Wednesday, June 09, 2010

Wednesday Watch


Evening Headlines

Bloomberg:
  • IMF Says Risks to Global Economy Have Risen 'Significantly'. Risks to the global economic outlook have “risen significantly” and policy makers have limited room to provide support to growth, International Monetary Fund Deputy Managing Director Naoyuki Shinohara said. “A key concern is that the room for continued policy support has become much more limited and has, in some cases, been exhausted.” “After nearly two years of global economic and financial upheaval, shockwaves are still being felt, as we have seen with recent developments in Europe and the resulting financial market volatility,” Shinohara said. “The global outlook remains unusually uncertain and downside risks have risen significantly.”
  • Greek Default Seen by Almost 75% in Poll Doubtful About Trichet. Global investors have little confidence in Europe’s efforts to contain its debt crisis or in European Central Bank President Jean-Claude Trichet, with 73 percent calling a default by Greece likely. Only 23 percent say they expect the region’s almost $1 trillion rescue package to both keep the European monetary union together and prevent a debt default by a government, according to a quarterly poll of investors and analysts who are Bloomberg subscribers. More than 40 percent say Greece is likely to abandon the euro. “There is clearly a risk of a breakup of the euro,” says Geoff Marson, managing director at a Guernsey subsidiary of London-based Odey Asset Management, which oversees about $6 billion. Trichet, whose ECB supported the rescue package by buying bonds of Greece and other European governments, saw his approval rating tumble from a January Bloomberg poll. A plurality -- 48 percent -- give the 67-year-old central banker an unfavorable rating in the latest poll, while 41 percent view him favorably. In January, Trichet received a 60 percent approval rating, with 27 percent regarding him negatively. “Trichet has sacrificed the ECB’s independence by helping to rescue Greece,” says Cyril Boudin, a participant in the poll and a derivatives trader at Unicredit Group in London. More than 60 percent of those surveyed say they expect the euro to fall further against the dollar over the next three months. While the European currency may be due for a “corrective bounce” in the short run, “longer term, the market has parity in its sights,” says Marson, who took part in the poll. “This crisis could be a significant step that leads to an eventual breakup of the euro zone,” says William Aston-Reese, vice president of money-market sales at New York-based broker Tradition Asiel Securities Inc. and a poll participant.
  • Crude-steel production capacity in South Korea, Asia's fourth-biggest producer, will surge 25% to a record this year as Hyundai Steel Co. adds plants, an industry group forecast. Total capacity may gain by 16 million metric tons to 80.2 million tons from a year ago, the Korea Iron & Steel Association said today.
  • Hornbeck(HOS) Sues U.S. to Lift Deepwater Drilling Ban. Hornbeck Offshore Services Inc. sued the U.S. Interior Department to lift the six-month ban on deepwater drilling in the Gulf of Mexico triggered by the deadly explosion of a drilling rig and subsequent oil spill. Hornbeck, whose supply boats serve almost all 33 drilling rigs that were operating in the deepwater gulf, said one customer has already said it will cancel a contract as a result of the moratorium. “There is nothing in the report that suggests OCS drilling is more dangerous today than it was on the day immediately preceding the tragic incident involving the Deepwater Horizon,” Carl Rosenblum, an attorney for the company said in a complaint filed in New Orleans federal court. Hornbeck is seeking an injunction stopping the moratorium. “Hornbeck is suffering immediate irreparable harm,” including the ability to retain trained staff for its vessels and offshore operations, which have been idled by the ban on drilling in waters deeper than 500 feet, according to the complaint.
  • Iran Guard Corps Companies Among Targets for UN Council Vote. The United Nations Security Council is set to vote today on a fourth round of sanctions on Iran that target companies controlled by Iran’s Revolutionary Guard Corps, a bank and a top official of the nation’s atomic energy agency.
  • Iran Opposition Struggles as Nuclear Wrangle Boosts Ahmadinejad.
  • SEC Plans to Seek Circuit Breakers for 'Thousands' of Stocks. U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission Chairman Mary Schapiro said the agency will expand a proposal that would halt trading of stocks after they’ve risen or fallen 10 percent during a five-minute period. The SEC intends to add “thousands” of companies to a plan that would initially affect companies listed on the Standard & Poor’s 500 Index, Schapiro said during a speech today.
  • Aussie Faces 'Volatile Ride' as China Bubble May Pop, HSBC Says. The Australian dollar faces a “bumpy and volatile ride” because of the risk that China’s property bubble may deflate, HSBC Plc said as they lowered their year-end forecast for the currency to 85 U.S. cents. The absence of any shocks from China or from Australian banks’ large foreign borrowings could allow the Aussie to climb to $1, said HSBC, which earlier this year had forecast parity. The Aussie could drop to 70 cents if such shocks occur, analysts from HSBC wrote in an e-mailed report.
  • India Free-Float Rules May 'Drag' on Stocks, Credit Suisse Says. India may fail to absorb a surging supply of stocks as increased sales “drag” on the market after the government raised the minimum public holding for all companies, Credit Suisse Group AG said. More than 200 companies may need to sell at least $13 billion of shares over the next 12 months, analysts led by Nilesh Jasani wrote in a report. Some $15 billion of equity offerings are already planned, they said. All companies must increase the public holding to at least 25 percent by selling at least 5 percent a year, the government said on June 4. “Implementation could prove to be a substantial drag for the market,” the analysts wrote. “Without a rampant bull market supported by massive unprecedented inflows, the rule- modified primary market demand for funds cannot be met.”
Wall Street Journal:
  • Washington Wire: Primary Updates.
  • Lincoln Bucks Wave Against Incumbents. Arkansas Sen. Blanche Lincoln survived a strong challenge Tuesday from Lt. Gov. Bill Halter in a hard-fought Democratic primary runoff, pulling out a narrow victory on a night when results across the country showed both the power and limits of this year's anti-establishment tide. Ms. Lincoln barely avoided becoming the third senator this year to be defeated by her own party. Labor unions and liberal groups had sought to make an example of Ms. Lincoln for her deviation from liberal positions, putting millions of dollars behind Mr. Halter's challenge. Even with the victory Tuesday, Ms. Lincoln will have a hard fight to avoid succumbing to an anti-incumbent tide that has left its mark across the country this year. She is trailing by double digits in multiple public opinion surveys against her GOP opponent, four-term Rep. John Boozman.
  • Lincoln's Win: Support for Derivatives Plan May Firm Up. It’s unclear what Sen. Blanche Lincoln’s victory in the Arkansas Democratic primary will mean for the details of the financial overhaul bill, but it certainly means she will remain a powerful lawmaker in the coming weeks. Many bankers had assumed she would lose her primary. And that, they hoped, would allow lawmakers negotiating a final bill to ditch a provision she wrote that could force banks to spin off derivatives. It’s in the bill that passed the Senate, but not the one that passed the House. With her political stock potentially rising and a seat on the conference committee to finalize details of the bill, she will be in a powerful perch in the days ahead. In fact, her derivatives provision might just have helped her win her primary, so it’s doubtful she’ll be looking to shed it. Her victory might encourage more Democrats to support the provision as a way to send a message to Wall Street that resonates with voters.
  • S&P Takes Negative Action On 8 US Oil & Gas Companies. Standards & Poor's Ratings Services took several negative ratings actions, including four downgrades, on eight U.S. oil and gas companies following the U.S. Department of the Interior's extension of the moratorium on drilling permits. The ratings agency said the actions also reflect "our heightened concerns about the burgeoning scope of the Macondo well disaster." S&P's action affect those operating in the Gulf of Mexico, which could be hit by operating disruptions and the flow of oil from the well disaster. S&P said the six-month moratorium affects permits issued for new drilling operations at water depths greater than 500 feet. S&P believes when the moratorium is eventually lifted, there could be extensive delays in issuing new permits due to high initial volume and new safety and operating standards. Uncertainty about the ultimate costs and potential financial liabilities associated with the disaster already resulted in a ratings downgrade for BP on Friday. Tuesday's ratings actions on Transocean and Anadarko Petroleum Corp. (APC) also reflect those concerns. S&P on Tuesday lowered its junk-level ratings on ATP Oil & Gas Corp. (ATPG), Hercules Offshore Inc. (HERO), Helix Energy Solutions Group Inc. (HLX) and Hornbeck Offshore Services Inc. (HOS). ATP's rating was slashed two notches, to highly speculative territory, while the other three ratings were cut by one notch each. Anadarko and Seacor Holdings Inc.'s (CKH) barely investment-grade ratings' outlooks were revised to negative from stable. Transocean and PHI Inc. (PHII), meanwhile, were placed on watch for downgrade. Transocean's rating is at BBB+, or three notches into investment-grade territory, while PHI is four notches into junk, at B+.
  • Citadel Veterans Open Up Own Shop. Three Executives From Hedge Fund's Execution-Services Arm Start a Computer-Driven Trading Firm.
  • U.S. Hits China With Steel Penalty. In a move that could escalate trade tensions between the U.S. and China, the Department of Commerce found that Chinese drill-pipe makers were selling roughly $200 million of pipes in the U.S. for less than their market value. The ruling, while preliminary, places a 15.7% subsidy on finished and unfinished drill pipe, mainly used for oil and natural gas extraction, coming into U.S. ports beginning Wednesday.
CNBC:
  • Teens Face Worst Summer Job Market in 41 Years. Employment among 16-to 19-year olds in May grew by just 6,000, the smallest increase since 1969, when teen jobs fell by 14,000, according to government data analyzed by employment firm Challenger, Gray & Christmas. In May 2008 and 2009, teen employment grew by over 110,000. “It’s certainly a preliminary strong indication that it’s going to be a tough job market for teens,” said John Challenger, CEO of Challenger, Gray & Christmas.
  • Texas Instruments(TXN): High End of Quarterly Outlook Likely.
IBD:
NY Times:
  • The Blog Prophet of Euro Zone Doom. For years, almost nobody paid attention to the sky-is-falling alarms of Edward Hugh, a gregarious British blogger and self-taught economist who repeatedly predicted that the euro zone could not survive. Living a largely hand-to-mouth existence here on his part-time teacher’s salary, he sent one post after another into the Internet wilderness. It was the height of policy folly, he warned, to think that aging, penny-pinching Germans could successfully coexist under one currency umbrella with the more youthful, credit-card-wielding Irish, Greeks and Spaniards who shared the euro with them. But now that the European sovereign debt crisis is rattling world markets, driving the euro lower almost every day and raising doubts about the future of the monetary union, his voluminous musings have become a must-read for an influential and growing global audience, including policy makers in the White House.
Business Insider:
CNNMoney:
  • Beware of Falling Prices. Lumber prices are sinking. And while that might make a trip to Home Depot cheaper, it's also a sign that the global economic recovery and the U.S. housing rebound are in danger of stalling.
  • Medicaid: States' $24 Billion Black Hole. Governors and state lawmakers are anxiously waiting to see whether Congress will send them another $24 billion to help cover their ever-expanding Medicaid rolls.
Institutional Investor:
Atlanta Journal Constitution:
  • Enough of It! Stop the Federal Spending Spree. Runaway federal spending has emerged as the chief issue on the minds of voters heading into the fall election season — and for good reason. In 2000, the federal government spent $1.8 trillion while debt held by the public stood at $3.4 trillion. A mere decade later, the federal government is on pace to spend $3.7 trillion while publicly held debt is approaching $10 trillion. There’s no blame game left to be played. President George W. Bush left office having presided over one of the largest expansions of federal spending in history. President Barack Obama appears intent on pulling off the amazing feat of making Bush look like a relative tightwad.
ObamacareWatch.org:
  • The More We Learn, The Worse It Gets. The truth is, the more we learn about ObamaCare, the worse it gets. It’s filled with budgetary gimmicks and flawed assumptions that will bankrupt the U.S. treasury. Its taxes will force deep cuts in employment in the medical device and other industries. Restaurants and other employers will have strong incentives to avoid hiring workers from low income households in order to lessen the burden from the law’s mandates and penalties. It will disrupt insurance for millions of Americans who are perfectly happy with the coverage they have today. And the government’s clumsy cost-cutting efforts will undermine the quality of American medicine. Most Americans already instinctively understand all of this. But it’s also clear that the administration and its allies will spend millions trying to persuade them that up is down when it comes to health care. We have launched this web site to set the record straight. ObamaCareWatch.org pulls together all of the best evidence and analysis about the legislation, as well as relevant news items and commentary, in an accessible and searchable format for anyone to use as they need to. Our aim is to provide Americans with the facts so that they can hold those who sponsored and passed ObamaCare accountable for what they have done.
McClatchy:
  • How Senator Dodd Empowered Fed to Assume AIG's(AIG) Toxic Assets. A little noticed 1991 amendment to a Depression-era law, written by a securities industry lawyer and pushed by Sen. Christopher Dodd, D-Conn., allowed AIG to post tens of billions of dollars in shaky mortgage securities as collateral for taxpayer loans. In rescuing the insurance giant and several Wall Street firms in the fall of 2008, top government officials wrestled with how to deal with so-called "toxic" securities tied to the risky home loans at the root of the subprime mortgage meltdown. Their solution, amounting to a transfer of about $90 billion in mostly subprime mortgage securities from major financial institutions to American taxpayers, is likely to remain one of the most controversial aspects of the massive federal response to the crisis. Critics contend that the Federal Reserve Bank of New York failed to protect taxpayers sufficiently when it paid $29 billion for toxic assets in saving the foundering investment house Bear Stearns and about $60 billion to settle AIG's liabilities for investments in subprime mortgage securities. The Fed wound up lending $43.8 billion to take possession of those securities. William Ford, a former president of the Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta, voiced support for senior Fed officials' decisions to serve as a lender of last resort in the heat of the crisis, but called it "dangerous" to accept subprime mortgage securities as collateral. A government watchdog says that the Fed engaged in a bit of legerdemain to make it appear that taxpayers have profited from the toxic securities. The amendment to Section 13(3) of the Federal Reserve Act allows the Fed to accept any collateral to its "satisfaction" for loans to "non-banks" such as AIG, as opposed to typical Fed loans to banks requiring investment-grade collateral. One person who was present during the legislative process, but declined to be identified for fear of damaging relationships, called it "fascinating, the whole way this thing gets slipped in. No one really understood what was happening, and boom, it's in the law." Rodgin Cohen, a prominent Wall Street lawyer, said he drafted the amendment, with help from others. While he's represented Goldman Sachs(GS) and AIG for years, Cohen said he wasn't acting on a client's behalf. Dodd, who's retiring from Congress this year, received $41,625 in campaign donations in 1991 and 1992 from Goldman Sachs, Bear Stearns, J.P. Morgan and three other big Wall Street firms that would benefit from the 2008 bailout. Since then, those banks donated another $883,800 to his political committees, according to Federal Election Commission records.
Boston Globe:
  • Patrick Plans for Possible $800 Million Cut in Massachusetts State Budget. Governor Deval Patrick's administration today announced a broad plan to slice more than $800 million from next year's state budget if anticipated federal funding doesn't come through, proposing cuts across nearly every aspect of state government. Only the local aid Beacon Hill sends to cities and towns would be protected, preserving a priority Patrick has set as he campaigns for re-election. Patrick, the House, and the Senate all built into their spending plans for next fiscal year money the state expected to get through a federal stimulus program that boosts Medicaid reimbursements, which frees up money to fill other budget gaps. But Congress has so far failed to extend the program past Dec. 31, leaving the funds in doubt. Massachusetts is one of about 30 states depending on a six-month extension to help ease the effects of the economic crisis on its budget, but some in Congress worry the increase in spending will further swell the federal budget deficit.
Politico:
Big Government.com:
Reuters:
  • Goldman(GS)-Basis Talks Look to be Breaking Down: Source. Goldman Sachs Group Inc (GS) may be looking at a new legal headache as settlement talks with an Australian hedge fund that invested $100 million in a now toxic mortgage-linked security appear to be breaking down, a source said. Lawyers working for the Basis Yield Alpha Fund could file a lawsuit against Goldman over the transaction -- called Timberwolf -- as early as Wednesday if a deal is not reached, said a person familiar with the situation. Negotiations between Goldman and Basis began months ago, but have heated up in the wake of a lawsuit filed by the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission against Goldman over another subprime mortgage-linked security.
  • Australia Mining Tax Hits Projects. Aluminum Corp of China (Chalco) could be forced to call off its $2.5 billion Aurukun bauxite and alumina refining projects in Australia if a proposed mining tax is introduced, the Australian Financial Review reported.
  • Fed's Hoenig Again Calls for Hike in Interest Rates.
TimesOnline:
  • Airlines Attack 'Cash-Grab' German Tax. Airlines reacted furiously to plans announced by Angela Merkel, the German Chancellor, to raise €1 billion from a new “eco tax” on aviation. Lufthansa said it was a “black day” for the sector, while the industry’s trade association denounced it as a “cash grab” and a “kick in the teeth” for airlines and passengers alike.
Telegraph:
Les Echos:
  • The French government plans to introduce a tax on individuals earning more than 11,000 euros a month to help finance the country's pension system, citing government officials.
Yonhap News:
  • U.S. Cautious About U.N. Condemnation of N. Korea Amid Reluctant China. The United States Tuesday was cautious about how to punish North Korea for the torpedoeing of a South Korean warship amid China's lukewarm position on further sanctions on its communist ally.
  • South Korean President Lee Myung Bak said "tangible" actions need to be taken against North Korea related to the sinking of a warship, citing participants in a defense policy advisory committee meeting.
Sing Tao Daily:
  • Wharf (Holdings) Ltd. expects revenue from home sales in China to decline this year as the government tries to curb speculation in the property market, Peter Woo, the company's chairman, said. The developer, which owns Times Square complexes in mainland cities including Shanghai, Dalian and Wuhan, said housing prices in China may drop 20% to 30% this year.
South China Morning Post:
  • Beijing Worried Over ABC Flotation. Not Enough Interest Seen in Bank's IPO. The central government is getting cold feet over the Agricultural Bank of China's planned US$20 billion share sale, two people involved in the offering said. China's Ministery of Finance and Central Huijin Investment Co., the two main shareholders of the Agricultural Bank of China, want the lender to delay a planned share sale in Hong Kong on concern there isn't enough interest, citing two people involved in the offering.
National Business Daily:
  • Shanghai Greenland Group Co. plans to cut prices at its 100 property developments in 41 Chinese cities, citing the company. The developer's sales in Shanghai fell to about 7,000 square meters last month from 32,700 square meters in April, citing Lu Qiling, an analyst at Shanghai Uwin Real Estate Information Services Co.
Evening Recommendations
Citigroup:
  • Reiterated Buy on (BEN), target $132.
Thomas Weisel:
  • Upgraded (MDRX) to Overweight, target $24.
Night Trading
  • Asian indices are -1.0% to +.25% on average.
  • Asia Ex-Japan Investment Grade CDS Index 148.0 +.5 basis point.
  • S&P 500 futures -.25%.
  • NASDAQ 100 futures -.18%.
Morning Preview Links

Earnings of Note
Company/Estimate
  • (CIEN)/-.17
  • (BF/B)/.53
  • (MW)/.14
  • (ALOG)/.31
  • (SHFL)/.10
  • (TITN)/.09
  • (THO)/.60
  • (KFY)/.13
Economic Releases
10:00 am EST
  • Wholesale Inventories for April are estimated to rise +.5% versus a +.4% gain in March.
10:30 am EST
  • Bloomberg consensus estimates call for a weekly crude oil inventory decline of -900,000 barrels versus a -1,902,000 barrel decrease the prior week. Gasoline supplies are estimated to fall by -500,000 barrels versus a -2,647,000 barrel decline the prior week. Distillate inventories are expected to rise by +500,000 barrels versus a +445,000 barrel increase the prior week.
2:00 pm EST
  • The Fed's Beige Book.
Upcoming Splits
  • (DHR) 2-for-1
Other Potential Market Movers
  • The Fed's Bernanke speaking, $21 Bln 10-Year Treasury Note Auction, weekly MBA mortgage applications report, (ECPG) investor day, Jefferies Life Sciences Conference, UBS Tech/Services Conference, RBC Tech/Media/Communications Conference, JPMorgan Diversified Industries Conference, Piper Consumer Conference, BofA Merrill Small/Mid Cap Conference and the Needham Healthcare Conference 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 stocks to open modestly lower and to rally into the afternoon, finishing mixed. The Portfolio is 75% net long heading into the day.

Tuesday, June 08, 2010

Stocks Reversing Higher into Final Hour on Euro Bounce, Less Financial Sector Pessimism, Short-Covering


Broad Market Tone:

  • Advance/Decline Line: Lower
  • Sector Performance: Most Rising
  • Volume: Above Average
  • Market Leading Stocks: Underperforming
Equity Investor Angst:
  • VIX 33.15 -3.88%
  • ISE Sentiment Index 116.0 +17.17%
  • Total Put/Call 1.12 +16.67%
  • NYSE Arms .70 -64.55%
Credit Investor Angst:
  • North American Investment Grade CDS Index 128.65 bps +1.63%
  • European Financial Sector CDS Index 186.28 bps +6.25%
  • Western Europe Sovereign Debt CDS Index 143.50 bps +1.18%
  • Emerging Market CDS Index 310.36 bps +2.54%
  • 2-Year Swap Spread 43.0 -3 bps
  • TED Spread 43.0 unch.
Economic Gauges:
  • 3-Month T-Bill Yield .10% -1 bp
  • Yield Curve 243.0 -2 bps
  • China Import Iron Ore Spot $146.60/Metric Tonne -.61%
  • Citi US Economic Surprise Index +2.60 -2.3 points
  • 10-Year TIPS Spread 1.93% -3 bps
Overseas Futures:
  • Nikkei Futures: Indicating -22 open in Japan
  • DAX Futures: Indicating +12 open in Germany
Portfolio:
  • Slightly Higher: On gains in my Retail, Medical and Biotech long positions
  • Disclosed Trades: Covered some of my (IWM)/(QQQQ) hedges and some of my (EEM) short
  • Market Exposure: Moved to 75% Net Long
BOTTOM LINE: Today's overall market action is mildly bullish as the S&P 500 trades near session highs on a bounce in the euro and rises in (XLF)/(IYR). On the positive side, Food, Restaurant, Insurance, Bank, Telecom, Paper, Utility, Steel, Energy and Coal stocks are especially strong, rising .75%+. Weekly retail sales rose +3.6% this week versus a +2.7% gain the prior week. This is the biggest gain since the week of April 6. On the negative side, HMO, Hospital, Biotech, Disk Drive, Oil Tanker and Alt Energy shares are under pressure, falling more than -1.0%. The tech sector has underperformed throughout the day again and remains a big worry. The California Municipal CDS is rising +4.8% to 293 bps, which is the highest since March 1. The GE Capital CDS is rising 8.0% to 271.64 bps, which is the highest since Sept. of last year. Given the market's oversold state, today's rally could be extended a few days. However, until gauges of credit angst begin to roll over, I would view any meaningful stock rally as suspect. I expect US stocks to trade modestly higher into the close from current levels on short-covering, less financial sector pessimism and bargain-hunting.

Today's Headlines


Bloomberg:

  • Fitch Says U.K. Fiscal Challenge 'Formidable;' Pound Declines. Britain is facing a fiscal challenge and needs to accelerate plans to reduce its budget deficit, Fitch Ratings said. The pound extended declines. “The scale of the U.K.’s fiscal challenge is formidable and warrants a strong medium-term consolidation strategy, including a faster pace of deficit reduction than set out in the April 2010 budget,” Fitch analysts including Brian Coulton in London wrote in a report today. Interest payments on U.K. debt, rated AAA at Fitch, may reach a “staggering” 70 billion pounds ($101 billion) in five years, from 31 billion pounds in the past fiscal year, Prime Minister David Cameron said yesterday. Standard & Poor’s, which also gives Britain the top credit grade, has a “negative” outlook amid concern about the deficit.
  • Bank Risk Nears Record High on Spain's $60 Billion Capital Call. Bank credit-default swaps surged near to a record on concern Spanish lenders will have to raise $60 billion to shore up capital as lawmakers struggle to finance a swollen budget deficit. The Markit iTraxx Financial Index of swaps on 25 European banks and insurers climbed as much as 14 basis points to 208, approaching the all-time closing high of 210 basis points set in March 2009, JPMorgan Chase & Co. prices show. Banco Santander SA, Spain’s biggest bank, increased 23 basis points to a record 258, according to CMA DataVision. Spanish lenders need as much as 50 billion euros ($60 billion) of capital, according to Banco Bilbao Vizcaya Argentaria SA, as they face mounting writedowns triggered by a housing market collapse and losses on government bond holdings. Civil servants went on strike today to protest at Prime Minister Jose Luis Rodriguez Zapatero’s efforts to tame the euro area’s third-largest deficit. “There is illness in the Spanish banking system,” said Jeroen van den Broek, head of credit strategy at ING Groep NV in Amsterdam. “It’s very similar to 2008, when the market was hunting down the next bank failure. Now, the market’s hunting the next sovereign fiscal problem.” The spread between Spanish 10-year securities and German bunds widened 10 basis points to 213 basis points, a level not seen since before the introduction of the euro in 1999. Spanish bank capital needs may amount to about 5 percent of the nation’s gross domestic product of about 1 trillion euros through 2013, Bilbao-based BBVA said yesterday. The estimate exceeds a forecast by Standard & Poor’s that a state-backed rescue of Spain’s banking industry could cost 35 billion euros. Swaps on Bancaja, the Valencia-based lender downgraded by Fitch Ratings on June 1, rose 32.5 basis points to 668.5, CMA prices show. Contracts on BBVA increased 23 basis points to a record 292, Banco de Sabadell SA climbed 20 to 369 and Banco Pastor SA rose 35.5 to 495, CMA prices show. Investors are paying record high rates to protect bonds of banks in Europe from default relative to the rest of the market. The Markit iTraxx Financial Index is more than 60 basis points higher than the corporate Markit iTraxx Europe Index, according to JPMorgan. “There’s no doubt that this EU sovereign crisis will change the course of economic history,” Jim Reid, head of fundamental strategy at Deutsche Bank AG in London, wrote in a note to investors. “It may be up to the central banks to provide stability going forward.”
  • The pace of hedge fund liquidations quickened in the first quarter after a year of declines, according to Hedge Fund Research Inc. About 240 funds shuttered in the first quarter, following 165 closures in the prior three months. Firms that invest client money in hedge funds had the most closures at 102. More than 1,000 hedge funds closed last year, making 2009 the second-highest year on record after 2008, when 1,471 hedge funds liquidated.
  • 'Herculean' Europe Debt Effort May Not Save Euro Area, RBS Says. Europe’s 750 billion euro ($900 billion) aid package might fail to save the 11-year-old monetary union and usher in an “extended period” of market stress and disorder, according to Royal Bank of Scotland Group Plc. “Maybe we reach the point where this Herculean effort works and enough policy stimulus is provided so countries can fly again,” David Simmonds, global head of research and strategy at RBS, said in Singapore today. “However I do not subscribe to this view because one cannot treat a debt-fuelled over-consumption problem with a lot more debt.” Financial institutions globally have combined exposure to Portugal, Spain and Greece of more than 2 trillion euros, about half taken up by banks, Simmonds said. “About 500 billion euros or so is held by French and German banks, so the point to stress is there will be a Herculean effort to hold this thing together,” he said.
  • Babson Capital to Trim Equity on U.S. Downturn Bet. Babson Capital Management LLC, which oversees more than $100 billion, is betting on weak U.S. growth by limiting its equity holdings of companies acquired in leveraged buyouts. “We believe economic growth will be pretty sluggish for the next few years so we are making a strategic decision to take a more defensive posture, meaning we prefer to get a bit more of our return from coupons of the investments rather than equity kickers,” Michael Hermsen, a managing director who co-heads Babson Capital’s Mezzanine and Private-Equity Group in Springfield, Massachusetts, said.
  • The rate to exchange Australian dollars for yen is moving in lockstep with U.S. stocks by the most on record as concern Europe's debt crisis will derail growth pushes investors to the safety of the Japanese currency. The 120-day correlation between Aussie-yen and the Standard & Poor's 500 Index rose to .8277 today, the highest since at least 1991, or as far back as Bloomberg data goes.
  • Senate Democrats Propose Trimming Tax Rise on Buyout Managers. Senate Democrats said they will scale back a House-approved tax increase on investment-fund managers as part of their jobs legislation. The plan would tax an increasing amount of the profit share paid to fund executives, known as carried interest, at higher ordinary income tax rates rather than at the lower capital gains rate. The measure also would reinstate a provision dropped by House Democrats that would send state governments $24 billion to help pay for Medicaid health care for the poor. It would pay for that in part by increasing to 41 cents the current 8-cent tax oil companies pay on each barrel of oil they produce.

Bloomberg Businessweek:
  • Hedge Funds Spent $1.4 Million Lobbying in 1Q. A trade group representing hedge funds spent nearly $1.4 million in the first quarter lobbying federal officials on proposed financial regulations, including stricter oversight of derivatives trading. The $1.37 million that the Managed Funds Association spent on lobbying was up from the $790,000 that the organization spent in the same quarter a year ago. It also tops the nearly $1.1 million spent in last year's fourth quarter by the lobbying organization for hedge funds, which cater to institutional investors and wealthy individuals.
  • Gold Rises to Record on Demand for Haven From European Crisis. Gold rose to a record on demand for a haven from financial turmoil in Europe. Gold futures climbed to $1,254.50 an ounce in New York and also touched highs in sterling, euros and Swiss francs. European equities fell and Fitch Ratings said the U.K. must deepen budget cuts to protect its top credit rating.
CNBC:
Fox News:
  • JPMorgan(JPM) May Take Brunt of New Financial Reform. The conventional wisdom on Wall Street has been that the new financial-reform package will squeeze earnings at Goldman Sachs (GS: 135.5085, -3.2815, -2.36%) much tighter than most of its competitors because of limitations on so-called proprietary trading. But executives at Goldman Sachs have been telling clients and investors just the opposite is true; in fact, it’s the firm’s chief competitor, JPMorgan Chase (JPM: 37.11, 0.38, 1.03%), that could get hit the hardest, FOX Business Network has learned.
NY Times:
NY Post:
  • JPMorgan(JPM) Coal Hole. JPMorgan Chase's CEO Jamie Dimon may get burned by a coal trade that is said to have rung up a loss of as much as $250 million this quarter, The Post has learned.The hit, which occurred on the bank's commodities desk, is believed to have been the result of wrong-way bets that JPMorgan placed in recent weeks on coal traded in different regions of the world.The potential losses come at an inopportune time, as Washington lawmakers review sweeping changes to Wall Street rules on proprietary trading.
  • Where Are the Jobs?
Business Insider:
Zero Hedge:
Seeking Alpha:
Washington Post:
TheStreet.com:
  • Hedge Funds Struggle Amid Manager Scandals. Some of the biggest victims of the Madoff scandals were investors who relied on vehicles known as funds of hedge funds. Hundreds of millions of dollars vanished from funds of funds run by Maxam Capital Management and Tremont Group Holdings. Shaken by the losses, investors fled funds of funds. Withdrawals totaled $158 billion in 2008 and 2009, according to industry tracker Hedge Fund Research.
Washington Times:
  • Lawmakers Got Fed Funds for Fancy Frontage. With a rooftop pool and 24-hour concierge service, the new luxury condominiums off Frank Sinatra Drive here seem an unlikely spot in need of a multimillion-dollar federal giveaway. Yet U.S. taxpayers doled out at least $8 million on a public walkway and park space in front of the Maxwell Place development here overlooking the New York City skyline - an amenity the development touts alongside its entertainment lounge, rooftop hot tub and theater screening room. But the decision to use tax dollars to fund the walkway project was made after private developers had already agreed in 2003 to pay for it - indeed, it was a key condition for getting the project off the ground, according to public records and interviews. Still, under the so-called earmarking process, by which Capitol Hill lawmakers slip requests for pet projects into larger spending bills, Sens. Frank R. Lautenberg and Robert Menendez, New Jersey Democrats, later pushed for millions of dollars in federal funding for the project.
The Hill:
  • Ax May Fall on Tax Break for Mortgages. The popular tax break for mortgage interest, once considered untouchable, is falling under the scrutiny of policymakers and economic experts seeking ways to close huge deficits. Although Congress last year rejected the White House’s proposed cut to the amount wealthier taxpayers can deduct for home mortgage interest payments, the administration included it again in its 2010 budget — saying it could save $208 billion over the next decade. And now that sentiment has turned against all the federal red ink — and cost-cutting is in vogue — Democrats on President Barack Obama’s financial commission are considering the wisdom of permanent tax breaks such as the mortgage deduction and corporate deferral. Calling them “tax entitlements,” senior Democratic lawmakers have argued they should be on the table for reform just like traditional entitlement programs Medicare, Social Security and Medicaid.
Politico:
  • Poll: Oil Response Worse Than Katrina. More than two-thirds of Americans rate the federal government's response to the oil spill off the Gulf Coast negatively — topping the number of those who said the same about Katrina soon after the hurricane, according to a new ABC News/Washington Post poll. Sixty-nine percent of the 1,004 adults polled nationwide held a negative view of the federal government's response to the spill; only 28 percent gave the government a positive rating.
  • Spending Fears Threaten Dem Agenda. At a closed-door meeting with a small group of House Democrats late last month, House Speaker Nancy Pelosi heard gripes from members not happy about having to vote on a big spending measure at a time when many voters think government growth and deficits are out of control. Nothing new there. Pelosi’s been hearing this type of message from the noisy caucus of moderate Blue Dog Democrats for a year and a half. But this time was different: The malcontents were freshmen, many of whom have enthusiastically backed President Barack Obama’s agenda most of the way but now are choking on its cost.
ABC News:
USA Today:
  • More Than 1 in 5 Kids Live in Poverty. The rate of children living in poverty this year will climb to nearly 22%, the highest rate in two decades, according to an analysis by the non-profit Foundation for Child Development. Nearly 17% of children were living in poverty in 2006, before the recession began. The foundation's Child and Youth Well-Being Index tracks 28 key statistics about children, such as health insurance coverage, parents' employment, infant mortality and preschool enrollment. The report projects that the percentage of children living in families with an "insecure" source of food has risen from about 17% in 2007 to nearly 18% in 2010, an increase of 750,000 children. Up to 500,000 children may be homeless this year, living either in shelters or places not meant for habitation.
Reuters:
Le Figaro:
  • U.K. Foreign Secretary William Hague said his country can't give more financial guarantees to help nations in the euro-zone because it faces its largest-ever peacetime budget deficit, citing an interview with Hague.
The Economic Times:
  • Foxconn Ends Death Payouts to Halt Suicides: Xinhua. iPhone maker Foxconn International Holdings will no longer pay compensation to families of employees who kill themselves to discourage suicides. Xinhua cited posters in Foxconn's Shenzhen complex as saying the company had "concrete evidence" that some of its employees who killed themselves in a recent spate of suicides had done so in order to win compensation money for their families. Most of the victims' families received more than 100,000 yuan ($14,640), Xinhua said.

Bear Radar


Style Underperformer:

  • Small-Cap Growth (-1.36%)
Sector Underperformers:
  • Oil Service (-2.36%), Biotech (-2.30%) and Disk Drives (-2.21%)
Stocks Falling on Unusual Volume:
  • IMA, AUXL, MRVL, CETV, ETM, ATHR, EQIX, QNST, KVHI, MAPP, CTXS, MRCY, HAWK, GIII, VECO, MWIV, OCLR, MOLX, ETFCD, AMZN, CBST, VIVO, TLB, DO, BK and BP
Stocks With Unusual Put Option Activity:
  • 1) DO 2) WFR 3) AEO 4) KEY 5) CAT
Stocks With Most Negative News Mentions:
  • 1) BP 2) UBS 3) BAC 4) DO 5) GS

Bull Radar


Style Outperformer:

  • Large-Cap Value (-.17%)
Sector Outperformers:
  • Gold (+1.91%), Coal (+1.49%) and Telecom (+.41%)
Stocks Rising on Unusual Volume:
  • SSRI, FCX, EXXI and RIMM
Stocks With Unusual Call Option Activity:
  • 1) CCJ 2) ARIA 3) TLB 4) FST 5) ARUN
Stocks With Most Positive News Mentions:
  • 1) AAPL 2) MCD 3) DG 4) BA 5) HPQ

Tuesday Watch


Evening Headlines

Bloomberg:
  • Bernanke Says Fed Likely to Raise Rates Before Full Employment. Federal Reserve Chairman Ben S. Bernanke said the central bank will raise its benchmark interest rate from a record low before the U.S. economy returns to full employment or inflation surges. “It will be the case that when we start the process of tightening policy that the economy will not yet be back at full employment,” Bernanke said.
  • Pimco's Crescenzi Sees 'Endpoint' in Devaluations. Nations have reached a “Keynesian endpoint” as exhausted balance sheets leave policy makers with few options to bolster economic growth, according to Anthony Crescenzi, an investor at Pacific Investment Management Co., the world’s largest bond-fund manager. “Time, devaluations, and debt restructurings might be the only way out for many nations,” Crescenzi wrote in an e-mailed note. Debt-fueled spending programs aimed at combating the global financial crisis of 2008 are among policy tools now “being seen as a magic elixir that has morphed into poison.” “The world is full of dirty shirts in terms of excessive debt, and the United States is one of those countries, but it still remains the reserve currency and still remains the flight- to-quality haven,” said Bill Gross, who runs the world’s biggest bond fund at Newport Beach, California-based Pimco. “The U.S. is the least dirty shirt,” he said in a June 4 radio interview on Bloomberg Surveillance with Tom Keene. The Obama administration forecast a $1.6 trillion budget deficit, the most ever, in the current fiscal year that began Oct. 1.
  • Bund Spread With Spain Nears Danger Zone: Technical Analysis. The premium investors receive for holding Spain’s debt compared with Germany’s has risen to near a level that may trigger another flight to quality, according to Citigroup Inc. The difference in yield between the nations’ 10-year securities widened today to 2.04 percentage points, a level not seen since before the introduction of the euro in 1999. A close this week of 1.98 percentage points will signal renewed sovereign-debt concern in Europe, according to Tom Fitzpatrick, an analyst in New York at Citigroup, one of the 18 primary dealers required to bid at Treasury auctions. “There is real danger if the spread widens out further, similar to the equivalent of the pivot moment Greece had in April before the crisis really took off,” Fitzpatrick said in a telephone interview. “If we see a real breach, we will see a domino effect into anti-risk developments including weaker equities, a higher VIX and further strength to Treasuries and bunds -- just more flight to quality.”
  • Aluminum prices in China have fallen below the cost of production, Luo Jianchuan, president of Aluminum Corp. of China Ltd., said in Shanghai today.
  • China's aluminum export growth may stall should the yuan be allowed to appreciate against the dollar, the China Nonferrous Metals Industry Association said. Rising labor costs have already made China's products less competitive overseas, Li Defeng, director of aluminum at the association, said in slides prepared for the Antaike aluminum conference in Shanghai today. U.S. purchases accounted for 19% of China's overseas aluminum sales last year.
  • Obama Gives States $250 Million to Review Premiums. Insurers led by UnitedHealth Group Inc.(UNH) and WellPoint Inc.(WLP) risk losing access to as many as 24 million customers a year under a plan announced by the White House today that expands funding for states to scrutinize “unreasonable” rate increases. The U.S. will give states $250 million in grants over five years to strengthen their ability to review premiums, starting with $51 million this year, said Kathleen Sebelius, the federal health secretary, in a statement today. UnitedHealth, WellPoint and Aetna Inc., the largest U.S. insurers, urged regulators in letters delivered last month to limit the new rate-review plans or risk driving insurers out of some markets.
  • European government bonds show the debt crisis that sent the euro to its lowest level in four years against the dollar yesterday is spreading to nations that previously were considered safe. The extra yield investors demand to hold Belgian and French 10-year government bonds instead of benchmark German bunds doubled in the past week. Investors, having focused on the budget deficits of countries such as Greece and Portugal, are now starting to recognize that Europe's so-called core economies have excessive borrowings, according to Bob McKee, chief economist at Independent Strategy, an economics consultancy in London. "France has a deficit that is comparable to some of the peripheral countries," McKee said in an interview. "Belgium has a major debt problem and we won't find out if it has a government to deal with it until the weekend." France's debt load of 77.6% of gross domestic product last year was the fourth-largest in the 16-member currency region, after Italy, Greece and Belgium.
  • Goldman(GS) Deserves Regulatory Probe in Bloomberg Poll. Goldman Sachs Group Inc. is being “legitimately scrutinized” by regulators who sued the firm for fraud based on conduct that many in the industry consider to be common practice, according to a Bloomberg survey. The most profitable securities firm in Wall Street history has suffered the worst reputational decline among its largest competitors, according to the global quarterly poll of 1,001 investors and analysts who are Bloomberg subscribers. Eighty- three percent of respondents said Goldman Sachs’s stature diminished in the past six months; the next closest were UBS AG, with 27 percent, and Citigroup Inc., at 26 percent.
  • Investors Pick U.S. Over BRICs in Bloomberg User Poll. The U.S. has supplanted China and Brazil as the most attractive market for investors as confidence in the global economic recovery wanes in the wake of the Greek debt crisis. Following the U.S.’s 39 percent rating as the most promising market were Brazil, chosen by 29 percent; China, 28 percent; and India, 27 percent. Those are three of the four so- called BRICs, large emerging markets that also include Russia. Just 6 percent chose Russia. In a poll taken in January, China was the favorite followed by Brazil. Respondents were allowed to pick multiple countries.
  • China, Hong Kong Stocks Downgraded at BofA Merrill. China and Hong Kong stocks were cut to “neutral” from “overweight” on speculation that policy easing may be “far away” and growth expectations will continue to fall, according to BofA Merrill Lynch Global Research. China is now the most “overbought” market in Asia while its yield curve has narrowed “sharply” to 102 basis points from 160 basis points in mid-April, strategists led by Sadiq Currimbhoy said in a report dated yesterday. They upgraded South Korea and India to “neutral,” and Singapore to “overweight.” “The Chinese 10-year bond is now 3.3 percent, down from 3.7 percent a few months ago, hardly a sign of accelerating either growth or inflation expectations,” the analysts wrote. “Any further narrowing and we would need to ‘underweight’ the market.” China has the highest number of “sell” signals within Asia based on a comparison of the markets’ 14-day relative strength index, according to the report.
  • iPhone Gets Jump on Rivals With Video Chats, Screen Technology.
Wall Street Journal:
  • Bernanke Says Economy Seems to Be on Track.
  • Obama to Reopen Oil Drilling. The Obama administration, facing rising anger on the Gulf Coast over the loss of jobs and income from a drilling moratorium, said Monday that it would move quickly to release new safety requirements that would allow the reopening of offshore oil and gas exploration in shallow waters. Gulf Coast residents, political leaders and industry officials said delays in releasing the new rules, along with the administration's six-month halt on deepwater drilling—both issued amid public pressure—threatened thousands of jobs.
  • Primaries to Watch From Coast to Coast.
  • The Leading Men of Regulation. Geithner, Dodd, Frank to Play Big Role in Crafting Finance Rules Behind the Scenes.
CNBC:
MarketWatch:
NY Times:
  • Goldman(GS) Gets Subpoena From Financial Crisis Panel. The commission investigating the causes of the financial crisis said Monday that it had subpoenaed Goldman Sachs and harshly accused the investment bank of trying to delay and disrupt its inquiry, The New York Times’s Sewell Chan reports from Washington. “Goldman Sachs has not, in our view, been cooperative with our requests for information, or forthcoming with respect to documents, information or interviews,” Phil Angelides, the chairman of the Financial Crisis Inquiry Commission, told reporters in a conference call. The deputy chairman, Bill Thomas, accused Goldman of “stonewalling,” and said, “They may have more to cover up than either we thought or than they told us.”
Business Insider:
  • Chinese Media Cites Foxconn Suicides In Calling for New Proletarian Revolution. Maoists have expressed concern with the growth of inequality in a country that only decades ago paid the same wage to all workers. Calls for a new proletarian revolution appears today in the state-owned People's Daily. Although many Chinese enjoy economic liberalization, technically everyone is still a Maoist. Watch what happens to the boom when this opinion catches on.
Zero Hedge:
CNNMoney:
  • Gulf Spill Widows: Don't Stop Drilling. The widows of two men killed on the Deepwater Horizon drill rig urged lawmakers Monday to allow drilling in the Gulf of Mexico to continue, saying the oil industry is a major source of income for families in the region. "Drilling in the gulf must continue," said Courtney Kemp, of Jonesville, La., whose husband was killed along with 11 other workers when the drill rig exploded and sank in April. The rig, operated by Transocean, was contracted to develop a well leased by BP. "If drilling ceases, not only would off-shore employees lose their jobs," said Kemp, "but the trickle-down effect would be devastating not only to the coastal states, but eventually to the entire country."
Market Oracle:
  • Why a Rising U.S. Dollar is Horrible News for China. You'd think a country would be happy to have a strong exchange rate, so why is a rising dollar so bad for China? China used its pegged exchange rate to destroy the trading competition and grow its economy at 9% a year for the last 15 years. Hong Kong, Korea, Singapore, and Taiwan only managed 7%-8% growth over the same period. A 1% difference may not sound like much, but China basically used this edge to overtake Germany as the world's largest exporter in 2009 and build the largest lowest-cost manufacturing "sector" the world has ever seen. In other words, China fell for the classic trap. It built its future prosperity on the idea the dollar would always be cheap against other foreign currencies. Already, the Chinese renminbi has risen 16% against the euro over the last 120 days... This is the fastest, most violent move in the history of euro-renminbi markets. The Chinese renminbi has also risen 13% against the British pound, 13% against the Aussie dollar, and 5% against the Japanese yen. Europe is China's largest trading partner, and Chinese goods have just gotten 16% more expensive for Europeans. If you're a Chinese businessman and you're using a 2% profit margin to beat the competition and sell your goods to France, it only takes a 2% currency appreciation to put you out of business. As China's vice commerce minister put it recently, "Water doesn't boil if it's heated to 99 degrees Celsius. But it will boil if it's heated by one more degree."
Washington Post:
  • In Chinese Admiral's Outburst, a Lingering Distrust of U.S. Interviews in China with a wide range of experts, Chinese officials and military officers indicate that Guan's rant -- for all its discomfiting bluster -- actually represents the mainstream views of the Chinese Communist Party, and that perhaps the real outliers might be those in China's government who want to side with the United States. Guan's speech underscored that 31 years after the United States and China normalized relations, there remains a deep distrust in Beijing. That the United States is trying to keep China down is a central part of the party's catechism and a foundation of its claims to legitimacy. More broadly, many Chinese security experts and officials view the Obama administration's policy of encouraging Chinese participation in solving the world's problems -- including climate change, the global financial crisis and the security challenges in Iran and North Korea -- not as attempts to elevate China into the ranks of global leadership but rather as a scheme to enmesh it in a paralyzing web of commitments.
LA Times:
  • The Ties That Bind. Remember Rahm Emanuel's Rent-Free D.C. Apartment? The Owner: A BP(BP) Adviser. In case you were tempted to buy the faux Washington outrage at BP and its gulf oil spill in recent days, here's a story that reveals a little-known corporate political connection and the quiet way the inner political circles intersect, protect and care for one another in the nation's capital. And Chicago. We already knew that BP and its folks were significant contributors to the record $750-million war chest of Barack Obama's 2007-08 campaign. Now, we learn the details of a connection of Rahm Emanuel, the Chicago mayoral wannabe, current Obama chief of staff, ex-representative, ex-Clinton money man and ex-Windy City political machine go-fer. Shortly after Obama's happy inaugural, eyebrows rose slightly upon word that, as a House member, Emanuel had lived the last five years rent-free in a D.C. apartment of Democratic colleague Rep. Rosa DeLauro of Connecticut and her husband, Stanley Greenberg. For an ordinary American, that would likely raise some obvious tax liability questions. But like Emanuel, the guy overseeing the Internal Revenue Service now is another Obama insider, Tim Geithner, who had his own outstanding tax problems but skated through confirmation anyway by the Democratic-controlled Congress. Remember this was all before the letters BP stood for Huge Mess. Even before the Obama administration gave BP a safety award. Now follow these standard Washington links if you can: Greenberg's consulting firm was a prime architect of BP's recent rebranding drive as a green petroleum company, down to green signs and the slogan "Beyond Petroleum." Greenberg's company is also closely tied to a sister Democratic outfit -- GCS, named for the last initials of Greenberg, James Carville, another Clinton advisor, and Bob Shrum, John Kerry's 2004 campaign manager. According to published reports, GCS received hundreds of thousands of dollars in political polling contracts in recent years from the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee. Probably just a crazy coincidence. But you'll never guess who was the chairman of that Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee dispensing those huge polling contracts to his kindly rent-free landlord.
Crain's Chicago Business:
Rasmussen Reports:
Politico:
  • Harry Reid Lays Out Huge Senate Agenda. Majority Leader Harry Reid (D-Nev.) laid out an daunting summer agenda for the Senate on Monday afternoon, including a tax extenders bill, an emergency extension of unemployment benefits, a small-business jobs bill, the financial reform conference report and a war funding bill. To top that off, the Senate also has to begin the confirmation hearings of Supreme Court nominee Elena Kagan and deal with the ongoing oil spill crisis in the Gulf. "The work period between now and July 4 is short, but our to-do list is very long," Reid said. As if that’s not enough to deal with, Reid wants key Senate committees to draw up an energy bill in wake of the oil spill crisis.
Reuters:
TimesOnline:
  • William Hague Wins European Backing for Israeli Raid Inquiry. William Hague condemned Iran’s plan to send aid boats to Gaza yesterday, warning that the move would deliberately aggravate an already tense situation. “It is not helpful, and probably it is not designed to be helpful,” the British Foreign Secretary said after meeting Franco Frattini, his Italian counterpart. He and Mr Frattini agreed that Europe wanted an international presence in any Israeli inquiry into the deadly storming of the boats. Such an inquiry must be “transparent, honest and complete,” Mr Frattini said. When asked what form the international component could take because of Israeli opposition to a role by the United Nations, Mr Hague said: “The UN is not the only option, there are other organisations.”
Telegraph:
  • UK Would Have to Double Scale of Cuts to Match Canada's Public Sector Bonfire. The 20pc cut in public spending which Canada implemented in the 1990s would be equivalent today to some £140bn worth of public spending cuts, according to the Institute of Economic Affairs. This is dramatically higher than the £71bn the Conservatives signalled they would aim for ahead of the election, and would necessitate the biggest reduction in public spending on record. The warning came after David Cameron said that the imminent spending cuts, which will be spelt out by the coalition Government over the coming days, with George Osborne due to provide more detail of the mechanism for the cuts on Tuesday, would affect every Briton's life. He cited Canada as a country which successfully cut its national debt while maintaining stability and escaping recession.
China Economic Times:
  • Now is the best time for China to reform its exchange rate mechanism because weakening pressure for appreciation of the yuan means there will be fewer negative effects from the change, citing government researcher Fan Jianjun.
Shanghai Securities News:
  • China's sales of land for residential development projects fell 14% in 70 cities in May from the previous month, citing the China Index Research Institute, which tracks the nation's real estate market.
Evening Recommendations
  • None of note
Night Trading
  • Asian indices are -.25% to +.75% on average.
  • Asia Ex-Japan Investment Grade CDS Index 147.50 -1.0 basis point.
  • S&P 500 futures +.72%.
  • NASDAQ 100 futures +.70%.
Morning Preview Links

Earnings of Note
Company/Estimate
  • (DG)/.34
  • (TLB)/.16
  • (PLL)/.50
Economic Releases
7:30 am EST
  • NFIB Small Business Optimism for May is estimated to rise to 91.0 versus 90.6 in April.
Upcoming Splits
  • (DHR) 2-for-1
Other Potential Market Movers
  • The Fed's Duke speaking, Fed's Evans speaking, Fed's Hoenig speaking, weekly retail sales reports, $36 Billion 3-Year Treasury Notes Auction, ABC Consumer Confidence reading, IBD/TIPP Economic Optimism Index, (PLXS) investor day, (ORBK) investor day, RBC Energy/Power Conference, Bank of America Merrill Lynch Small/Mid Cap Conference, Jefferies Life Sciences Conference, UBS Tech/Services Conference, Goldman Lodging/Gaming/Restaurant/Leisure Conference, JPMorgan Diversified Industries Conference, Piper Jaffray Consumer Conference, Needham Internet/Digital Media Conference and the (DPS) analyst meeting could also impact trading today.
BOTTOM LINE: Asian indices are mostly higher, boosted by commodity and financial shares in the region. I expect US stocks to open modestly higher and to weaken into the afternoon, finishing mixed. The Portfolio is 50% net long heading into the day.