote that also provided $1 billion in funding for additional assistance to the troubled U.S. auto industry. It also created funding to pay for a program dubbed cash-for-clunkers that would allow owners of older, heavier polluting cars to receive a cash voucher upon trading it in for a newer, cleaner car. The vote, at 226-200, was much tighter than that of an earlier margin in a vote on a House version of a war funding bill. This is because the bulk of Republicans -- almost all of whom had supported the legislation earlier -- voted against the bill due to the fact that it includes $5 billion in funding to boost lending capabilities at the International Monetary Fund. The funds will enable the IMF to lend an additional $108 billion to developing countries struggling in the face of the global economic downturn. In the end, just five GOP lawmakers voted in favor of the bill, in an attempt to paint Democrats as out of touch with the priorities of average Americans. Republicans decried the money as misspent, both because they said Americans are suffering at home and in need of assistance, and also because they said it could lead to the IMF lending money to enemies of the U.S. Also included in the legislation is money to pay for several foreign aid programs, such as greater assistance for Pakistan to help the Asian nation to deal with a burgeoning refugee crisis.

- House Democrats are crafting a transportation spending bill that would cost roughly $450 billion over six years, but no consensus has emerged on how to fund it, according to people familiar with the matter. The bill for the first time would establish standards -- like reducing oil consumption and spurring economic growth -- that would influence which highway and transit projects get federal funding. It would also consolidate to six or fewer the number of Transportation Department programs used to channel money to states, giving local officials more flexibility to combat their transportation challenges.

- Pro-government and opposition demonstrators poured into the streets of Iran's capital Tuesday for a fourth day of sometimes-violent rallies, as the country's religious leaders agreed to a partial recount of Friday's disputed presidential vote. Amid the unrest, and more shooting by government-backed militia, authorities arrested prominent opposition leaders and clamped down on media covering the crisis.

- European new-car registrations last month slipped 4.9% from a year earlier, but Germany's Volkswagen AG and Italy's Fiat SpA saw demand rise as scrapping incentives fueled sales of smaller cars. New-car registrations in Europe dipped to 1.27 million vehicles in May, the 13th consecutive month of shrinking demand, despite successful scrapping initiatives in several major markets that cushioned the fall, the European Automobile Manufacturers Association, or ACEA, said Tuesday in a statement. In the first five months of the year, registrations in Europe were down 14% compared with the same period last year at 5.96 million vehicles.


CNBC.com:
- As we head toward the release date for Apple's next big iPhone, the 3GS, pundits and experts are stepping forward with some pretty robust sales estimates.

- Not all airline stocks may be created equal, at least according to Stifel Nicolaus airline analyst Hunter Keay.


NY Times:

- Wall Street’s great investment houses have never faced a serious foreign challenge in their own backyard. But as tectonic shifts reverberate through the banking industry, their overseas rivals are edging into some of the most lucrative corners of American finance.


IBD:

- Into this busy field comes a small upstart, San Antonio-based Rackspace Hosting (RAX). Nine-year-old Rackspace had already carved out a niche in managed hosting, in which it owns and operates the infrastructure for clients' internal networks and Internet needs. Cloud computing was a natural extension.

Business Week:
- The Obama Administration wants to save money by streamlining approvals for "follow-on biologics." The biotech industry, with much to lose, cites risks. The Biotechnology Industry Organization dashed out a hostile response to the FTC's suggestions, issuing a statement that faulted the agency for "an exceedingly narrow policy perspective." The industry fears that limiting patent protections and market exclusivity would crush profits, which would in turn make it difficult for companies to invent new drugs. The average innovation takes $1.2 billion to bring to fruition, the industry group says. The FTC, it adds, "appears to minimize greatly the impact on innovation that would occur under a new paradigm in which biosimilar competitors would be able to take a free ride off the massive [research and development] investment made by the initial innovators."

CNNMoney.com:

- Can reinvigorated financial watchdogs take a bite out of surging oil prices? Dicker said that should oil prices continue to rise, the drumbeat for action will continue to get louder. He said he could even envision regulators forcing all futures traders to liquidate their contracts when they expire, rather than rolling them over into the next month -- which is how regulators responded when the Hunt brothers tried to corner the silver market 30 years ago. "If the screaming gets loud enough," he said, "you could see some pretty draconian measures."


Forbes:

- Get ready for a slew of press releases when the Russell Indexes rebalance on June 29. The Rochester Medical Corp. was early in touting its coming inclusion in the Russell 3000, a broad index that covers 98% of the liquid stocks on the world markets. Members of the Russell 3000 are from the large-cap Russell 1000 or small-cap Russell 2000, which will include small-cap Rochester.

- Oil’s Paper Bubble. Perception is once again substituting for reality in the oil markets. Prices are going in the opposite direction of demand. "I don't have a prediction short term, because it's a little bit of a fool's game," says Mark Brown, oil services research analyst for Pritchard Capital Partners. Fadel Gheit, senior energy analyst for Oppenheimer & Co., says perception once again is substituting for reality, with speculators driving up the market to levels that are "unjustifiable." "Market forecast supply and demand, in my view, will not support an oil price above $50, let alone above $70," he says. "So, obviously, the oil price is inflated, and they are inflated in the hands of the same players that brought about the global financial crisis." He says traders are taking positions, holding oil in tankers offshore and waiting for the price to spike, which becomes a "self-fulfilling prophesy" based on paper demand, not real consumption. "Demand is rising artificially because a big chunk of it goes to storage," he says. "Somebody is holding the oil and releasing it at higher prices--the same gimmick, the same game that we have gone through before." Gheit, who has testified before Congress urging better regulation in the market, believes "financial players have seized" the oil business in the last four or five years, with major oil companies having less impact on the market than major investment banks. "If Exxon makes an oil forecast tomorrow and Goldman Sachs makes an oil forecast tomorrow, the market will take Goldman Sachs and not pay attention to Exxon," he says, adding, "it has nothing to do with supply and demand of the physical commodity." "We had the crash (last year), we got hurt pretty badly, now we are back and we are doing exactly the same thing that we did before, which is accelerate, accelerate, accelerate," he says. "It will eventually crash. The question is not if, the question is when."


Politico:

- Reacting to a rising tide of anger from gay and lesbian supporters at a series of slights and deferred promises, President Obama will tomorrow sign an executive order extending benefits to same-sex partners of federal employees. The move, which mirrors the policy of many large corporations, will have an immediate effect for many workers, but it is a deeply reactive response to a core Democratic group whose concerns have been festering for six months. The executive order -- scheduled for signing tomorrow at 5:45 p.m., may in the short term give Joe Biden something positive to say at a June 25 fundraiser that has seen prominent guests drop out, a host sharply attack the administration, and which is expected to be marked by protests. The silence on gay rights in the early days of the administration have pushed many gay rights leaders toward demands that Obama go beyond smaller-bore issues toward the heavier political lifts of ending "Don't Ask, Don't Tell" and the Defense of Marriage Act and supporting same-sex marriage. And they're shifting toward a more confrontational strategy, which could include a march on Washington later this year. The executive director of the Empire State Pride Agenda, a large state-based gay rights group, Alan Van Capelle, greeted today's announcement sarcastically.


Rasmussen:

- Eighty percent (80%) of U.S. voters want the government to sell its stake in General Motors and Chrysler as soon as possible. A Rasmussen Reports national telephone survey finds that only 11% disagree and want the government to retain ownership for a long time. Support for ending the government ownership is so strong that 64% favor a proposal that would force the government to sell the auto companies within a year. Only 26% are opposed.


Washington Post:

- President Obama has embraced Bush Administration justifications for denying public access to White House visitors logs even as advisers say they are reviewing the policy of keeping secret the official record of comings and goings. In recent days, the Secret Service has rejected requests from two organizations for the logs, which document the West Wing meetings that have helped shape Obama's policies on banking regulation, economic recovery, foreign policy and the auto industry. Today, Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics in Washington filed a lawsuit against the Obama administration seeking release of the visits of coal company executives to the White House. Msnbc.com reported today that their broader request for logs since Jan. 20 was also denied.

- Advisers of hedge funds, private equity, venture capital funds and other private investment pools would be required to register with the Securities and Exchange Commission, according to Senate legislation introduced on Tuesday. Senator Jack Reed, chairman of the Senate Banking Committee's subcommittee on securities, said his bill would require advisers that manage more than $30 million in assets to register with the SEC. Smaller funds would be supervised by states.

- The CIA is pushing the Obama administration to maintain the secrecy of significant portions of a comprehensive internal account of the agency's interrogation program, according to two intelligence officials. The officials say the CIA is urging the suppression of passages describing in graphic detail how the agency handled its detainees, arguing that the material could damage ongoing counterterrorism operations by laying bare sensitive intelligence procedures and methods. The May 2004 report, prepared by the CIA's inspector general, is the most definitive official account to date of the agency's interrogation system. A heavily redacted version, consisting of a dozen or so paragraphs separated by heavy black boxes and lists of missing pages, was released in May 2008 in response to a Freedom of Information Act lawsuit by the American Civil Liberties Union.


Crain’s NY Business:

- Facing the inevitable assault of government regulation, the hedge fund industry is quietly building up its arsenal. The Managed Funds Association, the industry trade group, just hired heavyweight lobbying firm Brownstein Hyatt Farber Schreck to handle its relations with the federal government. Congress is mulling over how to regulate and rein in the $1.5 trillion hedge fund industry. The lobbying firm already represents the U.S. Department of Energy, the National Association of Homebuilders and the Private Equity Council, among others. Investment firms Apollo Management and Citadel Investments are also among its clients. With the threat of multiple bills floating around Capitol Hill, the Managed Funds Association is pumping money into its cause: It spent $750,000 in lobbying fees in the first quarter of this year, according to filings listed on OpenSecrets.org. The group is expected to outspend last year’s total of $2.5 million. With approximately 60% of hedge fund assets managed from Manhattan, the Big Apple is still considered the hedge fund capital. The MFA is hoping that Denver-based Brownstein Hyatt will give it an edge with Washington legislators: the firm hosted the kickoff party at last year’s Democratic National Committee, held in the Denver Art Museum. One of its name partners, Steve Farber, was chief fundraiser for the Democratic National Convention. Last month, two dissident senators were persuaded to drop their objections to former Goldman Sachs partner Gary Gensler becoming chairman of the Commodity Futures Trading Commission. Mr. Gensler’s nomination had been held up for months by Sens. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.) and Maria Cantwell (D-Wash.), who argued that Mr. Gensler was too cozy with the derivatives world. In addition to being a Wall Street master, Mr. Gensler is a former Treasury Department official under President Bill Clinton who helped write policy that exempted credit default swaps from regulation. Many blame the complex securities for last year’s market collapse. The industry has a few other political aces in its corner. New York Sen. Chuck Schumer sits on both the Senate financing committee and the banking committee. And the lawyer heading the MFA’s lobbying effort, Carmencita Whonder, joined Brownstein Hyatt’s Washington office in 2007 after serving as Mr. Schumer’s principle adviser on the banking committee.


AP:

- The latest cost estimates for health care legislation in Congress are around $1.6 trillion over 10 years, two Senate sources said Tuesday as concerns mounted over the price tag for the sweeping overhaul. Two Senate staffers, one Democratic and one Republican, said Congressional Budget Office estimates put the cost of the Finance Committee version of the bill at around $1.6 trillion. On Monday, the budget office said the Senate Health, Education, Labor and Pensions Committee version would cost $1 trillion over ten years and only cover about one-third of the nearly 50 million uninsured. The staffers who disclosed the latest estimates spoke on condition of anonymity because of the sensitivity of negotiations over the legislation. A third staffer, a Finance Committee Democratic aide who also spoke on condition of anonymity, indicated committee members are working to lower the cost to less than $1 trillion over 10 years, a level preferred by the Obama administration. Costs are becoming a big worry for moderate Republicans the administration is hoping to win over, as well as for fiscally conservative Democrats. The high estimates have disappointed senators and slowed down the work of key committees. Sen. Olympia Snowe, R-Maine, on Tuesday said the process that produced Kennedy's bill is "broken." "We have a fundamental obligation to ensure this legislation does not increase the deficit and, sadly, current congressional health care reform efforts fall woefully short," Snowe said in a statement.


Reuters:

- Adobe Systems Inc(ADBE), the maker of Photoshop and Acrobat software, posted the narrowest profit margin in more than 3 years, disappointing investors even though its revenue fell less than analysts had feared. The company's profit margin, excluding special items, dropped to 33.7 percent from 39.4 percent a year earlier. Adobe's stock fell 2.4 percent in extended trading.

- Large U.S. corporate bankruptcies have accelerated in recent weeks as the U.S. economic slowdown claims more victims, according to industry data. Eight public companies with assets of more than $1 billion have filed for bankruptcy protection in the last four weeks, compared with five multibillion-dollar company bankruptcies in the prior four-week period, according to data compiled by BankruptcyData.com and reviewed by Reuters.

- Venezuela on Tuesday passed a law to increase the government's stake in the petrochemical sector to a minimum 50 percent stake in all projects in a move that could affect companies such as Japan's Mitsibushi Corp. President Hugo Chavez has increased pressure on the private sector through nationalizations and by exerting authority over companies. The government has banned Coca-Cola Co's Coke Zero. The government is also planning to buy out a minority stake currently held by six Japanese companies in a major aluminum smelter. Here are some of the actions Chavez has taken against businesses in the oil-rich country.


Financial Times:

- Best Buy(BBY), the world’s largest consumer electronics chain, on Tuesday said its stores in Shanghai had seen a surge in the popularity of local Chinese products over the past year, in what may be a sign of the future shape of the global electronics market. Bob Willett, head of Best Buy’s international division, said the company’s six stores in Shanghai had see “massive movement towards local brands” over the past year – which include names such as Lenovo, TCL and Haier – in a business that was previously dominated by Japanese and Korean brands. “We are seeing 30-40 per cent improvements in local brands. International brands – Sony and Samsung – are declining by nearly 50 or 60 per cent in Shanghai alone,” he said. “We are seeing huge shifts and some of those shifts will translate to other parts of our business.”


TimesOnline:

- An ugly trade row has blown up between Europe and the United States over a decision by France, Germany and the UK to give Airbus launch aid for its latest aircraft. Airbus is seeking €3.5 billion in repayable aid to help it offset the estimated €11 billion it will cost to develop the A350XWB, which is due to enter service in 2013. However, the US government attacked the decision claiming it was “a major step in the wrong direction”. Sources familiar with the US government’s policy added that Europe’s decision to give Airbus launch aid would strain trade relations and could lead to penalties against European companies. Jim McNerney, the chief executive of Boeing, told The Times: “I’m disappointed Airbus is going to take that stuff on the eve of a WTO ruling on its appropriateness. It seems to me a step backward and suggests that they think the WTO process is irrelevant.”

- The scramble for Iraq's oil wealth is set to intensify after fresh agreements to develop three new exploration blocks in the country's Kurdish north. The decision from the Kurdistan Regional Government, which governs the semi-autonomous region, to allocate the concessions comes amid mounting international interest in the oil-rich province. Iraq holds the world's third-largest proven reserves of oil, after Iran and Saudi Arabia - about 115 billion barrels, according to BP - but large parts of the country, including the Kurdish region, where crude oil bleeds from the rocks in some places, remain relatively unexplored and there is the potential for the figure to rise sharply. The US Geological Survey estimates that the region could be found to contain 40 billion barrels of reserves. Industry sources told The Times that a formal announcement from the Kurdish authorities on which companies had won the concessions, which lie on Iraq's mountainous eastern border with Iran, was expected soon. A key reason for the present burst of activity is improved co-operation between Iraq's central government in Baghdad and the Kurdish authorities in Erbil, which since 2003 have clashed repeatedly over the latter's decision to strike deals to develop its oil reserves independently. After years of squabbling over how oil revenues should be distributed, exports of crude from the region were finally allowed to start on June 1.


China Securities Journal:

- China won’t have inflation this year even as loans increase by a record, citing Yao Jingyuan, chief economist of the National Bureau of Statistics. Industrial overcapacity and a “grim” job situation will prevent prices from rising, Yao said. Deflation will remain a concern for China’s economy this year, he said.


Sankei:

- North Korea is preparing to launch a long-range missile at a site in the country’s northeast as well as one from a northwest base. The two missiles are likely to be either standard or upgraded versions of the Taepo Dong-2 rocket.


Singapore Ministry of Health:

- The Risk of Community Spread of Swine Flu Rises in Singapore.


Late Buy/Sell Recommendations

Deutsche Bank:

- Raised (USB) to Buy.


Night Trading
Asian Indices are -2.0% to -.25% on average.

Asia Ex-Japan Inv Grd CDS Index -3.04%.
S&P 500 futures +.21%.
NASDAQ 100 futures +.21%.


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
- (ATU)/.13

- (FDX)/.50

- (IHS)/.57


Economic Releases

8:30 am EST

- The Consumer Price Index for May is estimated to rise .3% versus unch. in April.

- The CPI Ex Food & Energy for May is estimated to rise .1% versus a .3% gain in April.

- The Current Account Deficit for 1Q is estimated to shrink to -$85.0B versus -$132.8B in 4Q.


10:30 am EST

- Bloomberg consensus estimates call for a weekly crude oil inventory decline of -2,000,000 barrels versus a -4,382,000 barrel decline the prior week. Gasoline supplies are expected to rise by +550,000 barrels versus a -1,553,000 barrel decline the prior week. Distillate inventories are expected to rise by +1,000,000 barrels versus a -318,000 barrel decline the prior week. Finally, Refinery Utilization is estimated to rise by .13% versus a -.41% decline the prior week.


Upcoming Splits
- None of note


Other Potential Market Movers
-
The Fed’s Bernanke speaking, weekly MBA mortgage applications report, Fox-Pitt Kelton Small/Mid-cap Bank Conference, Jeffries Healthcare Conference and the (MAT) analyst conference could also impact trading today.


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