Thursday, October 01, 2009

Today's Headlines

Bloomberg:

- Spending by U.S. consumers climbed in August by the most since 2001, indicating the biggest part of the economy is starting to rebound from its worst slump in almost three decades. The 1.3 percent increase in purchases was larger than forecast and followed a 0.3 percent gain in the prior month that was bigger than previously estimated, Commerce Department figures showed today in Washington. Incomes climbed 0.2 percent for a second month and inflation decelerated. “This is not just a cash-for-clunkers story, spending is back in other areas as well,” said Chris Rupkey, chief financial economist at Bank of Tokyo-Mitsubishi UFJ Ltd. in New York, who correctly forecast the gain in spending. “It looks to be a slow and steady recovery.

- The number of contracts to buy previously owned homes in the U.S. increased more than forecast in August, reinforcing signs of a rebound in housing, industry figures showed today. The index of signed purchase agreements, or pending home sales, rose 6.4 percent after a 3.2 percent gain in July, the National Association of Realtors announced in Washington. The gain was the seventh in a row. Compared with a year earlier, pending sales rose 12.4 percent. “We are in a recovery,” said Gary Thayer, macro strategist at Wells Fargo Advisors LLC in St. Louis, before today’s report. “There were a lot of people who were on the fence. Prices are firming up and people are getting back into the market.”

- The Senate Finance Committee narrowly defeated a Republican attempt to exempt most Americans from tax increases to pay for the U.S. health-care overhaul, underscoring the friction over how to fund the legislation. The panel voted 12-11 to reject what Chairman Max Baucus warned was a “killer amendment” by Idaho Republican Mike Crapo to shield households earning less than $250,000 from at least three levies contained in the bill, including a penalty for people who fail to obtain insurance. “There are going to be a lot of people whose taxes are increased by this legislation,” said Crapo. He said the bill’s price tag -- an estimated $900 billion over 10 years -- should be reduced instead.

- Manufacturing in the U.S. expanded less than anticipated by economists and more Americans filed claims for unemployment benefits, pointing to a recovery that will be slow to generate jobs.

- New greenhouse gas regulations from the Environmental Protection Agency threaten to halt U.S. refinery upgrades and expansions, which could boost gasoline imports, an oil industry representative said. “Any time you increase capacity, or if you want to upgrade your refinery to use a wider range of crude oils, you could trigger these new regulations,” Charles Drevna, president of the National Petrochemical and Refiners Association, said in a phone interview.

- Natural gas stockpiles in the U.S. rose to a record 3.589 trillion cubic feet as the worst recession since the 1930s curbed demand from chemical plants, carmakers and manufacturers across the country. Inventories last week topped the prior record of 3.545 trillion set in November 2007, the Energy Department said today. With another month to go before supplies begin to drop as households and offices burn the fuel for heating, stockpiles may push the limits of U.S. storage capacity for the first time. As demand dropped during the recession, output increased from new fields in Texas, Oklahoma and Louisiana. Gas production this year will average 59.1 billion cubic feet a day, up from 58.59 billion in 2008, the department’s Energy Information Administration said in its monthly Short-Term Energy Outlook on Sept. 9. The Energy Department also predicted that consumption by industrial users, including factories, steel mills and chemical plants, will fall 9.8 percent in 2009. Gas supplies this fall may approach peak U.S. storage capacity of 3.899 trillion cubic feet, according to Energy Department estimates. “The record is sobering for the bulls,” said Phil Flynn, vice president of research at PFGBest, a Chicago-based brokerage. “The focus is going to be injections, which will show a record high, and that will bring some pressure on prices.”

- Copper prices slid the most in a week as the dollar strengthened, damping demand for the metal from buyers holding other currencies, and China’s factory output grew less than forecast. The U.S. Dollar Index, a six-currency gauge of the greenback’s strength, jumped as much as 0.8 percent. In China, the world’s largest copper consumer, the Purchasing Managers’ Index rose less than economists estimated, according to a report from the Federation of Logistics and Purchasing in Beijing.

- Former Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan said the U.S. will have to both tighten credit and raise taxes as the economy pulls out of the worst recession since the 1930s. “The presumption that we’re going to be able to resolve this without significant increases in taxes is unrealistic,” Greenspan, 83, said in an interview with Bloomberg Television yesterday. The budget deficit this year is forecast to widen to $1.6 trillion, boosted in part by President Barack Obama’s $787 billion stimulus package. Between 2010 and 2019, deficits will total $7.1 trillion, according to the Congressional Budget Office. Greenspan said that the odds are growing that the U.S. will have to enact some form of consumption tax to help reduce the federal budget deficit. Obama has pledged to bring down the deficit without raising taxes on middle-income Americans. The CBO estimates that this year’s budget shortfall will equal 11.2 percent of the economy, the most since World War II. Greenspan said he is “quite impressed” by Obama and called him “a very intelligent man.” “But I don’t think he is sufficiently in control of a very serious budget problem,” the former Fed chief said.

- Investors should buy 10-year Treasury notes before tomorrow’s payroll data after the yield broke out of a trading range and a momentum indicator signaled it has further to rally, according to RBC Capital Markets.

- Europe’s unemployment rate rose to the highest in more than 10 years in August as companies continued to cut jobs even as the region’s largest economies emerged from recession. Unemployment in the 16-member euro region increased to 9.6 percent from 9.5 percent in July, the European Union statistics office in Luxembourg said today.

- The military situation in Afghanistan is “in some ways deteriorating,” and requires quick action from the U.S. and NATO to combat insurgents, said U.S. General Stanley McChrystal. Coalition forces must “gain the initiative” and change their mindset, McChrystal, the top U.S. and NATO commander in Afghanistan, said today in a speech at the International Institute of Strategic Studies in London.

- General Motors Co., Toyota Motor Corp. and Ford Motor Co. said sales fell in September as waning demand after the “cash for clunkers” rebates may have cut industry deliveries to the second-slowest rate this year. GM deliveries tumbled 45 percent, while Toyota dropped 13 percent, both worse than analysts had estimated. Ford slid 5.1 percent, and Chrysler Group LLC, Honda Motor Co. and Nissan Motor Co. also posted declines. “We knew sales would slow down significantly after the cash for clunkers surge,” said Stephen Spivey, senior auto analyst at Frost & Sullivan in San Antonio. “October will tell you what kind of rebound comes off that dip.”


Wall Street Journal:

- Banks in the European Union could face losses of almost €400 billion this year and next year if the economy deteriorates sharply, the bloc's finance ministers and central bankers said in a draft statement obtained by Dow Jones Newswires. The statement details some of the results from recent stress tests conducted on 22 of the bloc's largest banks.

- The chairman of the Senate Finance Committee said Thursday that he wanted to complete work on a sweeping health-care bill by nightfall, opening the way for Democratic leaders to bring the historic legislation to the floors of both the House and Senate as early as mid-October.


NY Times:

- Hedge funds, trying to separate themselves from the big Wall Street banks, are stepping up their efforts to head off new regulation from Washington. Representatives of the industry’s main lobbying group met on Wednesday with the Treasury secretary, Timothy F. Geithner; Ben S. Bernanke, the chairman of the Federal Reserve; and Mary L. Schapiro, chairwoman of the Securities and Exchange Commission, to lay out their views of President Obama’s sweeping package of reforms to the nation’s financial regulatory system, The New York Times’s Zachery Kouwe reported. Of particular interest to the group, the Managed Funds Association, is the possibility that Congress will deem some hedge funds as systemically important to the financial system and subject them to onerous regulation and reporting requirements. The group has been focused for months on persuading lawmakers that, unlike big banks, hedge funds do not pose a systemic risk to the economy. Hedge funds have also been engaged in heading off restrictions on trading credit-default swaps and betting on the decline in a company’s stock price.As part of its push in Washington, the association is expected to elect Darcy Bradbury, a former assistant Treasury secretary and a senior vice president for the D.E. Shaw group, to lead the effort. She will succeed Eric Vincent, who is credited with turning the once-sleepy organization into a powerful lobbying group.

- The chairman of the Federal Reserve, Ben S. Bernanke, told skeptical lawmakers on Thursday that the Fed should be put in charge of regulating the nation’s biggest financial institutions. But in a nod to critics who have expressed alarm about the Fed’s immense power during the financial crisis, Mr. Bernanke said responsibility for monitoring broader risks in the financial system should go to a council of regulators, The New York Times’s Edmund Andrews writes.


Business Week:

- Sometimes in Hollywood, misery loves company. And, while three film studios are locked in a legal tussle with video vending machine operator RedBox and its $1 rentals, another company that’s feeling Hollywood’s the less than warm embrace these days is online DVD rental powerhouse Netflix (NFLX). At least three studios – which I’m told are Warner Brothers (TWX), Fox (NWS) and Universal (GE) — are trying to arm-wrestle a better deal out of the Los Gatos, Calif. company, whose nearly 12 million subscribers are expected to generate about $1.7 billion in DVD rentals this year.


Nasdaq:

- House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., said Thursday the House won't vote on a health overhaul bill that doesn't include a public option.


US News:

- 10 Hard-Hit Housing Markets That Are Ready to Rebound.


Rassmussen:

- Forty-three percent (43%) of Americans say it’s a bad idea for President Obama to go overseas at this time to help Chicago make its final presentation to the International Olympic Committee. But 36% disagree and think it’s a good move on the president’s part.


Politico:

- Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid is putting pressure on the Obama administration to complete its review of the ...... "Don't ask, don't tell" policy governing gays in the military. In a letter sent to President Barack Obama last week, Reid argued that changing the policy was a national security issue and called on the White House to move quickly.


The Boy Genius Report:

- One of our ninjas just blessed us with a product inventory shot from Best Buy. It shows that Best Buy locations will be getting BlackBerry Storm 2 dummy units starting October 25th. Why is that important? Well, as it was explained to us, actual retail units start to come in a little bit before or a little bit after those dummy models hit.


Google Blog:

- In May, we launched Search Options, a side panel that lets you filter, refine and generate different views of your search results. We've received lots of positive feedback, and we're seeing more and more people using Search Options every day. Today, we're announcing nine new Search Options tools: past hour, specific date range, more shopping sites, fewer shopping sites, visited pages, not yet visited, books, blogs and news. These features have been rolling out gradually and will be available globally in English by the end of the day.


USA Today:

- The Transportation Security Administration plans to install 150 security machines at airport checkpoints that enable screeners to see under passengers' clothes. The installation will vastly expand the use of the controversial body scanners, which can reveal hidden bombs and knives. But the devices have been labeled as intrusive by some lawmakers.

- There is another demand in the House of Representatives for an apology, but this time it is coming from the Republicans. The outrage comes after Rep. Alan Grayson, D-Fla., made a short speech on the House floor last night slamming the Republicans' health care plan. Grayson, a freshman congressman, said, “If you get sick, America, the Republican health care plan is this: Die quickly. That’s right. The Republicans want you to die quickly if you get sick.”

Reuters:
- A Massachusetts court ruled on Wednesday that hedge fund manager Phillip Goldstein's right to free speech was not violated by an order to let only qualified investors view his firm's website. Goldstein, who runs Bulldog Investors and is best-known for successfully curbing the reach of financial regulators into the $1.4 trillion hedge fund industry, took the case to court after Massachusetts' top financial regulator ordered him to stop allowing unqualified investors to look at his portfolios. "This ruling is wrong and we are going to appeal it," Goldstein said. "Apparently if you live in Massachusetts you have to be rich to read truthful material on a hedge fund website," he added.

- The number of civilians killed in Iraq in September fell to 125, the lowest level since the 2003 U.S. liberation, according to figures from Iraq's Health Ministry released on Thursday.

- CIT Group Inc (CIT) is planning to get a debtor-in-possession loan of $5 billion to $7 billion if its planned debt exchange offer fails and it files for prepackaged bankruptcy, sources familiar with the matter said on Thursday.

- Cisco has agreed to buy Norwegian videoconferencing company Tandberg for $3 billion in cash, its latest big bet that video will drive demand for its core data transmission gear. The acquisition will fill the wide gap between Cisco's high-end TelePresence video meeting service for executives and its WebEx tool used by millions of office workers for online meetings, and could bring videoconferencing to a mass market.

TimesOnline:

- Amazon(AMZN) will finally launch its Kindle e-Book reader in the UK, possibly as early as this month. The leading publishing trade magazine, The Bookseller, has reported that the much-anticipated device will hit British shelves as early as October, with an announcement expected as early as next week.


O Estado de S.Paulo:

- The rally in Brazilian stocks may turn into a bubble, said Arminio Fraga, the chairman of BM&F Bovespa SA and a former central banker.


DigiTimes:

- SanDisk(SNDK) is reportedly seeking additional supplies of NAND flash controller chips and support for backend packaging capacity from Taiwan makers for the production of microSD cards, according to industry sources. SanDisk has secured sufficient supply of NAND flash via its Toshiba partnership although many other card manufacturers have been hit by a chip shortage, the sources said. Despite the sufficient NAND flash supply, SanDisk's shipments of microSD cards are still being interrupted by a controller shortage and tight capacity at its microSD card packaging partner Siliconware Precision Industries (SPIL), the sources said.

- E-book reader shipments were around 1.1 million units in 2008 and the volume is expected to surpass three million units in 2009, according to industry sources citing figures from independent research firms.

Bear Radar

Style Underperformer:
Small-Cap Value (-2.90%)

Sector Underperformers:
Airlines (-6.46%), Gaming (-4.45%) and Gold (-3.90%)

Stocks Falling on Unusual Volume:
CRESY, CKP, CALM, ATPG, VMED, TEO, LGCY, DLLR, CRAI, PLCM, VMED, CMCSK, TTMI, CMCSA, VRTX, HEAT, LEAP, LBTYK, AGNC, MXIM, VRGY, RINO, ISIL, ETP, ROC, TSP, TKC and CYOU

Stocks With Unusual Put Option Activity:
1) CA 2) CMCSA 3) CBS 4) FITB 5) BMC

Bull Radar

Style Outperformer:
Large-Cap Value (-1.39%)

Sector Outperformers:
HMOs (+.62%), Road & Rail (+.15%) and Retail (-.91%)

Stocks Rising on Unusual Volume:
CI, WLP, NSC, MMC, UNP, WAG, PZE, AA, MBT, SKM, BMA, IMO, MANT, XRTX, DMND, ASEI, EBIX, DISCA, BCPC, CTRN, CLP, STZ, CV and STC

Stocks With Unusual Call Option Activity:
1) RHT 2) SGP 3) ATHR 4) ALTR 5) EJ

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Wednesday, September 30, 2009

Thursday Watch

Late-Night Headlines
Bloomberg:

- The Obama administration pledged to press Japan and Taiwan over subsidies to Elpida Memory Inc., Japan’s biggest computer memory-chip maker, following complaints from U.S. rival Micron Technology Inc.(MU).

- Kenneth R. Feinberg, the Treasury Department’s special master on compensation, said he is reluctant to impose “clawbacks” to recoup pay from executives when their company’s financial performance falters. “I have an assumption in my mind that it’s not a great idea” to recover money “already paid and maybe already spent and already taxed,” Feinberg said today via video conference at a meeting of the Chicago Bar Association. “I’m wary of exercising that authority in too many cases.”

- General Motors Co. will close Saturn, the brand created 24 years ago to mirror Japanese companies’ carmaking, after Penske Automotive Group Inc. broke off discussions to buy the unit. Penske, operator of 310 auto retailers, backed out because of concern it wouldn’t have access to cars and sport-utility vehicles after 2011 when GM was due to stop supplying them, Penske said in a statement. “This is very disappointing news and comes after months of hard work by hundreds of dedicated employees and Saturn retailers who tried to make the new Saturn a reality,” GM Chief Executive Officer Fritz Henderson said in a statement on the company’s Web site. “I’m a little surprised that there was no plan B here,” said Stephen Spivey, an auto analyst with Frost & Sullivan in San Antonio. “It’s surprising to me that Penske had no idea that this might not be accepted.” Closing Saturn could create a public-relations problem for GM, as it deals with consumer concerns about the sudden death of one of its brands, said auto-retail analyst Paul Melville of Grant Thornton LLP in Southfield, Michigan. “You’ve got a lot of people driving around in Saturn cars wondering how am I going to get this serviced and what’s going to happen to my Saturn dealer?” Melville said.

- Bank of America Corp.(BAC) Chief Executive Officer Kenneth D. Lewis, his credibility battered by the Merrill Lynch & Co. takeover, plans to step down at the end of this year. No successor was named for Lewis, who will also retire as a director, according to a statement today from Bank of America, the biggest U.S.Charlotte, North Carolina- lender by assets and deposits. The resignation ends Lewis’s 40-year career at the based company, including the last eight as CEO.

- The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency proposed greenhouse gas regulations today for power plants, oil refineries and factories. The agency came up with the rules as Senate Democrats unveiled a “cap-and-trade” plan that would limit emissions through a system of pollution rights, or allowances, that companies could buy and sell. Republicans say the EPA is trying to pressure the Senate into passing a cap-and-trade bill after the House approved its own plan in June. Under the proposal released today, the EPA said it won’t target small sources despite the way the Clean Air Act is written because doing so would lead to “absurd results.” State-level environmental regulators who implement much of the Clean Air Act “would be paralyzed by permit applications in numbers that are orders of magnitude greater than their current administrative resources could accommodate,” the EPA said. For six years, the agency will use the higher threshold out of “administrative necessity” while it studies the workability of regulating industrial, or “stationary,” sources of greenhouse gas emissions through the Clean Air Act. Murkowski, who said EPA is using regulation of stationary sources as a “thinly veiled threat” to pressure lawmakers into supporting cap-and-trade legislation, said Republicans will keep trying to stop the regulation of industrial sources while letting the agency continue with plans to cut emissions from new cars and trucks. With today’s proposed regulations, the agency is “charging ahead, regardless of the ongoing debate in Congress and the economic consequences of their actions,” Robert Dillon, a spokesman for Murkowski, said in an e- mail. “She does not believe the EPA’s efforts to limit the Clean Air Act to an arbitrary 25,000 ton threshold will withstand legal challenge.” The proposed EPA regulation of large industrial sources is a “slippery slope” that may “discourage a lot of investment” in the U.S., said Bryan Brendle, energy and resources policy director for the National Association of Manufacturers, in a phone interview. The EPA may be taken to court by “any citizen group” that wants to use the Clean Air Act to stop the development of a project, such as a shopping mall, by arguing the project needs a greenhouse gas permit, Brendle said. While industry is “thankful” for EPA’s efforts to exempt small businesses from greenhouse gas regulation, today’s proposal is on “shaky legal ground,” William Kovacs, vice president of environment, technology and regulatory affairs at the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, said in an e-mailed statement.

- The People’s Republic of China celebrates its 60th anniversary today by staging a military paradeBeijing to demonstrate the country’s rising global influence. Hundreds of missiles and tanks and thousands of troops from the world’s largest standing army will parade past Tiananmen -- the Gate of Heavenly Peace -- where Mao Zedong on Oct. 1, 1949, declared the Communist Party’s victory in a civil war and took the reins of government. China now produces in a day the equivalent of a year’s output five decades ago, and is poised to surpass Japan as the world’s second-largest economy by 2010. The Communists, who lifted 300 million citizens from abject poverty and raised the country’s international influence, must now satisfy increasing demands for domestic freedom and accountability. The celebration “is a show-off to beef up confidence in, and support to, the regime,” said Huang Jing, visiting professor at the National University of Singapore’s Lee Kuan Yew School of Public Policy. “Serious questions need to be asked how such a show of strength can translate into” tolerance, transparency and “inclusiveness in ethnic, cultural and religious diversity.” The country’s rise to global prominence gives credence to Napoleon Bonaparte’s prediction two centuries ago that “China is a sickly, sleeping giant. But when she awakes the world will tremble.” through the heart of

- The yen may weaken to around 100 against the dollar over the next “few months” given that there are few reasons for it to advance further, said Makoto Utsumi, a former top currency official at Japan’s Finance Ministry. “There aren’t really any particular reasons for the yen to strengthen,” Utsumi, 75, who led Japan’s currency policy from 1989 to 1991 as vice finance minister for international affairs, said in an interview in Tokyo Sept. 29. “I don’t expect the currency to extend its recent gains.”


Wall Street Journal:

- Investors have agreed so far to plow more than $1.13 billion into a long-awaited Treasury Department program to buy the toxic assets at the heart of the financial crisis. The Treasury announced that two of the nine investment firms tapped earlier this year to participate in the Public-Private Investment Program have raised at least $500 million -- a precursor to obtaining government financing.

- The Department of the Interior expects to approve seven major, renewable-energy transmission projects on western federal lands by the end of next year, part of the administration's effort to step up use of wind and solar power. Finding sites for new grid infrastructure has been a major obstacle to the Obama administration's plans to expand renewable-energy production. Many people and local governments oppose placing transmission projects, which help channel electricity generated by renewable-energy sources to consumers, in their backyards, citing environmental, safety and other concerns. The Interior Department is accelerating the construction of transmission projects on federal lands in an effort to streamline the permitting process, through there are still state, local and other federal regulatory hurdles that companies have to overcome.

- A new wave of financial alchemy is emerging on Wall Street as banks and insurers seek to make soured securities look better. Regulators are pushing back, saying the transactions don't have enough substance and stand to benefit bankers and ratings firms. The deals come as Wall Street firms, buoyed by surging markets, are seeking to profit from the unwinding of the complicated securities that helped fuel the credit crisis. Regulators, meanwhile, are struggling to prevent a recurrence of the crisis. The popular deals are known as "re-remic," which stands for resecuritization of real-estate mortgage investment conduits.

- So our top commander in Afghanistan, Gen. Stanley McChrystal, has told CBS's "60 Minutes" that he has spoken with President Barack Obama only once since June. This is a troubling revelation. Right now, our commander in chief is preparing to make one of the most important decisions of his presidency—whether to commit additional troops to win the war in Afghanistan. Being detached or incurious about what our commanders are experiencing makes it hard to craft a winning strategy.

- Two Senate Democrats Wednesday unveiled climate legislation that aims to drastically cut greenhouse-gas emissions beginning in 2012, starting an effort that threatens to divide the party amid opposition from coal, manufacturing and oil interests. Senate Environment and Public Works Committee Chairman Barbara Boxer and Senate Foreign Relations Committee Chairman John Kerry outlined the measure, which would cut emissions from 2005 levels 20% by 2020 and more than 80% by 2050. Republicans took issue with the Boxer-Kerry bill, calling it a new national energy tax. "The last thing American families need right now is to be hit with a new energy tax every time they flip on a light switch, or fill up their car -- but that's exactly what this bill would do," Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell said in a statement. In the House, Speaker Nancy Pelosi called the legislation a "strong foundation" to work on, while Republican Leader John Boehner said the measure was a "dangerous proposal."

- Nvidia Corp.(NVDA) announced its next major leap in technology, vowing to deliver chips that speed up an array of computing chores as well as advancing its traditional stronghold in graphics.


CNNMoney.com:

- A government effort to get badly needed cash into the hands of struggling small business owners is slowly gaining momentum, but entrepreneurs seeking the scarce loans are still in for a frustrating ride.

- Most people think they pay too much to Uncle Sam, but for some people it simply is not true. In 2009, roughly 47% of households, or 71 million, will not owe any federal income tax, according to estimates by the nonpartisan Tax Policy Center. Some in that group will even get additional money from the government because they qualify for refundable tax breaks.


The Wrap:

- Comcast(CMCSA), the nation’s leading provider of cable, entertainment and communications products and services, is in talks to buy the entertainment giant NBC-Universal from General Electric(GE), according to knowledgeable individuals. Deal points were hammered out at a meeting among bankers for both sides in New York on Tuesday, executives familiar with the meeting said. Two individuals informed about the meeting said that a deal had already been completed at a purchase price of $35 billion. A spokeswoman for NBC-Universal had no comment. A spokeswoman for Comcast also had no comment. The NBC-Universal division of GE, a premium content company, is a likely fit for the cable giant with its massive distribution pipeline. That is especially the case when the division's potential price tag has dropped significantly from a year ago.Comcast’s market cap is $48.44 billion. NBC-Universal has fallen in value to an estimated $35 billion in value, from about $55 billion a year ago.


NY Post:

- Sugar is the new crude oil for investment-hungry hedge funds, which are pushing sugar prices near 30-year highs and ushering new global shortages. After their infamous and massive bets on crude oil sent prices doubling and brought $5-a-gallon gasoline a year ago, hedge funds are now pouring their billions into raw sugar. Sugar prices have doubled since springtime, causing US officials to consider lifting tariff barriers so that more imported sugar can reach food and candy makers. Analysts say hedge funds are in search of high profits on commodity gambles, since returns on stocks and bonds are meager and less certain. In trading here yesterday, raw sugar surged as much as 4.4 percent to 25.15 cents a pound before settling at 25 cents, up 3.5 percent, the highest close since 1981. Betting by hedge funds and large speculators that sugar futures will jump has soared 77 percent this year, said the US Commodity Futures Trading Commission.


Politico:

- House Minority Leader John Boehner torched President Barack Obama Wednesday for his European trip to pitch the Chicago Olympics bid, criticizing the president for "going to go off to Copenhagen when we've got serious issues here at home that need to be debated." Obama's trip has been maligned by most Republicans as the health care overhaul remains in a continued state of flux in Congress and the top general in AfghanistanDenmark awaits word on a troop increase. The White House first said it was unlikely that Obama would go to because he thought it important to help push health care through Congress.

- Two days after the release date of Sarah Palin’s book was announced, it's already become the top seller at both Amazon.com and BarnesandNoble.com. Palin’s publisher announced Monday that the former governor of Alaska and Republican vice presidential candidate had finished her memoir, "Going Rogue: An American Life," early and was moving the release date up from the spring to November 17.


Rasmussen:

- For the second straight week, just 33% of likely voters say the United States is heading in the right direction, according to the latest Rasmussen Reports national telephone survey.


Washington Post:

- U.S. officials signaled Wednesday that they would seek a rare one-on-one meeting with Iranian diplomatsIran and other major powers on Tehran's nuclear program. The talks, expected to last through the day, have been structured to allow both for group meetings and informal one-on-one discussions with Iran, which a senior administration official said would be "an opportunity to reinforce the main concerns we will be making in the meeting." He spoke on condition of anonymity because of the diplomatic sensitivity ahead of the talks. President Obama has sought to make engagement with the Islamic Republic and other antagonistic nations a central part of his foreign policy, but until now Iran has spurned his efforts. during talks here on Thursday between


The Business Insider:

- Steve Jobs said people don't read any more. But Apple (AAPL) is in talks with several media companies rooted in print, negotiating content for a "new device." And they're not just going for e-books and mags. They're aiming to redefine print.


AP:

- Michael Vick is back with Nike(NKE) two years after the company severed ties over the quarterback's involvement in a dogfighting ring. "Mike has a long-standing, great relationship with Nike, and he looks forward to continuing that relationship," his agent, Joel Segal, said Wednesday. Segal would not reveal terms of the agreement. Nike declined a request for comment.


Reuters:

- Higher margins, the ability to collect and use information about customers, more revenue and greater willingness to share content with Internet operators is prompting Hollywood to join forces with the likes of Google's (GOOG) YouTube or set up its own Internet portals. Online video streaming and digital downloads should nearly triple to a $753 million North American market in 5 years, still a 5 percent sliver of DVD sales in 2008. But, analysts said, with disc sales dwindling and online viewing exploding, that gap will shrink.

- Unemployment rates rose in all cities across the United States in August from a year earlier, with 16 recording jobless rates of 15 percent or higher, according to the Labor Department. At the same time, only 11 metropolitan areas said they had gained jobs in August, while 356 had lost positions. For the eighth consecutive month, all 372 cities that the department surveys had year-on-year increases in jobless rates. The largest rise was in Detroit, where the rate rose by 7.9 percentage points, followed by its Michigan neighbor Muskegon, where it increased 7 percentage points. Detroit also has the highest unemployment rate in the country at 17 percent. But Los Angeles lost the most jobs in August from a year earlier, followed by Chicago and Detroit.

- A U.S. Senate panel on Wednesday adopted a measure aimed at rewarding healthy behavior in a sweeping healthcare overhaul sought by President Barack Obama as lawmakers pushed to complete the legislation. The Senate Finance Committee voted for an amendment offered by Republican Senator John Ensign and Democrat Thomas Carper that would allow health plans to provide financial incentives for people to quit smoking, exercise more and engage in other healthy activities. "I believe that the key to achieving savings is to provide rewards for people who engage in healthy behaviors," Ensign argued. The measure passed on a 18-4 vote despite concerns expressed by some Democrats as well as committee Chairman Max Baucus that it could raise insurance premiums for people who do not participate in wellness programs.


Financial Times:

- China has issued a stark warning about the risk from rising overcapacity in the economy, saying it could hamper recovery and lead to a surge in non-performing bank loans. The State Council, the country’s cabinet, issued a new plan to combat overcapacity in seven industries, barring new aluminum smelters for three years and criticizing “blind expansion” in parts of the steel and cement industries. The cabinet statement, which came late on Tuesday evening in Beijing, follows a crescendo of warnings from senior officials. It also outlined measures to restrict manufacturing of equipment for “green” industries of wind and solar power. over the past three months many government officials have begun to publicly warn that the credit binge could create overcapacity in heavy industry, which could produce a new round of bad bank loans. “Some regions act illegally, give approvals in violation of regulations or allow building before approval is granted,” the State Council said. The unusually blunt statement said that, without efforts to restrain production, it would be “hard to prevent vicious market competition and increase economic benefits, and this could result in factory closures, lay-offs and an increase in banks’ bad assets”.Prolonged overcapacity in industries such as steel and aluminum could also aggravate tense trade relationships with the US and Europe because of the risk that Chinese mills would dump inventories on to world markets at cheap prices. Government officials are also concerned that continued expansion of heavy industry such as aluminum and cement, which use a lot of power, will complicate efforts to meet energy efficiency targets ahead of the Copenhagen climate conference. The State Council said manufacturing capacity for wind power would be twice the actual installed generating output of 10m kilowatts by next year.


Telegraph:

- Carphone is understood to be close to agreeing terms with Vodafone over the sale of Apple's hugely popular device. At present Carphone has exclusive retailer rights to sell the iPhone through an agreement with Apple and O2, which until this week held the sole network rights to the iPhone. Charles Dunstone, chief executive of Carphone Warehouse, has credited the iPhone with enabling the company to increase its market presence at the expense of rival Phones4U.


Late Buy/Sell Recommendations

Oppenheimer:

- Rated (CHK) Outperform, target $35.


Deutsche Bank:

- Rated (FDX), (UNP), (CSX), (HTLD), (NMM), (CPLP), (DSX), (NSC), (ODFL), (GWR), (KNX) and (JBHT) Buy.

- Rated (FRO) and (EGLE) Sell.


Night Trading
Asian Indices are -1.0% to +.50% on average.

Asia Ex-Japan Inv Grade CDS Index 112.50 -3.0 basis points.
S&P 500 futures -.22%.
NASDAQ 100 futures -.28%.


Morning Preview

BNO Breaking Global News of Note

Google Top Stories

Bloomberg Breaking News

Yahoo Most Popular Biz Stories

MarketWatch News Viewer

Asian Financial News

European Financial News

Latin American Financial News

MarketWatch Pre-market Commentary

U.S. Equity Preview

TradeTheNews Morning Report

Briefing.com In Play

SeekingAlpha Market Currents

Briefing.com Bond Ticker

US AM Market Call
NASDAQ 100 Pre-Market Indicator/Heat Map
Pre-market Stock Quote/Chart
WSJ Intl Markets Performance
Commodity Futures
IBD New America
Economic Preview/Calendar
Earnings Calendar

Conference Calendar

Who’s Speaking?
Upgrades/Downgrades

Politico Headlines
Rasmussen Reports Polling


Earnings of Note
Company/EPS Estimate
- (STZ)/.41

- (RECN)/-.04

- (GPN)/.65

- (BLUD)/.25

- (SMSC)/.00

- (TSCM)/-.06

- (ZLC)/-.78

- (ACN)/.63


Economic Releases

8:30 am EST

- Personal Income for August is estimated to rise +.1% versus unch. in July.

- Personal Spending for August is estimated to rise +1.1% versus a +.2% gain in July.

- The PCE Core for August is estimated to rise +.1% versus a +.1% gain in July.

- Initial Jobless Claims for last week are estimated to rise to 535K versus 530K the prior week.

- Continuing Claims are estimated to rise to 6170K versus 6138K prior.


10:00 am EST

- ISM Manufacturing for September is estimated to rise to 54.0 versus a reading of 52.9 in August.

- ISM Prices Paid for September is estimated to rise to 66.0 versus 65.0 in August.

- Construction Spending for August is estimated to fall -.1% versus a -.2% decline in July.

- Pending Home Sales for August are estimated to rise +1.0% versus a +3.2% gain in July.


Afternoon:

- Total Vehicle Sales for September are estimated to fall to 9.5M versus 14.09M in August.


Upcoming Splits
- None of note


Other Potential Market Movers
-
The Fed’s Bernanke speaking, Fed’s Lockhart speaking, Fed’s Pianalto speaking, Challenger Job Cuts report, weekly EIA natural gas inventory report, Bank of America Global Real Estate Conference, Thomas Weisel Consumer Conference, Deutsche Bank Leveraged Finance Conference, (OC) analyst meeting and the (TRI) analyst meeting could also impact trading today.


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

Stocks Finish Slightly Lower, Weighed Down by HMO, Road & Rail, Alt Energy, Gaming and Homebuilding Shares

Evening Review
BNO Breaking Global News of Note

Google Top Stories

Bloomberg Breaking News

Yahoo Most Popular Biz Stories

MarketWatch News Viewer

Briefing.com In Play

SeekingAlpha Market Currents

WSJ Today’s Markets
Today’s Movers
StockCharts Market Performance Summary

WSJ Data Center

Sector Performance

ETF Performance

Morningstar Style Performance
Commodity Futures
S&P 500 Gallery View

Timely Economic Charts

Most Recent Guru Stock Picks
CNN PM Market Call

After-hours Stock Commentary

After-hours Movers

After-hours Stock Quote
After-hours Stock Chart