Tuesday, September 28, 2010

Wednesday Watch


Evening Headlines

Bloomberg:

  • Irish Banks Hooked on ECB Cure as Lenihan's Financing Fails: Euro Credit. Irish Finance Minister Brian Lenihan persuaded lawmakers two years ago to back a guarantee of the country’s financial system to give banks time to wean themselves off European Central Bank and government life support. Instead, the banks are growing more dependent on the ECB. The cost of insuring Irish government debt against default has soared to a record as bond buyers shun Irish lenders, forcing the Dublin-based parliament to debate extending a guarantee of all deposits and most bank securities as the original pledge expires today. The consequences of adding bank liabilities to Ireland’s 87 billion euros ($118 billion) of sovereign debt “are huge,” said Mike Soden, the former chief executive officer of Bank of Ireland Plc and the author of “Open Dissent,” a book on the financial crisis. The nation’s borrowing costs are surging because “the markets are much quicker than the thinking power of the Department of Finance or anybody else,” he said. The banks’ failure to find alternative funding sources in the capital markets is stoking investor concern that the state may be overwhelmed by bailout costs. The banks are “tied to the sovereign,” Lenihan said in a Sept. 22 speech to a parliamentary committee. The extra yield investors demand to hold 10-year Irish bonds over German bunds widened 394 basis points to 447 basis points since the guarantee was introduced in September 2008. Credit-default swaps linked to Irish debt rose 11 basis points yesterday to 493 basis points, compared with other so- called euro peripherals such as Greece at 817 basis points and Portugal at 446 basis points, according to CMA prices.
  • Federal Reserve's Lockhart Says Need for More Monetary Easing Isn't Clear. Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta President Dennis Lockhart said policy makers haven’t reached a consensus on whether to undertake a new round of buying Treasuries, and the need for further monetary easing isn’t clear. “For me personally it is not a foregone conclusion that more accommodation is required,” he told reporters after a speech today in Sewanee, Tennessee. “I am not yet of a firm mind of what exactly that problem is, and for that reason I’m not yet committed to a particular course of action that might involve further accommodation.” Fed officials “must come to grips” in the coming weeks “with the question of whether there is anything they can do to improve the situation in the economy and, if so, what that action should be,” Lockhart said in his speech about the Federal Open Market Committee’s decision. “If in six months or 12 months the economy is operating at the low level it is today” and unemployment is 9.5 percent or higher, “I will be comfortable with taking action,” he said.
  • Spanish Credit Rating Set for Moody's Cut as Growth Slows, Investors Say. Spain’s top Aaa credit rating, held since 2001, probably will be cut one level by Moody’s Investors Service as the euro region’s fourth-biggest economy struggles to grow, according to investors managing about $700 billion. Five out of eight money managers surveyed predicted a one- step reduction to Aa1, with the rest forecasting a two-level cut to Aa2. The decision may come this week after Moody’s put Spain’s debt on review for a possible downgrade on June 30, saying it would conclude the analysis within three months.
  • California Treasurer Lockyer Calls for Ban on Muni Credit-Default Swaps. California Treasurer Bill Lockyer said he wants regulators to prohibit municipal credit-default swaps because of concern that investors may use the instruments to manipulate the market and cost state taxpayers. Lockyer, 69, said he would ban credit-default swaps, a type of derivative used to protect debt-holders against default, if he had the authority. He’s called on regulators to adopt capital-margin requirements to reduce leverage and to prohibit the speculative use of credit-default swaps -- the trading of debt-insurance contracts by investors who don’t own the securities.
  • Hewlett-Packard(HPQ) Forecasts Sales, Profit That Beat Estimates. Hewlett-Packard Co., the world’s largest computer maker, forecast earnings and sales for fiscal 2011 that exceeded analysts’ estimates. The company expects earnings excluding costs of $5.05 to $5.15 a share on sales of $131.5 billion to $133.5 billion, interim Chief Executive Officer Cathie Lesjak said today. Analysts had predicted sales of earnings of $5.01 and revenue of $131.7 billion, according to a Bloomberg survey.
  • Boeing(BA) Gets $5.3 Billion U.S. Navy Order for 124 F/A-18s. Boeing Co. received a contract today for 124 F/A-18 fighter jets valued at $5.3 billion, the Pentagon said on its website. The contract is for 66 planes of the F/A-18 variant called the Super Hornet and 58 electronic jamming aircraft called the Growler, Boeing said today in a separate statement.
  • Sarkozy Readies France's Biggest Budget-Deficit Reduction in Two Decades. French President Nicolas Sarkozy’s government will today propose the country’s biggest annual budget-deficit cut in two decades to calm investor concerns and protect its top credit rating. Government borrowing will fall to about 6 percent of gross domestic product next year from about 7.8 percent this year, according to recent statements by Budget Minister Francois Baroin and Finance Minister Christine Lagarde. The ministers will present details of the budget to Sarkozy’s cabinet at 10 a.m. today in Paris.Sarkozy’s tax and spending plans may still leave his country trailing its euro-area peers in repairing national finances after the financial crisis. France’s deficit may exceed that of Germany, Italy, Belgium and the Netherlands just as Sarkozy is gearing up for an election in early 2012.
  • Japan's Tankan Sentiment Index Climbs Least in Six Quarters. Confidence among large Japanese manufacturers rose the least since early 2009 in September, and companies forecast that pessimists will outnumber optimists by year-end, as a rising yen threatens the nation’s recovery. The Tankan index of sentiment climbed 7 points in September to 8, the Bank of Japan said in Tokyo today. The figure compares with a 15-point increase in June. Confidence is expected to fall to minus 1 in December, the report said.
  • Toyota Forms Task Force on Rare Earth Metals Amid China Export Ban Reports. Toyota Motor Corp. has set up a task force on rare earth minerals used in hybrid cars amid reports of China’s ban on exports of the materials to Japan.

Wall Street Journal:
  • Investors, Regulators Laid Path to 'Flash Crash'. As the Securities and Exchange Commission finalizes its report on the May 6 "flash crash," it is being forced to confront the fallout of its own decisions—which Wall Street sought and cheered—that ushered in an era of fast trading dispersed across dozens of venues.
  • Currency Wars: A Fight to Be Weaker. Tensions Grow in Foreign-Exchange Market as Countries Scramble to Tamp Down Their Money. Tensions are growing in the global currency markets as political rhetoric heats up and countries battle to protect their exporters, raising concerns about potentially damaging trade wars. At least half a dozen countries are actively trying to push down the value of their currencies, the most high-profile of which is Japan, which is attempting to halt the rise of the yen after a 14% rise since May.
  • Tehran Touts Its Exports of Gasoline. Iran said Tuesday it has started exporting domestically produced gasoline, drawing skepticism from oil-industry experts but representing Tehran's latest show of defiance amid international sanctions aimed at curbing its nuclear ambitions.
  • Blaming the Voters.
CNBC:
Business Insider:
  • Google(GOOG) Vows To Make Display Ads Sexy.
  • Hugh Hendry Making Huge $2 Billion Bet On Asia's Failure. Hugh Hendry, CEO of Eclectica Asset Management, revealed a huge bet against Asia in an interview with King World News (via Zero Hedge). Hendry thinks that Asia will be the next global market to hit the skids after the subprime collapse in the U.S. and the sovereign crisis in Europe. He envisions severe problems for Japan, when currency strength will for the country to engage in another, more aggressive round of quantitative easing, debauching the country's currency. So he is making a bet worth $2 billion against Japanese credit, notably in corporations. He sees overconfidence and over reliance on the growth of China as a reason for this position. He even compared China to Starbucks, noting that they are now investing money in manufacturing the same way Starbucks did in new stores: accepting a negative marginal return on invested capital.
  • Trucking Volume Collapses, Falls Most Month To Month Since March 2009. (graph) Tonnage fell by 2.7% from July to August, according to the American Trucking Association. That's the biggest month over month fall since March 2009. The chief economist at the ATA, Bob Costelo, says this slowdown was expected and that it should be slowing further with the economy for the remainder of the year.
NY Times:
  • Guilty Plea Expected by Ex-New York Comptroller Hevesi in Corruption Case. Alan G. Hevesi, the former state comptroller, is poised to plead guilty to a felony corruption charge after a lengthy investigation into his office’s rewarding of pension investment business to firms that provided financial benefits to Mr. Hevesi and his aides, people with knowledge of the case said on Tuesday.
  • House Likely to Join a Call Urging China to Raise Currency. The House is expected to give the Obama administration another tool in its diplomatic pouch to pressure China to let its currency rise in value, reflecting growing concern around the country over the loss of manufacturing jobs, persistently high unemployment and a rising trade deficit.
  • Mineral Trade Halt Called a Threat to Japan's Economy. A halt of Chinese shipments of crucial industrial minerals to Japan poses a threat to the Japanese economy, a top Tokyo government official said Tuesday, amid a dispute over territorial sovereignty that has damaged relations between the regional rivals.
Forbes:
Institutional Investor:
  • Hard Times for D.E. Shaw. Hedge fund firm D.E. Shaw & Co. laid off 150 people today, according to sources familiar with the situation. The cuts, which amount to around 10 percent of the New York–based alternative asset manager’s work force, were across the board and included partners and portfolio managers, these sources confirmed.
Politico:
  • Obama: Yes to 2011 Climate Bill Push. President Barack Obama is pledging to throw his full weight next year behind efforts to overhaul the nation's energy and climate change policies, though he concedes such moves might need to happen "in chunks."
Reuters:
Financial Times:
  • Dublin to Launch Fresh Anglo Irish Bail-Out. Ireland's central bank may announce plans to inject additional capital of about 5 billion euros($6.8 billion) into Anglo Irish Bank Corp. The extra funds, to be announced on Sept. 30, will take the bailout costs for the bank to 30 billion euros, the FT said. Finance Minister Brian Lenihan will also announce plans to meet tougher capital targets, including a restructuring of part of Anglo Irish's 16 billion-euro bond debt.
  • Junk Buying Fuels 'Yield Chasing' Fears. Retail investors in the US have sharply increased their direct buying of junk bonds in the third quarter of the year, providing evidence of a trend of “yield chasing” that is worrying regulators. Finra, which regulates US securities firms, said the trend was a concern given the risks involved in this part of the corporate bond market.
  • Shell Plan Rapid North American Growth. Royal Dutch Shell is planning a rapid expansion of its North American business to raise production by 40 per cent to 1m barrels equivalent per day in 2014, including gas, Canadian oil sands and deepwater oil. The strategy, announced in Canada on Tuesday, is part of Europe’s largest oil company’s plan to meet its “aspiration” of producing 3.7m barrels per day in 2014, compared with 3.15m last year.
SkyNews:
  • Multi-Attack Terror Plot On European Cities. Intelligence agencies have intercepted a terror plot to launch Mumbai-style attacks on Britain and other European countries, according to Sky News sources. Sky's foreign affairs editor Tim Marshall said militants based in Pakistan were planning simultaneous strikes on London and major cities in France and Germany. He said the plan was in the advanced but not imminent stage and the plotters had been tracked by spy agencies "for some time".
The Standard:
21st Century Business Herald:
  • Some steelmakers in China have continued production and even boosted output amid government measures to curb overcapacity, citing an unidentified person at the China Iron & Steel Association.
Evening Recommendations
Citigroup:
  • Upgraded (ENDP) to Buy, target raised to $40.
Wells Fargo:
  • Rated (WMS), (PENN), (WYNN) and (BYI) Outperform.
Night Trading
  • Asian equity indices are unch. to +.75% on average.
  • Asia Ex-Japan Investment Grade CDS Index 126.0 -1.0 basis point.
  • Asia Pacific Sovereign CDS Index 112.50 -.5 basis point.
  • S&P 500 futures +.23%.
  • NASDAQ 100 futures +.26%.
Morning Preview Links

Earnings of Note
Company/Estimate
  • (FDO)/.51
  • (ATU)/.29
  • (AM)/.37
  • (SNX)/.75
  • (WOR)/.24
  • (MU/.40
Economic Releases
10:30 am EST
  • Bloomberg consensus estimates call for a weekly crude oil inventory decline of -700,000 barrels versus a +970,000 barrel increase the prior week. Gasoline supplies are expected to rise by +350,000 barrels versus a +1,590,000 barrel gain the prior week. Distillate inventories are estimated to rise by +325,000 barrels versus a +347,000 barrel increase the prior week. Finally, Refinery Utilization is expected to fall by -.6% versus a +.2% gain the prior week.
Upcoming Splits
  • None of note
Other Potential Market Movers
  • The Fed's Rosengren speaking, Fed's Kocherlakota speaking, Fed's Plosser speaking, weekly MBA mortgage applications report, $29 Billion 7-Year Treasury Notes Auction, BofA Merrill Power/Gas Conference, Oppenheimer Industrials Conference, UBS Auto Conference, JMP Securities Financial Services Conference, Wells Fargo Consumer Conference, (KMT) Analyst Day, (CRR) Analyst Meeting and the (FDX) Analyst Meeting could also impact trading today.
BOTTOM LINE: Asian indices are mostly higher, boosted by technology 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 75% net long heading into the day.

Stocks Slightly Higher into Final Hour on Short-Covering, Technical Buying, Investment Manager Performance Angst


Broad Market Tone:

  • Advance/Decline Line: Slightly Lower
  • Sector Performance: Mixed
  • Volume: Around Average
  • Market Leading Stocks: Underperforming
Equity Investor Angst:
  • VIX 22.91 +1.64%
  • ISE Sentiment Index 120.0 -14.29%
  • Total Put/Call .83 unch.
  • NYSE Arms .90 -25.42%
Credit Investor Angst:
  • North American Investment Grade CDS Index 110.52 bps +1.86%
  • European Financial Sector CDS Index 134.11 bps +2.74%
  • Western Europe Sovereign Debt CDS Index 158.66 bps +1.71%
  • Emerging Market CDS Index 225.10 bps -.19%
  • 2-Year Swap Spread 16.0 -2 bps
  • TED Spread 15.0 -1 bp
Economic Gauges:
  • 3-Month T-Bill Yield .14% +1 bp
  • Yield Curve 203.0 -6 bps
  • China Import Iron Ore Spot $139.50/Metric Tonne unch.
  • Citi US Economic Surprise Index -11.70 -4.6 points.
  • 10-Year TIPS Spread 1.82% +2 bps
Overseas Futures:
  • Nikkei Futures: Indicating -5 open in Japan
  • DAX Futures: Indicating -8 open in Germany
Portfolio:
  • Slightly Lower: On losses in my Tech and Ag long positions
  • Disclosed Trades: None
  • Market Exposure: 75% Net Long
BOTTOM LINE: Today's overall market action is mildly bullish as the S&P 500 trades slightly higher despite recent sharp equity gains, sovereign debt worries and more weak economic data. On the positive side, Retail, Semi, Gold and Steel shares are especially strong, rising 1.0%+. Growth stocks are outperforming value shares again. On the negative side, REIT, Wireless, Ag and Coal shares are under pressure, falling more than .75%. Small-caps are underperforming. (XLF) is also a bit heavy. Weekly retail sales rose +2.6% this week, which is the slowest pace since the week of May 4. Lumber is down another -2.97% today. The Euro Financial Sector CDS Index is up again today and is very near a technical breakout, which is a major negative. The Portugal sovereign cds is rising +4.10% to 435.0 bps and is close to a new record high. The Ireland sovereign cds is continuing its recent parabolic move higher, rising another +1.30% to a record of 485.10 bps and the Spain sovereign cds is gaining +2.29% to 234.29 bps. Furthermore, key credit default swap indices continue to move higher, even as equities trend higher, which is also a large negative. I still believe equity investors will continue to ignore these worrisome moves until they start to negatively impact the euro currency. Oil continues to trade poorly given recent equity and euro strength. The 10-year yield is down another -6 bps to 2.46% and is close to its 52-week low at 2.41%. The Shanghai Composite closed slightly below its 50-day moving average again last night and continues to trade poorly. The knee-jerk selling in (AAPL) shares on false rumors could be another red flag for the broad market. Investors continue to ignore most negative news items, which could be related to end-of-the-quarter positioning, but remains a large market positive for now. I expect US stocks to trade mixed-to-lower into the close from current levels on rising sovereign debt angst, profit-taking, more shorting, China concerns and increasing financial sector pessimism.

Today's Headlines


Bloomberg:

  • Ireland Swaps Surge to Record on Anglo Irish Bailout Cost Wager. The cost of insuring against default on Ireland’s government debt surged to a record as Standard & Poor’s said the price of bailing out nationalized lender Anglo Irish Bank Corp. could exceed $47 billion. Credit-default swaps tied to Irish bonds jumped as much as 33 basis points to 521.5 after more than doubling in the past two months, and were at 493 basis points as of 4 p.m. in London, according to data provider CMA. Contracts on Anglo Irish rose 4 basis points from yesterday’s record high closing price to 940, implying a 56 percent probability of default within five years. Investors are speculating the ballooning cost of rescuing Dublin-based Anglo Irish will force the nation’s government to choose between fully repaying senior bondholders and tackling the region’s biggest budget deficit. “It’s a key test for the market,” said Greg Venizelos, a credit strategist at BNP Paribas SA in London. “The cost of the Anglo Irish bailout is too high for Ireland to afford without jeopardizing its fiscal position.” The speculation about Ireland weighed on sentiment in the region, driving up credit-default swaps on other governments and banks. The Markit iTraxx SovX Western Europe Index of default swaps on 15 governments rose 5 basis points to 165, according to CMA. Credit-default swaps on Portugal increased 19 basis points to 449.5, approaching the record-high closing price of 461, while Greece climbed 2.5 basis points to 818.5 and Italy was up 5.5 basis points at 202, CMA prices show. Spain added 8 basis points to 235.5. Irish two-year government notes slumped, sending yields to the highest level since Bloomberg began collating the data in 2003. The yield on Ireland’s two-year government note rose as much as 52 basis points to 4.76 percent, Bloomberg generic data show. Credit-default swaps on financial-company debt rose, with the Markit iTraxx Financial Index of 25 banks and insurers rising 3 basis points to 149 and an index of their riskier subordinated debt climbing 1 basis point to 218, according to JPMorgan Chase & Co. Gauges of corporate risk also jumped. The Markit iTraxx Crossover Index of credit-default swaps on 50 mostly junk-rated European companies climbed 6.5 basis points to 523.4, according to Markit Group Ltd.
  • U.S. Consumer Confidence Fell More Than Forecast. Mounting gloom over the outlook for jobs and wages caused American consumers to lose confidence in September, indicating spending will take time to recover. The Conference Board’s sentiment declined to 48.5 this month, lower than the indexmedian forecast of economists surveyed by Bloomberg News and the weakest level since February, according to figures from the New York-based private research group today. Household purchases, which account for about 70 percent of the world’s largest economy, may be constrained by a jobless rate this is projected to average more than 9 percent through 2011. Consumers “certainly are worried about jobs,” said David Sloan, a senior economist at 4Cast Inc. in New York. They “are facing considerable headwinds.” The Conference Board’s measures of present conditions and expectations for the next six months both dropped, today’s report showed. Fewer respondents thought more jobs would become available and the share of those who expected incomes to rise fell to the lowest since February.
  • U.S. Household Income Falls for 2nd Straight Year, Census Says. U.S. median household income fell 3 percent in 2009 to $50,221, the second straight annual drop, the Census Bureau said.
  • China Rare Earth Says Japan Exports Halted on Lack of Government Permits. China Rare Earth Holdings Ltd., which exports 30 percent of its products to Japan, said shipments to the nation were halted from last week after a local branch of the Chinese trade ministry stopped issuing licenses. “We couldn’t get export licenses to Japan,” John Jiang, a sales manager in charge of exports at China Rare Earth, said by phone from Yixing, Jiangsu province. “They cited system failure.”
  • Corn, Soybean Futures Fall on Bets Favorable Weather to Boost U.S. Harvest.
  • Gold Futures Surge to Record $1,308.90 on Demand by Investors, Jewelers.
  • Suburban Voters Sour on Obama, Threatening Democrats' Hold on U.S. House.
  • Endo Pharmaceuticals(ENDP) Agrees to Acquire Qualitest for $1.2 Billion in Cash. Endo Pharmaceuticals Holdings Inc. agreed to buy U.S. generic-drugmaker Qualitest Pharmaceuticals for about $1.2 billion from private-equity firm Apax Partners LLP. Endo’s shares rose to their highest value in three years.
  • Dollar Is 'One Step Nearer' to Crisis on Burgeoning Debt Burden, Yu Says. The U.S. dollar is “one step nearer” to a crisis as debt levels in the world’s largest economy increase, said Yu Yongding, a former adviser to China’s central bank. Any appreciation of the dollar is “really temporary” and a devaluation of the currency is inevitable as U.S. debt rises, Yu said in a speech in Singapore today. “Such a huge amount of debt is terrible,” Yu said. “The situation will be worsening day by day. I think we are one step nearer to a U.S.-dollar crisis.”
  • Fewer U.S. CEOs Project Gains in Sales, Employment. Chief executive officers in the U.S. turned less optimistic in the third quarter as fewer projected sales and hiring will improve, a survey showed. The Business Roundtable’s economic outlook index fell to 86 in the July-to-September period, the first decrease since the beginning of 2009 when the gauge dropped to a record-low of minus 5, the Washington-based group said today.

Wall Street Journal:
  • More Americans Expect Recovery Will Take Years. The American public has arrived at the same dismal conclusion as many economists: We’re in for a long and painful economic recovery. A new survey by AlixPartners LLP, a business-advisory firm, showed a growing share of Americans think it will take years for the economy to recover to “normal times.” Some 46% said it will be 2013 or later before that happens. A smaller 36% predicted a recovery sometime before 2013.
  • Banks Face the Killing Yields. The financial-services industry is built for speed. But while superlow interest rates are meant to be high-octane fuel for the economy, they are gumming up financial engines. The problem for many banks, insurers and fund managers is that their cost of borrowing can't fall below zero. Yet returns from a number of businesses or products continue to decline with already near-record low bond yields. That compresses margins and threatens to make some business lines uneconomic.
  • Assets of California Commodity Pool Frozen Amid Alleged Fraud.
CNBC:
MarketWatch:
Business Insider:
Forbes:
The Detroit News:
  • Union Rejects Concessions at GM Plant in Indianapolis. A months-long battle to save a General Motors Co. stamping plant here that pitted rank-and-file UAW members against top union officials over whether autoworkers should accept pay cuts to keep jobs ended bitterly today. Addison, Ill.-based JD Norman Industries said it is dropping its effort to buy the factory after an announcement late Monday that United Auto Workers members had voted 457-96 against accepting the concessions. That means the 80-year-old plant will close next year, and the city and county will lose one of their biggest tax revenue generators. At least one state politician has charged that the vote also means more layoffs at other area auto suppliers.
AppleInsider:
Real Clear Politics:
Politico:
  • Insider Likely to Replace Rahm Emanuel. President Barack Obama hasn’t yet picked a permanent replacement for chief of staff Rahm Emanuel — but he’s leaning toward someone already inside the Obama bubble rather than an outsider who would shake up the West Wing, people close to him say.
  • Foreign Firms: Quit Bashing Us. On the campaign trail, President Barack Obama elicits cheers when he rails against tax loopholes that he says benefit foreign companies that have operations in this country. It’s a sound bite that seems eminently fair to average voters, particularly those suffering through today’s tough economic times. But representatives of some of those firms are coming to Washington on Tuesday for a series of quiet meetings at the White House and on Capitol Hill to offer a counterargument — that the combination of tough presidential rhetoric and draconian administration policy could drive their firms away and, with them, thousands of jobs that the economy desperately needs if there is going to be a real recovery.
AP:
  • FBI Investigates Prominent Labor Leader Andy Stern. The FBI and the U.S. Labor Department are investigating prominent labor leader Andy Stern in their probe of corruption at the Service Employees International Union, according to two people who have been interviewed by federal agents.
Reuters:
  • Position Limits Keep Market Diverse - CFTC's Gensler. Position limits would guard against excessive concentration in the energy futures market, the chief U.S. futures regulator said in a speech to natural gas officials on Tuesday. Chairman Gary Gensler of the Commodity Futures Trading Commission said the financial crisis last fall showed the risk posed by "large concentrated actors on the financial stage". "I believe we should consider setting position limits to guard against excessive concentration in the energy futures market," said Gensler at a luncheon held by the Natural Gas Roundtable, a nonprofit organization. The CFTC is weighing whether to set position limits -- a maximum market share -- for oil and other energy products.
Telegraph:
Handelsblatt:
  • Carl Heinz Daube, the head of Germany's Federal Finance Agency, said a restructuring of Greek debt could have "devastating consequences" for the German covered bond market. In a worst case scenario, interest and redemption payments of Pfandbriefe wouldn't be completely secured, Daube said. So-called haircuts on Greek debt would also have consequences for life insurers holding the bonds and may create new problems for other peripheral euro-region economies, he said.
Xinhua:
  • China's government will subsidize as much as 70% of the cost of essential equipment for trial solar-power projects, citing a government statement.
  • China yesterday started a crackdown against pornography, pirated products and "illegal publications" in preparation for the National Day holiday break that starts Oct. 1.

Bear Radar


Style Underperformer:

  • Small-Cap Value (+.07%)
Sector Underperformers:
  • 1) Wireless -.74% 2) REITs -.48% 3) Agriculture -.40%
Stocks Falling on Unusual Volume:
  • MON, DLB, RIMM, TYL, AAPL, DB, VLTR, TIE, AGNC, CALM, AMED, VLCCF, CPRT, GTIV, MFLX, BOBE, DTSI, RDWR, CTRP, FELE, FLIR, CNQR, UNFI, BJRI, SCHN and AEC
Stocks With Unusual Put Option Activity:
  • 1) WAG 2) ACF 3) XLNX 4) MON 5) JBL
Stocks With Most Negative News Mentions:
  • 1) TGT 2) MON 3) HD 4) ANF 5) MF

Bull Radar


Style Outperformer:

  • Mid-cap Growth (-.09%)
Sector Outperformers:
  • 1) Gold +1.02% 2) Retail +.72% 3) Steel +.62%
Stocks Rising on Unusual Volume:
  • WAG, CEVA, IVN, CYMI, ENDP, GPRE, NTAP and CXW
Stocks With Unusual Call Option Activity:
  • 1) RRC 2) ALU 3) WAG 4) DF 5) QCOR
Stocks With Most Positive News Mentions:
  • 1) AAPL 2) WAG 3) RIMM 4) BA 5) NOC

Monday, September 27, 2010

Tuesday Watch


Evening Headlines

Bloomberg:

  • Berlusconi Yields Climb Amid Threat of Early Italian Election: Euro Credit. Investors are driving up Italy’s borrowing costs as Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi struggles to retain enough support to prevent early elections in Europe’s most-indebted nation. The extra yield that investors demand to hold 10-year Italian debt rather than German bunds exceeded 163 basis points yesterday to hover at the highest level in a month. The premium is rising as the government prepares to sell as much as 9.5 billion euros ($12.8 billion) of bonds today and tomorrow.
  • Yuan Legislation in U.S. Congress My Prompt Retaliation, Businesses Say. U.S. legislation pressing China to raise the value of its currency may boomerang by prompting retaliation against American businesses operating there, representatives of those companies said. “This step would make it harder for us to export to China, not easier,” Timothy Stratford, a partner in Beijing at Covington & Burling LLP and a former U.S. trade official, said at a briefing today in Washington. The House of Representatives is set to consider legislation this week that would let companies petition for higher duties on imports from China to compensate for the effect of a weak currency.
  • Takefuji Said to File for Bankruptcy Today Amid Rising Interest Refunds. Takefuji Corp., a Japanese consumer lender, will file for bankruptcy protection today because of rising refunds to borrowers for overcharged interest, according to a person with direct knowledge of the matter.
  • October is likely to be "peculiarly dangerous" for Chinese stocks, already Asia's biggest loser in 2010, as the supply of new shares soars in the month that's historically been the worst for the nation's equities, according to China International Capital Corp. The median return in October for China's benchmark during the period has been negative 4.5%, with declines 67% of the time, according to Hao Hong, a global strategist at CICC. This October "will also see a substantial amount of restricted stock starting to become tradable," Hong said. Shares worth $112 billion will become eligible for trading on the Shanghai market next month, he said.
  • U.S. Gasoline Supplies Increase in Survey as Demand Falls: Energy Markets. U.S. gasoline inventories probably rose to the highest level in six months as demand slipped with the end of the summer driving season and economic growth slowed, a Bloomberg News survey showed. An increase in first-time claims for jobless benefits in mid-September points to reduced gasoline demand and lower pump prices. Consumption dropped 1.9 percent in the week ended Sept. 17, the smallest level since February. Regular gasoline, averaged nationwide, declined for a tenth straight day to $2.694 a gallon on Sept. 26, the AAA said on its website. “We’ve seen a recent major decline in gasoline demand,” said Peter Beutel, president of trading advisory company Cameron Hanover Inc. in New Canaan, Connecticut. “Normally demand drops at this time of year along with refinery utilization rates. We’ve yet to see refiners cut back.” Gasoline output has outpaced demand during the past three weeks, according to the department. Refineries produced 9.02 million barrels a day of gasoline compared with demand of 8.85 million. Supplies of the fuel in the week ended Sept. 17 were 15 percent higher than the five-year average for the period, the department said. U.S. fuel demand will drop 9 percent to average 18.93 million barrels a day this year, from a record 20.8 million in 2005, the Energy Department said on Sept. 8.
  • California May Seek $5 Billion From Wall Street, Lockyer Says. California is lining up a short- term loan of more than $5 billion from a group of Wall Street banks to tide the state over with enough cash after a record- long budget impasse, Treasurer Bill Lockyer said. The state may borrow the money from Bank of America Merrill Lynch, JPMorgan Chase & Co., Goldman Sachs Group Inc. and RBC Capital Markets once a budget is enacted and would repay the funds with an estimated $10 billion of notes it will sell in October or November, Lockyer said today in New York.
  • Mexican Mayor Becomes 11th City Chief Killed in 2010 as Drug Deaths Surge. An interim mayor of the Mexican town of Tancitaro in Michoacan state became the country’s 11th city chief killed this year, and may have been stoned to death. State officials were conducting an autopsy to confirm the cause of death after Gustavo Sanchez’s corpse was found on a road in the Michoacan city of Uruapan, said an official at the state attorney general’s office who can’t be identified because of the agency’s policies. He said there were signs the victim may have been killed with rocks.
  • Commodity Volatility May Gain Amid Recovery Concerns, SocGen's Godin Says. Commodity prices, which have surged to the highest level since January, may see greater volatility as investors react to threats to the global economic recovery, according to Societe Generale SA. “We’re not completely out of the crisis,” Olivier Godin, the bank’s head of commodities derivatives in Asia, said in an interview from Hong Kong. “There might be some bumps along the way, and that’s going to affect our markets.”
  • Chavez May Strengthen Grip on Venezuela Economy as Foes Gain Ground. Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez suffered his worst setback at the ballot box since taking office in 1999, losing his two-thirds majority in congress as support for his rule wanes before 2012 presidential election.
  • Kim Jong Il's Son Appointed General Before North Korea Meeting. Kim Jong Il’s youngest son was named a general, signaling the start of a possible power transfer in North Korea to a man said to be in his late 20s who has never previously been mentioned in public.

Wall Street Journal:
  • J.P. Morgan(JPM) Targets FDIC Funds for WaMu Claims. J.P. Morgan Chase & Co. is putting federal regulators on notice that it may go after the very funds it used to buy Washington Mutual Inc.'s banking assets—and then some. In a series of previously undisclosed letters sent to the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp., the nation's second-largest bank by assets warned it could seek billions in legal protection from the FDIC receivership that liquidated the Seattle-based thrift two years ago, people familiar with the situation said.
  • Fed Weighs Different Approach If It Revives Bond Purchases. Federal Reserve officials are considering new tactics if they resume purchases of long-term U.S. Treasury securities to bolster a disappointingly slow recovery. Rather than announcing massive bond purchases with a finite end, as they did in 2009 to shock the U.S. financial system back to life, Fed officials are weighing a more open-ended, smaller-scale program that they could adjust as the recovery unfolds. The Fed hasn't yet decided to step up its bond purchases, let alone agree on an approach.
  • Drones Target Terror Plot. CIA Strikes Intensify in Pakistan Amid Heightened Threats in Europe.
  • Local Taxes Sway Races. A recent rise in state and local taxes is roiling voters in an already tumultuous year, complicating the debate over whether to extend Bush-era tax cuts and upending some campaigns. As Washington is consumed with the debate over whether to extend Bush-era tax cuts beyond the end of the year, voters in many parts of the country are focused on state tax increases already hitting them.
  • ObamaCare's Hotel California. The state moves to impose price controls you can never leave. California, the novelist Wallace Stegner famously wrote, is like the rest of America, only more so—meaning that wherever the country is headed, the Golden State is probably there already. So the state's ObamaCare advance planning deserves closer scrutiny, given that it mirrors the regulatory and ideological model that the White House favors for everyone else.
  • Pimco's Hodge: Global Deflation Now Bigger Risk Thank Inflation.
CNBC:
Business Insider:
Zero Hedge:
NY Times:
  • Where Are All the Prosecutions From the Crisis? At a hearing before the Senate Judiciary Committee last week, Senator Ted Kaufman of Delaware summed up the frustration on Capitol Hill with the lack of any identifiable villains for the financial troubles of the last two years. “We have seen very little in the way of senior officer or boardroom-level prosecutions of the people on Wall Street who brought this country to the brink of financial ruin,” Mr. Kaufman said. “Why is that?”
  • India's Spy Plan Said to Deter Business.
Politico:
Reuters:
  • Jabil(JBL) Q4 Revenue Lags Street, Sees Q1 Revenue Below Market. Technology distributor Jabil Circuit Inc's (JBL) quarterly revenue missed Wall Street expectations, and the company forecast first-quarter 2011 sales below estimates, sending its shares down 2 percent in extended trade.
  • Progress Energy(PGN) Trading Halt Sparks Questions. Shares of Progress Energy Inc were halted briefly on Monday on the New York Stock Exchange after trading triggered a circuit breaker, although more than 100 trades took place after the stock had moved enough to trigger a halt. Nearly 60 erroneous trades have been canceled, according to a Nasdaq representative.
  • U.S. Set to Propose New Auto Fuel, Emissions Rules. The Obama administration this week will propose new fuel efficiency and emissions requirements for cars and light trucks for model years 2017 and beyond.
  • U.S. Bank Regulators Delay 'Too Big Fail' Reform. U.S. banking regulators on Monday put off proposing how the government would use its new authority to dismantle large, collapsing financial companies, saying they need more time for industry and other regulators to weigh in.
  • Paychex Q1 Profit Beats Street View. Payroll processor Paychex Inc (PAYX) reported a quarterly profit above market view, helped by an increase in revenue from its human resources services segment.
Financial Times:
  • Mexico Hedges Against Fall in Oil Prices. Mexico is hedging its oil exports for 2011 at about $65 to $70 a barrel as it takes a cautious view on the global economic recovery, citing bankers, traders and brokers. Based on current market rates, Mexico is paying a premium between $5 and $6 a barrel for the put options, placing the program's cost at about $1 billion, citing bankers.
Telegraph:
  • Americans! Don't Copy Europe! The policies his administration is pursuing amount to comprehensive Europeanisation: European carbon taxes, European foreign policy, European healthcare, European daycare, European disarmament, European industrial intervention and, inevitably, European unemployment rates.
Shanghai Securities News:
  • Relevant Chinese government departments may jointly sign off on trials for a property tax. The trials may be announced publicly soon.
Evening Recommendations
Citigroup:
  • Downgraded (HSP) to Sell, target $52.
Night Trading
  • Asian equity indices are -.50% to +.25% on average.
  • Asia Ex-Japan Investment Grade CDS Index 127.0 +1.0 basis point.
  • Asia Pacific Sovereign CDS Index 113.0 -2.5 basis points.
  • S&P 500 futures +.14%.
  • NASDAQ 100 futures +.17%.
Morning Preview Links

Earnings of Note
Company/Estimate
  • (WAG)/.44
Economic Releases
10:00 am EST
  • Consumer Confidence for September is estimated to fall to 52.1 versus a reading of 53.5 in August.
Upcoming Splits
  • None of note
Other Potential Market Movers
  • The S&P/CaseShiller Home Price Index, weekly retail sales reports, Richmond Fed Manufacturing Index for September, ABC Consumer Confidence reading, Fed's Warsh speaking, Fed's Lockhart speaking, $35 Billion 5-Year Treasury Notes Auction, (BAM) Investor Day, BofA Merrill Power/Gas Conference, JMP Securities Healthcare Conference, DA Davidson Construction Conference and the (HPQ) 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 stocks to open modestly higher and to weaken into the afternoon, finishing mixed. The Portfolio is 75% net long heading into the day.