Thursday, March 17, 2011

Today's Headlines


Bloomberg:
  • Conflicting Information Drives Fear in Japan Reactor Disaster. Accurate and timely information from Tokyo Electric Power Co. about the accident at its nuclear plant in northern Japan has been hard to come by. About 60 reporters at a March 16 briefing with utility officials wanted to know whether helicopters would dump seawater on reactors at the Dai-Ichi station to prevent a meltdown. The company was considering the plan, said Masahisa Otsuki, head of the nuclear maintenance division. At the same time, a live broadcast on a nearby TV screen showed a helicopter taking off with a massive bucket of water hanging from its belly. Reporters barraged the officials. “We are sorry,” a spokesman said. “We need to check on this.”
  • Radiation Testing Weighed for Japanese Food Imports, U.S. Regulators Say.
  • Bahrain Arrests Four Opposition Leaders as Crackdown Widens. Bahraini police arrested at least four opposition leaders a day after imposing a military curfew on parts of the country and forcing protesters from a central roundabout in the capital. Those arrested included Hassan Mushaima, a leader of the Shiite Haq movement, and Ebrahim Sharif, head of the opposition National Democratic Action Society, according to a statement today from al-Wefaq, the largest Shiite opposition party in the country. Mushaima’s Haq party boycotted October parliamentary elections, calling them illegitimate.
  • Industrial Production in U.S. Falls .1%; Manufacturing Gains. Production at U.S. factories increased for a sixth month in February, indicating manufacturing will keep stoking the economy and underscoring the Federal Reserve’s view of a stronger expansion. The 0.4 percent rise in manufacturing output, which makes up 75 percent of all industrial production, followed a 0.9 percent January gain that was three times as large as initially estimated, Fed figures showed today. A gauge of Philadelphia- area factories unexpectedly climbed to a 27-year high.
  • Consumer Comfort in U.S. Drops to Lowest Level Since August. Consumer confidence plunged last week to the lowest level since August as rising gasoline prices made Americans more pessimistic about the economic outlook and their finances. The Bloomberg Consumer Comfort Index dropped to minus 48.5 in the period to March 13 from minus 44.5 the prior week. Sentiment fell across most income and age groups and worsened for all education levels. Higher gasoline prices persisted for another week, becoming a bigger concern for Americans already dealing with rising grocery bills. The report showed confidence among households with annual incomes exceeding $100,000 fell to the lowest level in November, posing a risk for consumer spending, the biggest part of the economy. “Consumers across different income and demographic groups are feeling the pain of rising prices at the pump,” said Joseph Brusuelas, a senior economist at Bloomberg LP in New York. “It’s even biting those making more than $100,000, and they’re the ones who’ve been a primary driver of the recovery. It’s likely to restrain growth this quarter.” The Bloomberg comfort index, which began December 1985, fell to a record low of minus 54 in November 2008, while the peak of 38 was reached in January 2000. An index of the buying climate fell to minus 57.4, the lowest since October 2009, from minus 53. Those saying it was a good time to buy needed items plunged to 2 percent from 20 percent the previous week. The average price of regular gasoline at the pump climbed another 5 cents to $3.56 a gallon in the week ended March 13, according to AAA, the nation’s biggest motoring organization. That followed a gain of 14 cents the prior week and 20 cents a week before that. The report is “showing trouble across the board,” Gary Langer, president of Langer Research Associates LLC in New York, which compiles the index for Bloomberg, said in a statement.
  • China Shoppers Hoard Salt as Protection on Fear Japan Radiation to Spread. Chinese shoppers cleared shelves of salt, viewed as a defense against radiation exposure, as the government sought to allay concern that fallout from a stricken Japanese nuclear facility might reach its shores. The Ministry of Environmental Protection released a chart on its Web site showing radiation levels in 41 cities, from Dalian in the northeast to Tibet in the west are within normal ranges. People shouldn’t take potassium iodide tablets used to combat radiation unless the government recommends it, the Center for Disease Control and Prevention said on its site.
  • India Raises Interest Rates for Eighth Time in a Year to Reduce Inflation. India’s central bank increased interest rates for the eighth time in a year after raising its inflation forecast twice in three months. Stocks and bonds fell. The Reserve Bank of India raised the repurchase rate to 6.75 percent from 6.5 percent, according to an e-mailed statement today. All 26 economists in a Bloomberg News survey had predicted the decision. It boosted the reverse repurchase rate to 5.75 percent from 5.5 percent. Governor Duvvuri Subbarao extended the steepest rate increases among Asia’s major economies after the government last month unveiled plans to lower taxes and boost spending. The Reserve Bank also has to contend with the impact of higher oil prices on inflation, which cuts purchasing power in a nation where the World Bank says more than three-quarters of the people live on less than $2 a day. “The RBI needs to tighten more to bring inflation under control,” said Devika Mehndiratta, a Singapore-based economist at Credit Suisse Group AG. “Price pressures are building up quite sharply.” Mehndiratta expects a half-point increase in rates by September. India’s key wholesale-price inflation quickened to 8.31 percent in February, led by manufactured product costs. The Reserve Bank today raised its March-end inflation forecast to 8 percent from 7 percent, according to the statement. “The underlying inflationary pressures have accentuated, even as risks to growth are emerging,” the central bank said in the statement. “As domestic fuel prices are yet to adjust fully to global prices, risks to inflation remain clearly on the upside, reinforced by the persistence of demand-side pressures.”
  • FedEx(FDX) Surges After Quarterly Profit Forecast Beats Estimates. FedEx Corp. (FDX), operator of the world’s biggest cargo airline, climbed the most since July after predicting higher profit this quarter than analysts estimated amid the global economic recovery. The stock jumped as much as 6 percent after FedEx said per- share earnings for the fiscal fourth quarter ending May 31 will be $1.66 to $1.83 a share. Analysts had projected $1.66, the average of 22 estimates in a Bloomberg survey.

Wall Street Journal:
  • Japan Claims Modest Gains in Bid to Cool Nuclear Plant. Japanese authorities claimed modest gains Thursday in their efforts to tame a heavily damaged nuclear-power plant that has caused worries around the world, but increasing international skepticism and troublesome levels of radiation on the ground underscored the ongoing difficulties. Authorities attempted to douse the troubled Fukushima Daiichi nuclear-power complex with some 100 tons of seawater on Thursday using helicopters and fire trucks, an urgent effort to combat rising temperatures in two storage pools for spent nuclear fuel. Radiation levels at the site fell slightly.
  • U.S. Seeks Range of Strikes on Libya at U.N. The Obama administration is seeking a U.N. Security Council resolution that would authorize a wide range of possible military strikes against the forces of Libyan leader Col. Moammar Gadhafi, aimed at preventing them from overrunning rebels and civilians in the country's east, officials said. In discussions with other U.N. Security Council members, the Obama administration is making the case that a no-fly zone alone would be "insufficient" to save the rebel capital of Benghazi, in eastern Libya. The Obama administration is seeking a broad U.N. authorization for strikes aimed at holding back Libyan ground and air forces with the aim of protecting Benghazi and avoiding a humanitarian crisis there. Military operations could include a no-fly zone but would not be limited to that, officials said.
  • Investor Criticizes Shadow Market. Ben Horowitz, a prominent Silicon Valley venture capitalist, criticized the unregulated "shadow market" that has fueled trading in shares of technology start-ups like Facebook Inc. and Twitter Inc. before they go public. Mr. Horowitz, a partner at Andreessen Horowitz, said these secondary markets operate with "asymmetric" information and often "inflate" private share prices. He said regulators may decide to step in if smaller investors start getting hurt.
  • Europe Banks Won't Get Stress Test Capital Minimum Rules Fri - BdB. European banks asked to take part in the European Union's stress test aren't likely to get the long-awaited rules on minimum capital required to pass by Friday, the BdB lobby group representing German commercial banks said Thursday.
  • Interview: Globalfoundries Assessing Japan Impact on Silicon Supply. Contract chip maker Globalfoundries is assessing the impact of a disruption of silicon supply out of Japan on its business, with Japan's natural disaster highlighting the challenge of managing risk in global distribution in the semiconductor industry, the head of its major shareholder said Thursday. "Twenty percent of the entire semiconductor industry comes from Japan, but a lot more than that is silicon from Japan," Ibrahim Ajami, chief executive officer of Advanced Technology Investment Co., or ATIC, told Zawya Dow Jones in an interview.
  • Japanese Ministry of Finance: 'Ready for Battle'. One of the biggest mysteries about the recent volatility in the markets related to Japan is when Japanese authorities would intervene in the markets to stabilize the wild swings we’ve seen recently in the yen. There are recent signs that officials there are trying to jawbone the financial markets into backing off from betting big on swings in Japanese markets. Bradley Davis of Dow Jones Newswires reports:
  • Law School Loses Its Allure as Jobs at Firms Are Scarce. Student applications to law schools are down sharply this year, as college seniors grow leery of a degree that promises certain debt and uncertain job prospects. The number of law-school applicants this year is down 11.5% from a year ago to 66,876, according to the Law School Admission Council Inc. The figure, which is a tally of applications for the fall 2011 class, is the lowest since 2001 at this stage of the process.
Business Insider:
  • Radioactive Fliers Land in US. Two flights that originated in Tokyo and landed in Dallas and Chicago yesterday triggered radiation detectors when passengers passed through customs, The Post has learned. Tests on the jet that landed at the Dallas-Fort Worth airport showed low levels of radiation on the travelers' luggage and inside the cabin's filtration system.
LA Times:
  • Small Amounts of Radiation Headed for California, But No Health Risk Seen. Very low levels of radioactive isotopes from the damaged Japanese nuclear plant are expected to reach California as soon as Friday, but experts say the amount will be well within safe limits. A network of radiation monitors is keeping close watch.
  • Shortage of Japanese Parts Shuts GM(GM) Truck Factory. General Motors said Thursday that it will suspend production of Chevrolet Colorado and GMC Canyon pickup trucks at a factory in Shreveport, La., for at least a week starting Monday because of a shortage of parts coming from Japan. About 900 employees work at the plant.
Politico:
  • Paul Ryan: President Obama 'Punting' on Budget. Rep. Paul Ryan (R-Wis.) accused Barack Obama of “punting” on the budget debate Thursday, saying the president is “ignoring the problem.” The House Budget Committee chairman said he has “never discussed” budgetary issues with Obama — the last time the two talked one-on-one was during a congratulatory phone call the president made after the November elections, when Republicans swept the lower chamber.
  • Dems Wonder: What's Our Plan? Democrats in Congress are grappling with a question as they negotiate a spending deal: Who's in charge?
Rasmussen Reports:
  • Daily Presidential Tracking Poll. The Rasmussen Reports daily Presidential Tracking Poll for Thursday shows that 21% of the nation's voters Strongly Approve of the way that Barack Obama is performing his role as president. Forty-one percent (41%) Strongly Disapprove, giving Obama a Presidential Approval Index rating of -20 (see trends).
Valor:
  • The U.S. Export-Import Bank plans to provide a loan of $1 billion for deep-water oil exploration in Brazil. The bank will also help finance Brazilian infrastructure projects for the 2014 World Cup and 2016 Olympics. The bank plans to announce the loans during President Obama's visit to Brazil this week.
Globe and Mail:
  • RIM's(RIMM) Messenger Remedy Not Satisfactory, India Says. Indian security agencies are not satisfied with a plan offered by Research In Motion for them to have access to data on its BlackBerry Messenger services, junior Telecoms Minister Sachin Pilot told parliament Wednesday. RIM gave India access to its consumer services, including its Messenger services, in January after Indian authorities raised security concerns, but said it could not allow monitoring of its enterprise e-mail.
DigiTimes:
  • PC Supply Chain Still Has Up to 3 Months of Inventory, Says Acer Taiwan President. Acer Taiwan president Scott Lin has pointed out that the PC industry's upstream supply chain still has an inventory level of about 2.5-3 months, and therefore will only see limited impact from Japan's earthquake; however, since some PC players are rushing to stockpile more inventory, causing the price of DRAM and panels to rise, players will see their component costs increase in the short term. As for the damage to the supply of silicon wafers and panel conductive adhesives from Japan, since the two components are already showing signs of shortages, Acer is monitoring their supply status and will take measures when needed. Since retail channels still have about one month of inventory, while brand vendors and upstream OEM players each have about one month of inventory, the PC supply chain should not have any problems within the next 2.5-3 months. As for long term, restoring Japan's power system will be key to whether the shortage problems expand, Lin noted.
ICIS.com:
  • Japan Disaster: Tokyo Staff Told to Leave Offices on Blackout Fears. Staff from several petrochemical-related firms have been told to vacate their offices on fears of a possible large-scale blackout in Tokyo and its surrounding areas on Thursday night, company sources told ICIS. Demand on Thursday morning had almost reached the available capacity of Tokyo Electric Power Co (TEPCO), trade minister Banri Kaieda said, according to Reuters. Electricity demand usually peaks in the evening or early night, Kaieda added. The 9.0-magnitude earthquake and tsunami, which hit Japan’s northeast on 11 March, damaged TEPCO’s Daiichi nuclear facility, forcing disruptions for industrial operations and a cut in electricity supplies across the northern region of the country. TEPCO earlier this week said that it may impose a rolling blackout during an upcoming three-day weekend for Tokyo and the nine prefectures it serves. A source from Mitsubishi Corp said wide scale blackout is possible on Thursday night as electricity consumption in the city is almost at breaking point.
Jiji:
  • Four ethylene plants in eastern Japan were halted because of the March 11 earthquake, citing Kyohei Takahashi, chairman of the Japan Petrochemical Industry Association. The plant shutdowns in Kashima, Chiba and Kawasaki will reduce the country's output of ethylene by 25%.
Shanghai Daily:
  • Lenovo Warns About Battery Shortage. LENOVO, the world's No. 4 personal computer brand, joined a growing list of companies in several industries warning of disruptions to their production in the medium term, as stocks of components such as batteries dwindle. "In the short term there won't be much impact. We are more worried about the impact in the next quarter," Lenovo Chief Executive Yang Yuanqing said in Shanghai yesterday.The supply of batteries for notebook PCs ... could come under pressure, as key suppliers such as Sony Corp have shut down factories in Japan, said Michael Clendenin, managing director of RedTechAdvisors, a Shanghai-based firm. "Sony and Sanyo would be two of the key suppliers, and Sony has essentially shut down five or six of its factories in Japan," Clendenin said.
Caixin:
  • China's consumer price index growth may rise 5.5% in April, citing an official at the People's Bank of China.

Bear Radar


Style Underperformer:

  • Small-Cap Growth (+.40%)
Sector Underperformers:
  • 1) Airlines -1.56% 2) Hospitals -.55% 3) Networking -.05%
Stocks Falling on Unusual Volume:
  • MLHR, KNL, SWH, AEP, ETR, RNR, SHLD, TRGL, CCJ, KWK, TLK, LULU, PEGA, SANM, CBPO, TRGT, JAZZ, OCLR, FNSR, SINA, CPLA, HOLI, OPLK, SWKS, WBSN, JDSU, SOHU, SCO, ATU, NRP, GES and WGO
Stocks With Unusual Put Option Activity:
  • 1) MHS 2) FXY 3) MDY 4) ALL 5) CCJ
Stocks With Most Negative News Mentions:
  • 1) ANN 2) DVN 3) BMC 4) MEE 5) AEO
Charts:

Bull Radar


Style Outperformer:

  • Large-Cap Growth (+1.76%)
Sector Outperformers:
  • 1) Road & Rail +3.44% 2) Oil Service +3.22% 3) Wireless +2.67%
Stocks Rising on Unusual Volume:
  • ALJ, SI, CLF, BBL, TOT, GLNG, PANL, CREE, ESRX, AKAM, QCOM, DIOD, GTLS, EWJ, WWWW, FDX, BSFT, HNR, CSX, EWG, BTU, HRS, BWC, EFA, EWD, QLD and HGG
Stocks With Unusual Call Option Activity:
  • 1) BIG 2) CREE 3) MNKD 4) LVLT 5) USU
Stocks With Most Positive News Mentions:
  • 1) DIOD 2) PH 3) AKAM 4) CMA 5) MGM
Charts:

Wednesday, March 16, 2011

Stocks Falling into Final Hour on Rising Energy Prices, Japan Nuclear Fears, Technical Selling, Mideast Unrest


Broad Market Tone:

  • Advance/Decline Line: Lower
  • Sector Performance: Almost Every Sector Declining
  • Volume: Heavy
  • Market Leading Stocks: Underperforming
Equity Investor Angst:
  • VIX 27.59 +13.77%
  • ISE Sentiment Index 63.0 -32.98%
  • Total Put/Call 1.23 +11.82%
  • NYSE Arms 2.37 +95.34%
Credit Investor Angst:
  • North American Investment Grade CDS Index 90.40 +1.38%
  • European Financial Sector CDS Index 115.32 -2.45%
  • Western Europe Sovereign Debt CDS Index 174.33 bps -.76%
  • Emerging Market CDS Index 224.43 +2.22%
  • 2-Year Swap Spread 20.0 +1 bp
  • TED Spread 22.0 unch.
Economic Gauges:
  • 3-Month T-Bill Yield .09% unch.
  • Yield Curve 264.0 -7 bps
  • China Import Iron Ore Spot $163.60/Metric Tonne -.67%
  • Citi US Economic Surprise Index +60.20 -2.4 points
  • 10-Year TIPS Spread 2.38% -4 bps
Overseas Futures:
  • Nikkei Futures: Indicating -403 open in Japan
  • DAX Futures: Indicating -28 open in Germany
Portfolio:
  • Lower: On losses in my Tech, Retail and Medical longs
  • Disclosed Trades: Added (IWM)/(QQQQ) hedges and added to my (EEM) short
  • Market Exposure: Moved to 50% Net Long
BOTTOM LINE: Today's overall market action is bearish as the S&P 500 erases gains for the year. On the positive side, Coal and Ag shares are higher on the day. Small-caps and cyclicals are outperforming. Copper is rising +1.48%. The 10-year yield is declining -10 bps to 3.20%. The Spain sovereign cds is falling -4.84% to 227.21 bps, the Japan sovereign cds is falling -4.75% to 113.18 bps, the Belgium sovereign cds is falling -4.51% to 147.80 bps and the Asia Pacific sovereign cds index is dropping -5.59% to 120.47 bps. Moreover, the US Muni CDS Index is falling -3.55% to 153.72 bps. On the negative side, Airline, Education, Construction, Drug, I-Banking, Wireless, Computer Services, Disk Drive, Semi, Computer, Software, Steel, Oil Service and Energy shares are under significant pressure, falling more than 2.0%. Tech shares continue to underperform. China Iron Ore Spot has declined -14.4% in about 1 month. The avg. US price for a gallon of gas is -.01/gallon today to $3.55/gallon. It is up .43/gallon in 29 days. The fact that oil is rising +.99% today with such equity market weakness and a falling euro is also a negative. Some key market leaders are finally rolling over today. As well, the market is reacting poorly to known news, which is always a red flag. I suspect that global growth is slowing more than economists perceive right now. News that Shanghai's exports to the European Union shed 25.4 percent annually to US$2.1 billion last month is a red flag for global growth. I expect US stocks to trade mixed-to-lower into the close from current levels on Japan nuclear fears, global growth worries, rising energy prices, Mideast unrest, technical selling and more shorting.


Today's Headlines


Bloomberg:
  • Japanese Flee Disaster Zone as Quakes, Fires Hamper Rescue. Hundreds of cars streamed south of Japanese areas devastated by last week’s earthquake and tsunami as technicians battled to contain fires and radiation leaks at the Fukushima Dai-Ichi nuclear power station. In the city of Sendai, near the epicenter of the March 11 temblor that was Japan’s strongest on record, vehicles were wrapped four-high in places around the airport’s perimeter fence. The top floor of a two-story house dragged from its foundations as the 7-meter (23-foot) wave retreated could be seen in wreckage that was studded with uprooted trees. In Fukushima city, capital of the prefecture where Tokyo Electric Power Co. workers are struggling to prevent a nuclear meltdown, about 200 people lined up at the Co-op supermarket to buy provisions. The line at a local gasoline station stretched for more than a kilometer (0.6 miles), there was no running water and portable toilets were overflowing. “People still think this is a dream, and that they’re going to pinch themselves and it won’t have happened,” said Keiji Kakogawa, 34, a social worker who arrived in the area from Kyoto, central Japan, two days ago to search for a female friend living in a nearby town that bore the tsunami’s brunt. “A few days ago they were asleep in their homes. Now everything has changed.”
  • Arab Uprisings Lose Momentum as 'Status Quo' Fights Back. Bombs and tear gas are threatening to smother the “Arab Spring” that toppled the leaders of Egypt and Tunisia and promised to spread democracy in the Middle East. In Bahrain, security forces today used tear gas to drive protesters from their main rallying point in the capital Manama, two days after Saudi Arabia sent troops to bolster the ruling family. “When the guns are all on one side and being used, that side has a distinct advantage,” said Cliff Kupchan, a senior analyst at Eurasia Group, a New York political-risk consulting firm. “What we’re seeing now is the first really hard pushback from status quo forces since this year’s unrest in the Middle East began.”
  • Euro Weakens as Moody's Cuts Portugal's Credit Rating; Yen Recoups Losses. The euro halted three days of gains versus the dollar after Moody’s Investors Service downgraded Portugal’s credit rating, reviving concern about Europe’s ability to solve its debt crisis. The 17-nation common currency depreciated versus all but two its major counterparts after Portugal was cut two steps by Moody’s yesterday to A3, four steps from so-called junk status.
  • U.S. Housing Starts Fell in February to Lowest Since April 2009. Housing starts in the U.S. declined more than forecast in February to the slowest pace since April 2009 and building permits slumped to a record low, signs the housing market recovery is limping along as the rest of the economy improves. Beginning home construction fell 22.5 percent to a 479,000 annual rate, with declines in all regions, Commerce Department figures showed today in Washington. The decrease from January was the biggest since March 1984. The median forecast in a Bloomberg News survey called for a 566,000 rate. Building permits, a proxy for future construction, fell 8.2 percent to a 517,000 pace.
  • U.S. Producer Prices Rise More Than Forecast, Led by Food, Oil. Wholesale costs in the U.S. rose more than forecast in February, led by food prices at a more than three-decade high and a surge in energy. The producer-price index climbed 1.6 percent from the prior month, the most since June 2009, Labor Department figures showed today in Washington. The median projection in a Bloomberg News survey was for a 0.7 percent gain. Compared with a year earlier, companies paid 5.6 percent more for goods last month after a 3.6 percent rise in January. The cost of food increased 3.9 percent, the most since November 1974, while energy prices rose 3.3 percent led by a 15 percent jump in home heating oil. Expenses for intermediate goods rose 2.0 percent from the prior month, the biggest gain since July 2008. Prices of crude goods increased 3.4 percent.
  • Fed's Parkinson Says 30% of Banks' Ratings Unsatisfactory. Patrick Parkinson, the Federal Reserve’s chief bank regulator, said nearly one out of three U.S. banks has supervisory ratings deemed unsatisfactory. “Around 30 percent of all banks have less than satisfactory supervisory ratings,” Parkinson said today at the American Bankers Association annual government relations summit in Washington.
  • GE(GE) $1 Billion Nuclear Unit at Risk as Nations Mull Atomic Future. General Electric Co. (GE)’s goal of broadening its $1 billion nuclear service-and-parts business with sales of new reactors risks stalling as world leaders reconsider the future of atomic energy. Governments from Germany to India are reassessing the technology after Japan’s March 11 earthquake and tsunami crippled a power plant and raised the threat of a meltdown. China today halted nuclear project approvals and plans safety inspections of new facilities. Political doubts after the Japan disaster may signal dwindling appetite for new plants, and the reactors that Chief Executive Officer Jeffrey Immelt has said he wants to pursue. Three reactors at the Fukushima Dai-Ichi plant use a GE design, including the damaged No. 1 unit that began operating in 1971.
  • Atomic Energy Agency to Call an Emergency Meeting on Japan Nuclear Crisis. International Atomic Energy Agency Director General Yukiya Amano will call an emergency meeting of the United Nations atomic agency on the Japan nuclear crisis, the agency said today in Vienna. The meeting will take place following a visit by Amano to Japan. Amano will fly to Japan tomorrow.
  • Obama Picks Kansas Over Ohio State to Win NCAA Basketball Tournament Final.
  • Yen Reaches an Almost 16-Year High Versus Dollar on Japan's Nuclear Crisis. The yen approached a 16-year high versus the dollar as Japan’s nuclear crisis intensified, increasing speculation Japanese companies and investors will repatriate funds to help pay for earthquake and tsunami damages. The yen strengthened for a fourth straight day after Tokyo Electric Power Co. said a reactor containment vessel may have been breached at the crippled Fukushima Dai-Ichi power plant, increasing the risk of radioactive leaks.

Wall Street Journal:
  • Radiation Thwarts Helicopter Plan. Efforts to extinguish smoldering spent fuel were thwarted Wednesday, after high radiation levels above forced the cancellation of a plan to dump water from a helicopter on the power plant at the center of Japan's escalating nuclear crisis. And suggesting the spreading of problems at the reactor, officials said the waste fuel kept at a storage pool at one of the reactors appeared to be heating up. As the troubles in the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power complex continue to haunt officials and hinder rescue efforts in the area, Japan's emperor Wednesday addressed the nation on television to make his first public comments about the disaster, saying he was "deeply concerned" about the situation at the nuclear facility.
  • Latest Japan Headlines at a Glance.
  • IAEA: Japan Crisis "Very Serious," But Not Out of Control. Late Tuesday and again on Wednesday, Guenther Oettinger, the EU Energy Chief, called the Japanese nuclear crisis “out of control.” Unsurprisingly, when these headlines hit this morning in the U.S., the stock market got slammed, Treasurys rallied so sharply the NY Fed had to delay a purchase program and everyone’s eyes got really, really wide. Quite a lot of work for a guy opining from another continent. About one hour later (around 12:30) ET, the International Atomic Energy Agency came out with its own comments. They called the situation “very serious” and said its director general would fly to Japan Thursday to personally assess the situation. About the Japanese nuclear crisis, the IAEA had a different take: We will not say it is “Out of Control.”
  • ATM Fees Heading Higher. Some of the nation's biggest banks are imposing a variety of new fees on people who withdraw money from automated-teller machines. The move is the latest example of the burgeoning new fees that banks are imposing on customers accustomed to years of free services. Banks are scrambling to replace billions of dollars in revenue expected to be lost from new federal regulations on overdraft charges and debit cards.
  • JPMorgan(JPM) Cuts Currency Exposure In Emerging-Market Model Portfolio. Emerging-market strategists at J.P. Morgan Chase & Co. (JPM) adjusted the company's widely tracked model portfolio Wednesday, cutting its exposure to emerging-market currencies by 10%.
CNBC.com:
  • US Loan Markets Show Early Signs of Jitters. A raft of companies, including privately held Toys R Us, have scotched plans to refinance bank loans this week as borrowing costs have risen in the market, in an early sign that capital markets may be weakening.
Business Insider:
DailyBeast:
  • Al Qaeda Targets Libya. The terror cell sees Gaddafi’s bloody civil conflict as the perfect chance to swoop in and turn the war-torn country into an Islamic state. Exiled Libyans with connections to Al Qaeda are racing to find ways to send people home, in hope of steering the anti-Gaddafi revolt in a radical Islamist direction, according to several senior Afghan Taliban sources in contact with Al-Qaeda.
Rasmussen Reports:
  • 22% Says U.S. Heading in Right Direction, Lowest of Obama's Presidency. Just 22% of Likely U.S. Voters say the country is heading in the right direction, the lowest level of confidence found since before President Obama’s inauguration in January 2009. According to a new Rasmussen Reports national telephone survey taken the week ending Sunday, March 13, 72% of voters now say the country is heading down the wrong track, also at its highest level since before the inauguration.
Politico:
Reuters:
  • Banks Must Prepare for Restructuring - EU Draft Conclusions. European Union banks must disclose sovereign debt holdings on both their trading and banking books as part of stress tests, EU leaders will say at a summit on March 24-25, according to draft conclusions. "Banks' disclosure will be enhanced, including on sovereign debt holdings on the trading and banking book," read the draft conclusions, obtained by Reuters. "Member states will prepare, ahead of the publication of the results, specific and ambitious strategies for the restructuring of vulnerable institutions, including private sector solutions (direct financing to the market or asset sales) but also solid framework for the provision of government support in case of need," the document reads.
  • S&P, Nasdaq Now Negative for '11 on Japan Worry. S&P 500, Nasdaq turn negative for '11 on Japan fears, Yen hits 16-year high against dollar, U.S. Treasury bonds rally as investors flee risky asset.
  • Stock Flows Negative for Second Week, Munis Lose - ICI.
Handelsblatt:
  • European Central Bank council member Christian Noyer said the bank will take the disaster in Japan into consideration when it discusses raising interest rates in April, citing an interview.
Cinco Dias:
  • Spain is preparing a Contingency plan for savings banks in case they can't attract enough private investment to meet core capital requirements, citing people in financial markets.
Financial Post:
  • Shell Sees Value in Oil Sands. In a world where political and regulatory risk have become as big a part of the oil business as finding new supplies, Royal Dutch Shell PLC is expanding its Alberta oil sands mining presence as part of US$100-billion in investment plans over the next four years.
Kyodo:
  • Radiation levels near the Japanese town of Namie, 21 kilometers from Tokyo Electric Power Co.'s Fukushima Dai-Ichi nuclear plant, rose to as high as 6,600 times normal levels. Radiation levels climbed to as high as 330 microsieverts per hour at one point between yesterday and today, citing Japan's science ministry.
CRIEnglish:
  • Shanghai's Exports Drop 4.2% in February From Year Earlier. Shanghai's exports fell 4.2 percent from a year earlier in February, the first drop in 15 months, after trade activities were distracted by seasonal changes, higher production costs, weaker overseas demand and a stronger yuan. By contrast, exports jumped 24.4 percent in January. The decline in February's overall trade growth was partly expected as many shipments have been front-loaded into January due to the holiday. "But the scale of such a fall is still unexpected," Li said. "It could be a result of more expensive labor costs and a stronger yuan which imposed a burden on exporters." According to the bureau, Shanghai's exports to the European Union, grappling with a debt crisis among some of its members, shed 25.4 percent annually to US$2.1 billion last month, while shipments to the United States were flat. Shanghai's exports to Japan rose 7.9 percent to US$1.3 billion. It is uncertain how major the influence of Japan's devastating earthquake will be on Shanghai's overall trade in the future, analysts said. Fixed-asset investment in Shanghai fell an annual 4.3 percent in the first two months to 57 billion yuan as fewer funds went into infrastructure construction following the expiry of stimulus policies.

Bear Radar


Style Underperformer:

  • Large-Cap Growth (-2.57%)
Sector Underperformers:
  • 1) Steel -3.75% 2) Computer Services -3.55% 3) Oil Service -3.10%
Stocks Falling on Unusual Volume:
  • RUE, ASMI, AFCE, NTES, CSIQ, EXXI, LEAP, AAPL, MYL, SSYS, MXIM, VOD, SPWRA, VSAT, QCOM, FSLR, DISCK, MSFT, NFLX, LBTYK, EWG, SSO, LNC, EZU, OAS, MHS, MET, TXN, EWQ, SHAW, RA, IBM, EXC, BWC, QLD, CW, BWS and HIG
Stocks With Unusual Put Option Activity:
  • 1) EWJ 2) EXC 3) MAR 4) CCJ 5) XLNX
Stocks With Most Negative News Mentions:
  • 1) LVS 2) NYT 3) AAPL 4) MTB 5) AGCO
Charts: