Wednesday, September 08, 2010

Today's Headlines


Bloomberg:

  • Fed Banks: 'Widespread Signs of a Deceleration' in Economy. The Federal Reserve said the U.S. economy maintained its expansion while showing “widespread signs of a deceleration” in mid-July through the end of August, according to a survey by 12 regional Fed banks. Five regional banks reported “economic growth at a moderate pace” and two pointed to “positive developments or net improvements.” The remaining five banks said conditions were mixed or decelerating. The report underscores the Fed’s view that while the recovery from the worst recession in seven decades has cooled, the economy isn’t relapsing into a contraction.
  • Anglo Irish Bank to Be Split, One Part to Be Sold or Would Down. Anglo Irish Bank Corp. will be broken in two as Ireland’s government seeks “finality” on the bailout of the nationalized bank and tries to calm investor concern that the cost will continue to mount. Anglo Irish will be split into a so-called good bank, which will retain the lender’s deposits, and an asset recovery bank which will run down its loans over time, the Finance Ministry in Dublin said in a statement today. The central bank will determine by October how much new capital will be needed.
  • The Baltic Dry Index, a measure of commodity-shipping costs, advanced for an eighth session as strengthening freight rates for iron ore carriers led gains. The gauge rose 2% to 2,975 points, the highest level in 12 weeks, according to the Baltic Exchange.
  • Paulson's Biggest Hedge Fund Said to Lose 11% in 2010. John Paulson, who became a billionaire by betting against U.S. mortgage markets, lost 11 percent this year in his New York-based firm’s biggest hedge fund, according to a person briefed on the returns.
  • Copper Futures Rise as Gains in U.S. Equities Boost Demand for Commodities. Copper rose the most in a week as U.S. stocks advanced, boosting demand for commodities. The Standard & Poor’s 500 Index climbed as much as 0.8 percent as improved demand for Portuguese and Polish bonds tempered speculation that Europe’s debt crisis will trigger another recession. Before today, copper jumped 21 percent since July 1 as inventories dropped. The S&P 500 gained 6.3 percent in the same period. LME copper stockpiles dropped for a fourth straight session to 394,500 tons, the lowest level since Nov. 10, according to daily exchange figures. Inventories have slid 21 percent this year, helping to boost the metal to a four-month high of $7,750 a ton on Sept. 3.
  • U.S. Retail Space Availability to Drop in 2011, CB Richard Says. Space available for lease at U.S. local retail centers will decline next year for the first time since 2005 as consumer spending rises, according to commercial broker CB Richard Ellis Group Inc. The availability rate, which refers to space being actively marketed and ready for tenant construction in a year, will fall to 12.8 percent for neighborhood and community shopping centers at the end of 2011 from a peak of 13.2 percent in the second half of this year, according to a forecast from CBRE Econometric Advisors, a unit of Los Angeles-based CB Richard Ellis.
  • China 'Tightening' Speculation Follows Property Surge. China’s attempts to cool the real-estate market may be faltering as sales surge, prompting speculation the government may issue more tightening measures. Real-estate stocks tumbled today after a newspaper reported that the government may introduce a second round of measures to cool the market and Citigroup Inc. said extra steps are “very likely.” The government is seeking to limit the risk of asset bubbles after flooding the economy with money to drive a recovery from the financial crisis. “The key drivers of the property bubble are excess liquidity and lack of investment alternatives, which are still largely in place,” said Ken Peng, a Beijing-based economist for Citigroup.
  • BofA(BAC), JPMorgan(JPM) Can Only Watch as U.S. Bancorp(USB), PNC(PNC) Seek Targets. U.S. Bancorp and PNC Financial Services Group Inc. may lead the biggest boom in bank takeovers since 2007, and this time, the largest lenders can only sit and watch. Bank loans outstanding have dropped 10 percent since October 2008, the deepest contraction in more than 35 years, according to Goldman Sachs Group Inc. That’s left banks with unused lending capacity, idle cash and depressed market values, making laggards ripe for consolidation, according to KBW Inc., Rochdale Securities LLC and CreditSights Inc. Potential targets include KeyCorp(KEY), SunTrust Banks Inc.(STI) and Regions Financial Corp(RF).
  • Record-Low Rates Should Prompt Debt Sales to Pay for Buybacks, Tilson Says. U.S. companies should use record low interest rates to issue debt and buy back stock to boost per- share earnings, according to hedge-fund manager Whitney Tilson. Those with high credit ratings and enough cash are ideal candidates to sell bonds and cut their dividends to raise money for repurchasing their own equities, said Tilson.
  • Norfolk Southern(NSC), CSX(CSX) Say Shipping Volumes Rising as Rail Demand Holds Up. Norfolk Southern Corp. and CSX Corp. said shipping volumes have risen more than 10 percent in the current quarter as demand remains strong in most markets. Volume increased 11 percent at CSX and 14 percent at Norfolk Southern in the third quarter through Aug. 20, executives said at the Dahlman Rose & Co. Global Transportation Conference today in New York. “The recovery may be choppy and uneven -- and that may be an understatement -- but it is a recovery,” Norfolk Southern Chief Executive Officer Charles “Wick” Moorman said in a presentation. “We don’t expect anything that looks like the much-discussed double-dip. We don’t see what precipitates it, don’t see it in our carloads and don’t hear it when we talk to our customers.”
  • Krugman, DeLong's Keynes Model Flawed, Harvard's Ferguson Says: Tom Keene. The economic assumptions of Paul Krugman and Bradford DeLong are based on “flawed” versions of John Maynard Keynes’s model, according to Niall Ferguson, a history professor at Harvard University. “They have a flawed Keynesian model in their minds about what fiscal stimulus can do when you already have a highly indebted economy,” Ferguson said in a radio interview today on “Bloomberg Surveillance” with Tom Keene. “We’ve seen this movie in Japan before where you end up with an explosion of public debt but a flatlining economy, and gradually that debt burden, even at low interest rates, begins to be more of a burden than a source of stimulus.”

Wall Street Journal:
Bloomberg Businessweek:
  • Dow May Rise From Election Day to Year-End: Technical Analysis. Investors who bought Dow Jones Industrial Average stocks on the November election day in the middle year of U.S. presidencies since 1918 generated profits through New Year’s Eve 70 percent of the time, according to Janney Montgomery Scott LLC’s Dan Wantrobski. The Dow jumped an average of 5 percent during the two months between the November congressional elections to Dec. 31 in the 16 winning Dow years over the past 23 midterm cycles. The average return for all midterm voting years is 2.3 percent, while the seven losing years had a negative return of 4 percent on average, Wantrobski said.
Business Insider:
RTT News:
  • Euro Snaps Back as Portugal Eases Sovereign Debt Fears. The euro battled back from early losses on Wednesday amid speculation that renewed fears about the European sovereign debt situation have been overblown. Portugal conducted an oversubscribed bond offering this morning, suggesting that demand for its public debt remains steady. Yields rose for the 661 million euro bonds due in 2013 and 378 million euro bonds due in 2021. "There was high demand in the sale, with a high level of participation of a wide base of investors, and a cost compatible with current market conditions," Portugal's Finance Ministry said.
CNET:
  • Google(GOOG) Launches 'Instant' Search. Google on Wednesday introduced a faster version of its search engine called Google Instant that begins displaying results as soon as users type in queries. The feature, which is being introduced to users in the U.S., most of Europe and Russia can be turned off, however the company says the new interface shaves off 2-5 seconds from user searches since it brings up results nearly as fast as it does for its auto-suggest feature. In fact, it will automatically do a search for the top auto-suggestion before a user has even selected it. Google estimates that if all its users switch over to the instant interface, it will amount to a savings of 11 hours of searching per second.
AppleInsider:
  • Apple(AAPL) Forecast to Sell 28M iPads in 2011, Chipping Away at PC Sales. Apple's competitively priced iPad is expected to reduce sales of low-end notebook PCs in 2011, when consumers are projected to buy at least 28 million of the touchscreen tablet, one analyst believes. Maynard Um with UBS Investment Research issued a note to investors this week, in which he increased his price target for AAPL stock to $350, up from $340. He said there is no evidence that the iPad is having a negative effect on Mac sales, but it is "adversely affecting the PC industry." "Sales of traditional notebooks appear to be feeling pressure from the iPad, causing a scramble by vendors to launch iPad-like tablets," Um wrote. "We believe that a majority of this impact is occurring on the lower end of PC sales as the iPad is priced close enough to this range that it becomes attractive to consumers looking to make purchases within this segment." He continued: "We are not sold that the iPad is purely cannibalizing PC sales, as the functionality of the iPad cannot yet deliver the functionality of notebook PCs. However, consumers who purchase iPads may be more willing to delay purchases and upgrades of existing PCs." Um sees Apple selling 28 million iPads in 2011, a number he cautioned could be "conservative."
Gigaom:
Real Clear Politics:
  • Can You Smell What Obama's Cooking? You may recall Barack Obama claiming that the original stimulus plan didn't need any more tax cuts or "piecemeal" measures. To suggest so was to engage in "politics as usual." And trust me; you don't want to be caught going there. And today? You know what, America? You look as if you're ready for some piecemeal measures and a fake tax cut!
Rasmussen Reports:
Politico:
  • GOP Notches Record Primary Turnout. Democrats are already expected to lose seats in the November midterm elections, but now there's even more bad news for the party that controls Congress and the White House. A study released Tuesday shows Republicans boast a voter turnout record so far this cycle that, compared with Democrats, is unprecedented for a midterm election in the past 80 years. A higher average percentage of Republicans than Democrats turned out for their respective statewide primaries this year for the first time in a midterm election since 1930, according to Curtis Gans, the director of American University's Center for the Study of the American Electorate. The study shows that Republican turnout averaged 10.5 percent in statewide primaries — the highest it has been in a midterm election since 1970. Meanwhile, Democratic turnout was about 8.3 percent in statewide primaries — the lowest percentage on record for an election year in which there was not a presidential contest.
Reuters:
  • Boeing(BA) Not Ruling Out Merger With Rival. Boeing is "actively" looking at potential acquisition opportunities in response to a changing security environment and will not rule out a merger with another large defense contractor, Boeing's head of defense said on Tuesday. Speaking at the Reuters Aerospace and Defense Summit in Washington, Dennis Muilenburg said Boeing continues to look at high-growth areas such as cybersecurity, intelligence and surveillance and unmanned systems for potential deals and will make targeted acquisitions in those areas.
  • OPEC Should Seek $100 Oil Price: Libya. OPEC needs a higher oil price of $100 a barrel because the rising costs of imports such as food have eroded OPEC members' income, Libya's top oil official told Reuters on Wednesday.
  • EADS CEO Says $1.3 Billion M&A Possible. EADS Chief Executive Louis Gallois said EADS is in talks with a few companies in defense, services and security areas for potential deals and could comfortably make an acquisition of around 1 billion euros ($1.3 billion).

Bear Radar


Style Underperformer:

  • Small-Cap Value (+.24%)
Sector Underperformers:
  • 1) Medical Equipment -.65% 2) Utilities -.48% 3) Gold -.33%
Stocks Falling on Unusual Volume:
  • AIXG, VECO, CREE, ANGO, SLAB, CAGC, RBCN, CHBT, UDR, TLB and IT
Stocks With Unusual Put Option Activity:
  • 1) ARG 2) IBN 3) WMB 4) CREE 5) AA
Stocks With Most Negative News Mentions:
  • 1) DTE 2) TRB 3) TLB 4) SLAB 5) DIS

Bull Radar


Style Outperformer:

  • Small-Cap Growth (+1.15%)
Sector Outperformers:
  • 1) Gaming +2.02% 2) Banks +2.0% 3) Oil Service +1.90%
Stocks Rising on Unusual Volume:
  • VRUS, CTEL, BP, RDS/A, PFE, CNMD, RDWR, TZOO, CIEN, GMCR, CMTL, HITK, COLM, ROVI, BUCY, INCY, LOGM, NTAP, SAIA, GOLD, ARMH, MAPP, CRZO, BWLD, TEVA, EZU, PVH, EWP and TPL
Stocks With Unusual Call Option Activity:
  • 1) MTG 2) COF 3) ENER 4) NUE 5) TYC
Stocks With Most Positive News Mentions:
  • 1) AAPL 2) NAV 3) PVH 4) GOOG 5) LUV

Weekday Watch


Evening Headlines

Bloomberg:






Wall Street Journal:






Bloomberg Businessweek:





Fox News:




CNBC:





MarketWatch:






Business Insider:





Zero Hedge:






New York Post:





IBD:






NY Times:






CNNMoney.com:







Forbes:






Seeking Alpha:






AppleInsider:






The Daily Beast:






Politico:





USA Today:





Reuters:





Financial Times:





The Guardian:






Telegraph:



Yomiuri:





South China Morning Post:





People's Daily:





China Securities Journal:





Shanghai Securities News:





Evening Recommendations
Citigroup:
  • Rated .
  • Reiterated Buy on .
  • Reiterated Buy on .
  • Reiterated Buy on .
Wells Fargo:
  • Rated .
  • Rated .
  • Rated .
BMO Capital Markets:
  • Rated .
  • Rated .
  • Rated .
  • Rated .
Night Trading
  • Asian equity indices are -% to +% on average.
  • Asia Ex-Japan Investment Grade CDS Index 103.0 + basis points.
  • Asia Pacific Sovereign CDS Index 94.0 + basis point.
  • S&P 500 futures +%.
  • NASDAQ 100 futures +%.
Morning Preview Links

Earnings of Note
Company/Estimate
  • (
Economic Releases
8:30 am EST

9:55 am EST

10:00 am EST

2:00 pm EST
  • .
Upcoming Splits
  • None of note
Other Potential Market Movers
  • The speaking could also impact trading today.
BOTTOM LINE: Asian indices are mostly lower, weighed down by automaker and financial shares in the region. I expect US stocks to open mixed and to rally into the afternoon, finishing modestly higher. The Portfolio is 100% net long heading into the day.

Tuesday, September 07, 2010

Stocks Falling into Final Hour on Increasing Sovereign Debt Angst, Rising Economic Fear, Profit-Taking


Broad Market Tone:

  • Advance/Decline Line: Substantially Lower
  • Sector Performance: Most Declining
  • Volume: Light
  • Market Leading Stocks: Outperforming
Equity Investor Angst:
  • VIX 23.80 +11.68%
  • ISE Sentiment Index 120.0 +25.0%
  • Total Put/Call 1.28 +34.734%
  • NYSE Arms 1.58 +342.32%
Credit Investor Angst:
  • North American Investment Grade CDS Index 106.20 bps +3.61%
  • European Financial Sector CDS Index 121.17 bps +7.41%
  • Western Europe Sovereign Debt CDS Index 144.66 bps -.75%
  • Emerging Market CDS Index 237.69 bps +5.33%
  • 2-Year Swap Spread 18.0 unch.
  • TED Spread 17.0 unch.
Economic Gauges:
  • 3-Month T-Bill Yield .12% unch.
  • Yield Curve 212.0 -7 bps
  • China Import Iron Ore Spot $141.90/Metric Tonne -1.53%
  • Citi US Economic Surprise Index -33.40 +5.0 points
  • 10-Year TIPS Spread 1.65% -3 bps
Overseas Futures:
  • Nikkei Futures: Indicating -106 open in Japan
  • DAX Futures: Indicating -10 open in Germany
Portfolio:
  • Lower: On gains in my Tech, Ag and Medical long positions
  • Disclosed Trades: Added (IWM)/(QQQQ) hedges, added to my (EEM) short
  • Market Exposure: Moved to 75% Net Long
BOTTOM LINE: Today's overall market action is mildly bearish as the S&P 500 gives back some of its recent gain on light volume. On the positive side, Steel, Gold, Software and Restaurant shares are higher on the day. The S&P GSCI Ag Spot Index is rising another +.93%. On the negative side, Education, Bank, Semi and Oil Tanker shares are under meaningful pressure, falling more than 2%. Cyclical and small-cap shares are underperforming. (XLF) has been heavy throughout the day. The Ireland sovereign cds is gaining another +11.30% to 374.41 bps. As well, the Spain sovereign cds is rising +6.11% to 239.55 bps, the Portugal sovereign cds is gaining +6.75% to 324.70 bps, the UK sovereign cds is soaring +15.43% to 77.05 bps and the Hungary sovereign cds is rising +5.6% to 372.27 bps. The 10-year yield is falling too much again, dropping -10 bps to 2.60%. The euro continues to trade very poorly. The rises in key cds indices are a big negative. However, given last week's large drops, today's moves aren't yet alarming. I will monitor these indices closely before further shifting market exposure. I expect US stocks to trade mixed-to-higher into the close from current levels on short-covering, bargain-hunting and buyout speculation.

Today's Headlines


Bloomberg:

  • Bank Default Swaps Rise Most in Month on Concern of Higher Capital Demands. The cost of insuring against losses on bonds sold by European financial companies rose by the most in a month on concern higher capital requirements and losses from sovereign debt holdings will endanger the recovery. The Markit iTraxx Financial Index of credit-default swaps on 25 banks and insurers rose for a second day, climbing 8.25 basis points to 137.75, according to JPMorgan Chase & Co. at 3:30 p.m. in London. Investors are concerned the Basel Committee on Banking Supervision will propose higher capital requirements when it meets today, limiting banks’ ability to lend. Europe’s biggest lenders are already facing losses on more than 134 billion euros of Greek, Portuguese and Spanish bonds, according to a Bloomberg News survey. “If the minimum capital requirement is too high, profitability of banks will decline significantly,” said Alexander Plenk, a Munich-based strategist at UniCredit SpA. “That’s what everyone is waiting for today.” Swaps on Deutsche Bank rose 8 basis points to 106 and Commerzbank jumped 12.5 to 108, according to data provider CMA. Swaps on Germany rose 2 basis points to 40 after factory orders in Europe’s largest economy unexpectedly fell in July. The Markit iTraxx SovX Western Europe Index of swaps on 15 governments rose 9 basis points to 152, the biggest daily increase since Aug. 11, according to CMA. Italy jumped 17.5 basis points to 209.5 as the government planned a sale of three- year bonds in dollars. Contracts on Portugal climbed 29 basis points to 326, Spain increased 17.5 to 233, Ireland was 26.5 higher at 366.5 and Greece was up 24 at 892, CMA prices show. Contracts on the Markit iTraxx Crossover Index of 50 companies with mostly high-yield credit ratings climbed 11 basis points to 494. The Markit iTraxx Europe Index of 125 companies with investment-grade ratings increased 3.25 basis points to 109, JPMorgan prices show.
  • Dividends Beating Bond Yields by Most in 15 Years. More U.S. stocks are paying dividends that exceed bond yields than any time in at least 15 years as profits rise at the fastest pace in two decades. Kraft Foods Inc. and DuPont Co. are among 68 companies in the Standard & Poor’s 500 Index with payouts that top the 3.80 percent average rate in credit markets, based on data since 1995 compiled by Bloomberg and Bank of America Corp. While Johnson & Johnson sold 10-year debt at a record low interest rate of 2.95 percent last month, shares of the world’s largest health products maker pay 3.66 percent. The combination of record-low interest rates, potential profit growth of 36 percent this year and a slowing economy has forced investors into the relative value reversal. For John Carey of Pioneer Investment Management and Federated Investors Inc.’s Linda Duessel, whose firms oversee $566 billion, it means stocks are cheap after companies raised payouts by 6.8 percent in the second quarter, data compiled by Bloomberg show.
  • Obama Student-Aid Rule Riles For-Profits, Spurs Most Letters Since 1983.
  • Gold Futures Approach Record High as Global Stocks Slump Amid Debt Concern. Gold futures approached a record high as a slump in equities spurred demand for the precious metal as an alternative investment. Stocks in Asia, Europe and the U.S. fell on heightened concern that the global economy will struggle. The euro dropped as much as 1.4 percent against the dollar as an industry group said Germany’s 10 largest banks may need fresh capital to meet new regulations. Gold climbed as much as 0.8 percent to $1,261.60 an ounce. The all-time high on June 21 was $1,266.50.
  • Buffett-Backed BYD Falls in Hong Kong After August Vehicle Sales Decline. BYD Co., the Chinese automaker backed by Warren Buffett, fell the most in a week after saying its sales in August declined. BYD dropped as much as 3.1 percent to HK$47.75 and traded at HK$48.05 as of 12:29 p.m. The carmaker’s sales in China fell 19 percent from a year earlier to 31,069 vehicles last month, the Shenzhen-based company said in an e-mailed statement today. BYD, 10 percent owned by Buffett’s Omaha, Nebraska-based Berkshire Hathaway Inc., cut its full-year vehicle sales target by 25 percent to 600,000 units on Aug. 4.
  • SEC Considers Rules for High-Frequency Traders After Plunge. U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission Chairman Mary Schapiro said her agency may impose new rules on high-frequency traders after lawmakers and investors questioned whether market participants who execute thousands of transactions in seconds sparked the May 6 plunge. The SEC should consider whether traders with the “best access” to markets should face obligations to buy and sell stocks to preserve liquidity, Schapiro said today in remarks prepared for a speech at the Economic Club of New York. The agency is also examining whether stock quotations should have to stand for a minimum amount of time. Such a change would stop high-frequency traders from repeatedly placing and canceling orders in milliseconds. “Some could argue that May 6 was an aberration -- another perfect storm -- and now that it has passed markets have naturally adapted leaving no need for a comprehensive review of our market structure,” Schapiro said. “I disagree.”
  • Potash Corp.(POT) CEO Doyle Says BHP Billiton(BHP) 'Will Not Be the Only Bidder'. Potash Corp. of Saskatchewan Inc. Chief Executive Officer Bill Doyle said he doesn’t believe that BHP Billiton Ltd. will be the only bidder for the world’s biggest fertilizer producer. “A number of third parties have already expressed interest in alternative transactions, some who we approached and others who initiated contact on their own,” Doyle, 60, said in a video clip posted today on the potash-producer’s website.

Wall Street Journal:
  • Vale Starts Push to Be Global Leader in Fertilizer. This week, Brazilian miner Vale SA, the world's biggest iron ore miner, sets off on a new goal: to become the world leader in the production of crop fertilizers. On Friday, Vale hopes to begin by consolidating its fertilizers empire in a restructuring of some operations that will form a new company, Vale Fertilizantes SA. The Rio de Janeiro company has earmarked $12 billion to be spent on new projects and acquisitions in fertilizers in the next three years, according to Vale fertilizers director Mario Barbosa.
  • Samsung Mobile Display to Boost 2011 Production. Samsung Mobile Display, which has had difficulty meeting demand for ultra-thin screens for smartphones, expects its production capacity to increase sharply when its new facility opens in July. Capacity will go up to 30 million screens per month from three million currently when the new facility opens.
  • U.S. Treasury Blacklists Iranian-Owned German Bank EIH for Iran Business. The U.S. Treasury added Iranian-owned, German-based European-Iranian Trade Bank AG to its key blacklist Tuesday, saying the bank has provided a financial lifeline to Iranian companies involved in weapons proliferation. The move bans the Hamburg-based bank— known as EIH Bank for its German initials—from the U.S. financial system.
  • ACLU Sues Homeland Security Over Search Policies. The U.S. Department of Homeland Security has been sued over its policies that allegedly authorize the search and seizure of laptops, cellphones and other electronic devices without a reasonable suspicion of wrongdoing, the American Civil Liberties Union said Tuesday. The ACLU claims the policies place no limit on how long Homeland Security can keep a traveler's devices or on the scope of private information that can be searched, copied or detained. There is no provision for judicial approval or supervision, the ACLU said.
  • The Obama Economy. How trillions in fiscal monetary stimulus produced a 1.6% recovery.
CNBC:
New York Post:
  • GM's AmeriCredit Acquisition Irks Feds. Former GM Chief Ed Whitacre's decision to resign last month instead of staying as planned through the automaker's initial public offering came on the heels of Whitacre's decision to quietly acquire a subprime lender without consulting the government, according to people familiar with the situation. After the government bailed out GM's former auto finance arm, GMAC, to the tune of $17 billion, Treasury officials were flummoxed by GM's decision to return to auto lending with a July 22 deal to acquire AmeriCredit for $3.5 billion, sources close to the deal said.
Business Insider:
  • Is Chuck Schumer's Criticism of Yuan Price Fixing a Secret Play to Boost Hist Hedge Fund Pals? The common line from politicians, including New York's Chuck Schumer, is that China must be punished for fixing the price of the yuan, as it hurts US manufacturers. But the very plugged-in Tim Carney hears "whispers" from K Street lobbyists that there may be something more at work: Currency exchange rates are a major playground for hedge funds. George Soros, for instance, has multiplied his hedge funds' value a hundred-fold through currency speculation. One K Street lobbyist told me he's received phone calls this week from a hedge-fund client desperate to learn if and when Schumer and Baucus's fight to un-peg the yuan might go through Congress. So the question is this: Which hedge funds are betting on the yuan rising versus the dollar (or possibly even falling)? And is anyone at that fund keeping in touch with Schumer? What's interesting, too is that Schumer's partner on this fight, Montana Senator Max Baucus is the second biggest recipient of financial industry money after Schumer.
  • HP(HPQ) Sues Mark Hurd for Violating Severance Agreement.
Zero Hedge:
Rigzone:
SEC:
  • SEC Charges Colorado-Based Investment Adviser With Fraudulently Recommending Hedge Funds to Older Investors. The Securities and Exchange Commission today charged Boulder, Colo.-based investment adviser Neal R. Greenberg with fraud and breach of fiduciary duty in the marketing and recommendation of his firm's hedge funds to investors, including many elderly clients. The SEC's Division of Enforcement alleges that Greenberg falsely stated that the Agile hedge funds offered and managed by his two investment advisory firms were suitable for conservative investors who were retired or nearing retirement. However, the Agile hedge funds used leverage and concentrated in a small number of investments. The funds suffered substantial losses in September 2008 and ceased redemptions to investors. The SEC Division of Enforcement further alleges that the Agile hedge funds improperly collected approximately $2 million in management and performance fees that were not adequately disclosed to investors.
FINalternatives:
  • Michigan Boosts Hedge Funds, Cuts Private Equity. The Michigan State Retirement Systems is tripling its hedge fund allocation—at the expense of its private equity investments. The $45 billion public pension fund has boosted its hedge fund allocation from 2% to 6%, Pensions & Investments reports. The hedge fund increase, as well as that of real return and opportunistic funds from 1% to 4%, will be funded by a sizeable cut in its private equity allocation from 20% to 14%.
WeeklyStandard.com:
  • Democrats Fleeing Obamacare. Do Any Congressional Democrats Favor Repeal? The question now is whether the 34 House Democrats who voted against Obamacare are willing to pledge publicly that they support repeal – and whether their GOP opponents will make them answer that question.
Rasmussen Reports:
Politico:
  • White House Still Seeks to End Tax Cuts. President Obama disagrees with his former budget director’s proposal that the Bush tax cuts for the rich be extended for two years, White House press secretary Robert Gibbs said Tuesday.
  • Congress Outsourcing Some Ethics Work. Congress is outsourcing key parts of its ethics investigations. The Office of Congressional Ethics, an independent ethics body, has contracted out more than $500,000 of work over the past year, a sign of just how busy the ethics watchdog has been and how expansive the ethics process has become.
    The recipient of nearly $530,000 in taxpayer dollars is Navigant Consulting, a business consulting firm. Navigant, based in Chicago, was not involved in any of the most sensitive legal aspects of ethics cases, but because of an unpredictable caseload, a small staff and institutional constraints on its time, the OCE has found itself outsourcing things like document retrieval and management, forensic accounting and technology services, according to public records and sources familiar with the matter.
  • Carson-Gore Academy of Environmental Sciences Built on Toxic Soil.
    Conservative corners of the Internet are buzzing over a Los Angeles school named after former Vice President Al Gore that was built on toxic soil and, some say, poses a health risk to students.
Telegraph:
  • China's Young Officers and the 1930s Syndrome. It was slightly disturbing to hear the warnings of a distinguished China-watcher at a closed-door session of the annual Ambrosetti conference on Lake Como. (This gathering of the global policy elites at Villa D’Este is a hardship assignment for Telegraph hacks. It fell to me again this year, but somebody has to do it.) “China’s military spending is growing so fast that it has overtaken strategy,” said Professor Huang Jing from the Lee Kwan Yew School of Public Policy in Singapore. (He kindly let me quote his remarks.) “The young officers are taking control of strategy and it is like young officers in Japan in the 1930s. They are thinking what they can do, not what they should do. This is very dangerous. “They are on a collision course with a US-dominated system”. Harvard Professor Niall Ferguson rattled me even further with a talk warning that the Chimerica marriage of the last generation is “on the rocks”.