Thursday, April 21, 2011

Thursday Watch


Evening Headlines

Bloomberg:
  • Global Supply-Chain Repairs May Spur Investment Powering Economic Growth. Repairing supply chains frayed by Japan’s earthquake and surging fuel prices may provide a further spur to business investment powering global economic growth. Joseph Carson, director of global economic research at AllianceBernstein LP in New York, says companies exploiting new ways to ensure cost-effective delivery of raw materials and their own goods may help extend last year’s 5.4 percent surge in worldwide fixed investment. That may boost spending in the U.S. alone beyond the 8 percent he estimates for this year, double the pace of 2010 and more than three times the projected rate of consumer demand. “Recent events raise questions over the global supply chain and reliance on single-source suppliers,” said Carson, a former analyst at General Motors Corp. A shift “could add fuel for a prolonged investment cycle that would have been impossible to predict a year ago.”
  • Crude Oil Rises for a Third Day Amid Outlook for Improving Global Demand. Crude oil for June delivery gained as much as 55 cents to $112 a barrel, in electronic trading on the New York Mercantile Exchange. It was at $111.88 at 10:16 a.m. Sydney time. Yesterday, the contract climbed $3.17 to $111.45, the highest since April 8. Prices are up 34 percent the past year. Brent crude oil for June settlement advanced 49 cents, or 0.4 percent, to $124.34 a barrel. It rose $2.52, or 2.1 percent, to end the session at $123.85 a barrel on the London-based ICE Futures Europe exchange yesterday, the highest settlement since April 11.
  • Tepco Must End 'Whack-a-Mole,' Cover Fukushima Reactors as Typhoons Loom. Tokyo Electric Power Co. must speed up plans to cover reactors at its crippled nuclear plant and drain tainted water to prevent more radiation leaks as Japan’s typhoon season approaches, engineering professors said.
  • Emerging Stocks Face Risk of Earnings Downgrades, Citi Says. The pace of earnings growth in emerging markets is slowing, leading to an increased risk of downgrades to analysts' profit estimates in coming months, according to Citigroup Inc.(C). Analysts are now predicting 12-month per-share earnings growth of 16%, compared with an average estimate of 30% in early 2010, analysts led by Geoffrey Dennis wrote in a report. "Investors are worried about top-line growth due to gross domestic product downgrades and margin pressure due to rising commodity prices and higher wages," teh report said.
  • Mongolia Rail Boom Seen Breaking China's Rare Earths Grip: Freight Markets. Mongolia’s aim of quadrupling its rail network will send coal, copper and rare earths to nations such as Japan and South Korea under a plan to reduce dependence on the Chinese market and boost economic development.
  • BP(BP) Sues Transocean(RIG) Seeking to Recover Billions in Damages for Gulf Spill. BP Plc (BP/) sued Transocean Ltd. (RIG), owner and operator of the Deepwater Horizon oil drilling rig that exploded one year ago today, saying the company is to blame for the accident and seeking to recover costs for billions of dollars in damages related to the Gulf of Mexico oil spill. BP said in a complaint filed today in federal court in New Orleans that it has already incurred costs of $17.7 billion and took a pre-tax charge last year of $40.9 billion in relation to the spill. The London-based company said that without Transocean’s “misconduct,” there wouldn’t have been any explosion, fire, deaths or oil spill.
  • Brazil Raises Rate to 12%, Slowing Pace on Currency, Steps to Curb Credit. Brazil’s central bank slowed the pace of rate increases on a less-than-unanimous vote, saying they need to implement policy adjustments “for a sufficiently long period” to bring inflation to target next year. Policy makers, led by central bank President Alexandre Tombini, voted 5-2 to raise the Selic rate by a quarter point to 12 percent from 11.75 percent, as expected by 15 of 58 analysts surveyed by Bloomberg. Forty-one analysts forecast a half-point increase and two predicted a pause. The bank said that two board members voted for a half-point increase. Consumer prices rose 6.44 percent in the year through mid- April, close to the upper limit of the central bank’s target range of 4.5 percent, plus or minus 2 percentage points.
Wall Street Journal:
  • Japan Imposes Ban on Nuclear Zone. Japan's government announced Thursday it is creating a formal ban on entry into the 20-kilometer evacuation zone around the quake-hit Fukushima Daiichi nuclear-power plant after some residents ignored pleas to stay away from the potentially hazardous areas. The announcement came as workers at the plant are pumping water that is flooding the basement of the turbine building for reactor No. 2, which contains more than 30 million times Japan's allowable level of Cesium-137, a long-lived radioactive isotope. At the current rate of pumping, it would take more than 100 days to remove the water. That doesn't take into account additional water that could enter—either through continuing operations to cool the reactor with water, or from other sources—or government plans to eventually pick up the pace of pumping.
  • Bernanke to Open Up as Fed Embarks on Era of Glasnost. Next Wednesday, Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke will do something no Fed chief has done before: Stand before a room full of journalists after officials conclude a policy meeting and answer questions about the central bank's decisions.
  • Chipotle(CMG) Faces U.S. Probe Over Hiring. The federal government has begun a criminal investigation into whether Chipotle Mexican Grill Inc. has knowingly hired illegal immigrants at its restaurants, a person familiar with the matter said. The criminal division of the U.S. Attorney office for Washington, D.C., wrote the burrito chain April 13 seeking documents related to hiring, the person familiar with the matter said. The company recently fired 40 employees at two Washington, D.C., restaurants who allegedly submitted false documents related to their eligibility to work in the U.S., this person said.
  • Ethnic Militias Fuel Tensions in Northern Afghanistan. Government officials in northern Afghanistan are building up their own ethnic-based militia groups to expand their influence and keep the Taliban at bay. But the spread of mostly Tajik and Uzbek militias is aggravating tensions with local Pashtuns—the country's largest ethnic group but a minority in the north—some of whom say they are being driven to turn to the Taliban, a largely Pashtun group, to defend their interests.
  • Uptick in Loans Could Aid Businesses. Three years after credit markets froze, two crucial forms of bank lending that remained stubbornly weak are finally showing signs of life, another indicator that the credit crisis is on the mend. Small-business lending and the use of existing lines of credit, both slow to rebound, are showing faint but intelligible signs of recovery. An uptick in the two forms of lending could help businesses expand and reduce unemployment, which are crucial to a broader economic recovery. Commercial and industrial lending, the most widely tracked measure of business-loan demand, had already improved at the end of last year, and growth continued for the second quarter in a row. But the rebound in lending remains in its early stages, with credit growth more anemic than in past recoveries.
  • Fleeing the Dollar Flood. The world tries to protect itself from U.S. monetary policy. Members of the International Monetary Fund emerged from their huddle in Washington last weekend resolved to keep every option open to slow the flood of dollars pouring into their countries, including capital controls. That's a dangerous game, given the need for investment to drive economic development. But it's also increasingly typical of the world's reaction to America's mismanagement of the dollar and its eroding financial leadership. The dollar is the world's reserve currency, and as such the Federal Reserve is the closest thing we have to a global central bank. Yet for at least a decade, and especially since late 2008, the Fed has operated as if its only concern is the U.S. domestic economy. The Fed's relentlessly easy monetary policy combined with Congress's reckless spending have driven investors out of the United States and into Asia, South America and elsewhere in search of higher returns and more sustainable growth. Even in the U.S., Americans are buying commodities (oil per barrel: $111) and gold ($1,500 an ounce) as a dollar hedge, and the state of Utah recently took steps to make it easier for citizens to buy and sell gold as a de facto alternative currency. Whether or not these prove to be wise investments, they are certainly signals of mistrust in Washington's economic stewardship. At an economic town hall this week, President Obama blamed "speculators" for rising oil prices. He should have mentioned the Fed and his own Treasury, which have encouraged the world to invest in hedges against the falling dollar. Chairman Ben Bernanke and Mr. Geithner have deliberately pursued a policy of unprecedented monetary and spending stimulus to reflate the economy and boost asset prices. The bill is coming due in a weak dollar, food and energy inflation, and the decline of U.S. economic credibility.
CNBC:
  • Apple(AAPL) Profit Leaps, Easily Outpaces Forecasts. Apple reported a profit that blew past analysts' estimates, pushing its shares higher, as sales of its iPhones and Macs easily topped what analysts expected. The maker of computers and personal electronics reported a net profit of $5.99 billion, or $6.40 a share, in its fiscal second quarter. That compared with $3.33 a share a year earlier on the same basis. On the sales side, Apple garnered $24.67 billion in revenue, a full 83 percent higher than $13.499 billion from a year before. Analysts who follow Apple expected the company to report a profit of $5.37 a share on sales of $22.383 billion, according to an estimate compiled by Thomson Reuters. Apple's gross margins for the second quarter came in at 41.4 percent, compared with 41.7 percent a year earlier. The company said it expects June quarter earnings of $5.03 a share on sales of $23 billion. The company has a reputation among investors for consistently low-balling its financial outlook. In the quarter, the company sold 3.76 million Macintosh computers and 18.65 million iPhones. Both figures were above analysts' estimates, which stood at 3.64 million and 16.3 million, respectively. "You've got a company, it's best capturing the profits going on in the mobile space. The iPhone continues to set records," said analyst Colin Gillis at BGC Partners. However, sales of iPods and iPads came in short of estimates. Sales of iPods were 9 million, versus expectations of 9.85 million. The number of iPads sold was 4.69 million. Some analysts had projected shipments of closer to or even more than 6 million for the tablet computer launched on March 11. But the lower-than-expected number could be attributed to the fact that Apple recognizes revenue from its stores when its customers receive the products. The initial wait time for the iPad 2 was four to five weeks. "The iPad numbers were light though not really surprised. We don't even have full year data on it. Also in the quarter the product got refreshed," Gillis said. "I was looking for 6 million in sales." Shares of Apple were about 3 percent higher in extended trading.
Business Insider:
Zero Hedge:
  • Meet Keratea: Greece's War Zone. One of the more interesting "war zones" that most have never heard of is not in North Africe, nor in the Middle East, but in Greece. Meet Keratea, a small city of 15,000 people located close to Athens, where after over 100 days of struggle between authorities and the broder population, the riot police has officially decided to abdicate the city to its fate in what is the first popular mini-revolution in the developed world.
IBD:
CNN Money:
  • AIG(AIG) Stock's Slide May Hurt Taxpayers. AIG may not generate as much outrage as it did in 2008 and 2009 when the financial sector was in freefall. But I've got 1.655 billion reasons why you should still care about the insurance giant. The Treasury Department owns a 92% stake in AIG: 1.655 billion shares. And that investment is dangerously close to slipping into the red.
NY Post:
  • Awakening to Obama's 'Hosni' Hell. First, the bad news. If you're keeping score at home, another day passed with more slaughter of demonstrators in the streets of Syria without serious objection from the White House. The stalemate in Libya remained a stalemate and Jordan can't get a handle on a new wave of protesters. Now, for the really bad news. There are increasing signs that the "Arab Awakening" is a gift to Iran and its terrorist franchises. In Bahrain and especially Yemen, anti-American and anti-Western forces are filling the gaps as government control shrinks. And now for the worst news. The most dangerous developments are happening in Egypt, which was a bulwark for 30 years against Iranian expansion and Arab Islamic fundamentalists. But the risky departure of Hosni Mubarak, under American pressure, threw the door wide open to both and the results already are disturbing. Many people saw this coming -- but apparently, they did not include a single soul in the White House.
Boston Herald:
  • Spillover Effect Can't Be Less Drilling. Much has transpired since the disaster, both positive and negative. On the positive side, the widely-predicted environmental disaster has not materialized. The combination of man-made efforts to contain the spill and the earth’s own resiliency in the face of both natural and man-caused environmental disasters have limited the effects of the accident. The environmental damage should not be minimized but the effects have fallen far short of what many experts expected.
Lloyd's List:
  • Grand China Shipping plans to build a fleet of more than 70 container vessels, with a combined capacity of 240,000 boxes, by 2015, citing Senior Vice President Gary Luo.
Rasmussen Reports:
Politico:
  • Donald Trump: The $7 Billion Dollar Man. Donald Trump, who has said he looks forward to filing disclosure statements if he becomes a presidential candidate, has a net worth of more than $7 billion, sources told POLITICO. The eye-popping figure is far higher than the $2.7 billion that Forbes Magazine valued his net worth to be last month.
Reuters:
  • China Bank Regulator: Western Loose Monetary Policy Fueling Global Inflation. The ultra-loose monetary policies in developed countries are driving up global inflation, China's top banking regulator said in comments published on Thursday. "The spill-over effect of quantitative policy easing in major economies is becoming more evident. Global inflation is on the rise while the sovereign debt crisis is deepening," Liu Mingkang, Chairman of the China Banking Regulatory Commission, said in a speech published on the agency's website (www.cbrc.gov.cn).
  • EU's Rehn: Finland Mustn't Hold Up Portugal Aid. Finland needs to take a stance on aid to Portugal by a May 16 euro zone finance ministers' meeting, the European Union's economic and monetary affairs commissioner, Olli Rehn, said. Meeting that time frame, however, could prove difficult because Finland may not have a new government by then following its parliamentary elections last Sunday. "Democracy and election result have to be respected," Rehn, who is Finnish, told the daily Helsingin Sanomat in an interview. "But in parallel with that, the euro group must be able to make such decisions that prevent Portugal from drifting into insolvency." His remarks, published early on Thursday, followed Finland's Sunday parliamentary elections in which the euro-sceptic True Finns party scored big gains, which raised fears that Finland could derail a bailout for Portugal.
  • Gingrich Derides Obama Over Energy Policy. Rising gas prices threaten to derail the fragile U.S. economic recovery and are becoming a potent campaign issue in the Republican race to challenge Obama in 2012. Republican former House of Representatives Speaker Newt Gingrich, mulling a run for the White House, on Wednesday derided President Barack Obama over energy policy and high gasoline prices. Gingrich, who was holding meetings with members of the Tea Party movement and other conservative activists, tried to get ahead of the curve, blaming high prices for heating oil and gasoline on Obama, and outlining proposals of his own. "Obama is waging war on American energy," he said. He also proposed lifting a ban on oil shale development in the West; imposing new oil and gas royalties; giving coastal states federal royalty revenue sharing and enacting a law to reduce "frivolous" lawsuits sometimes used to stop energy projects.
  • Qualcomm(QCOM) Beats Street, Raises 2011 Targets. Wireless chip maker Qualcomm Inc (QCOM.O) posted better than expected quarterly results and raised its full-year financial targets on improving demand for advanced phones, and its shares rose 5 percent. The company, which also sells technology licenses, said demand was strong in most regions of the world and that investor concerns about the wireless phone sales fall-out from massive earthquake in Japan were overdone.
  • F5 Networks(FFIV) Sees Strong Q3; Allays Japan Fears. Network equipment maker F5 Networks Inc expects to post a strong third-quarter profit, as the boom in mobile computing and the need to speed up Internet traffic drive demand for its products. F5 shares were up 13 percent at $112.43 after the bell in heavy trade. The stock closed at $99.74 on Wednesday on Nasdaq.
  • Special Report: From Hannibal Lecter to Bernie Madoff.
Global Times:
  • China Banking Regulator to Launch Mortgage Stress Testing. The country's banking regulator will launch a new round of stress tests for property loans to minimize the financial risks, while a senior researcher at a government think tank said on Wednesday that further credit tightening policies may be needed. The China Banking Regulatory Commission said in a statement on its website late Tuesday that banks should start stress tests on lending in the property market, citing a speech by commission chairman, Liu Mingkang. Banks should strictly control financial risks, both in mortgage loans for homebuyers and in lending to developers, the China Banking Regulatory Commission statement said. "There are signs that there is still a risk of a property bubble, and further credit tightening policies may be the most effective measure to cool down the over-heated market, judging by the current excess in liquidity," said Wang Jun, deputy director of the research department with the China Center for International Economic Exchanges, a government think tank, on Wednesday. "Some policies, like limiting home purchases for homeowners of multiple properties, is a short-term strategy since money being squeezed out of the property market can enter into other areas like commodities, thus adding to the country's inflationary pressure," Wang said. "Minimum down payments for multiple home purchases could be higher, for instance," Wang added.
ShanghaiDaily.com:
  • Shanghai will increase housing subsidies for "top young professionals" to attract them to work in the city, citing a local government official. The city has been losing out on top professionals as high living costs and housing prices are discouraging them from settling in Shanghai, according to the report.
21st Century Business Herald:
  • China's banking regulator has required the nation's lenders to incorporate price drops of as much as 50% in seven cities in stress tests on their property loans, citing an unidentified bank official. Banks were told to do the tests for "high-risk" cities of Shanghai, Beijing, Shenzhen, Guangzhou, Chongqing, Hangzhou and Nanjing. The stress tests include three scenarios: if property prices drop 30% and interest rates increase 27 basis points, if prices drop 40% and rates rise 54 basis points and if prices drop 50% with rates up 108 basis points, according to the report.
jiaotanqihuo.com:
  • China March coal imports fell 40.7% to 9.05 million tons compared with a year earlier.
Evening Recommendations
Citigroup:
  • Reiterated Buy on (UNP), target $112.
  • Reiterated Buy on (HBI), target $39.
CSFB:
  • Reiterated Overweight on (FCX), target $75.
Night Trading
  • Asian equity indices are unch. to +1.0% on average.
  • Asia Ex-Japan Investment Grade CDS Index 105.0 -2.0 basis points.
  • Asia Pacific Sovereign CDS Index 112.50 -3.25 basis points.
  • S&P 500 futures +.37%.
  • NASDAQ 100 futures +.88%.
Morning Preview Links

Earnings of Note
Company/Estimate
  • (GR)/1.25
  • (ESI)/2.54
  • (APD)/1.39
  • (PPG)/1.33
  • (LLL)/1.82
  • (BLK)/2.76
  • (ALXN)/.51
  • (BBT)/.30
  • (MAN)/.32
  • (VZ)/.50
  • (BAX)/.93
  • (BIIB)/1.41
  • (MCD)/1.14
  • (TRV)/1.48
  • (NEM)/1.00
  • (SLB)/.75
  • (GE)/.28
  • (UNH)/.88
  • (DD)/1.37
  • (MS)/.40
  • (PM)/1.04
  • (SHW)/.53
  • (DHR)/.57
  • (COF)/1.54
  • (CYMI)/.81
  • (SNDK)/.99
  • (CB)/1.15
  • (STI)/.11
  • (DO)/1.41
  • (GNTX)/.29
  • (BX)/.41
  • (LUV)/.03
  • (IGT)/.20
Economic Releases
8:30 am EST
  • Initial Jobless Claims for last week are estimated to fall to 390K versus 412K the prior week.
  • Continuing Claims are estimated to fall to 3675K versus 3680K prior.
10:00 am EST
  • The House Price Index for February is estimated to fall -.3% versus a -.3% decline in January.
  • Leading Indicators for March are estimated to rise +.3% versus a +.8% gain in February.
  • Philly Fed for April is estimated to fall to 36.8 versus a reading of 43.4 in March.
Upcoming Splits
  • (EEQ) 2-for-1
  • (EEP) 2-for-1
  • (HEI) 5-for-4
Other Potential Market Movers
  • The $14 Billion 5-Year TIPS Auction, weekly Bloomberg Consumer Comfort Index, Bloomberg April Economic Expectations Index and the weekly EIA natural gas inventory report could also impact trading today.
BOTTOM LINE: Asian indices are higher, boosted by commodity and technology shares in the region. I expect US stocks to open modestly higher and to maintain gains into the afternoon. The Portfolio is 100% net long heading into the day.

Wednesday, April 20, 2011

Stocks Surging into Final Hour on Less Tech Sector Pessimism, Technical Buying, Short-Covering, More Economic Optimism


Broad Market Tone:

  • Advance/Decline Line: Substantially Higher
  • Sector Performance: Most Sectors Rising
  • Volume: About Average
  • Market Leading Stocks: Performing In Line
Equity Investor Angst:
  • VIX 15.17 -4.17%
  • ISE Sentiment Index 122.0 -3.17%
  • Total Put/Call .98 +8.89%
  • NYSE Arms 1.19 +36.51%
Credit Investor Angst:
  • North American Investment Grade CDS Index 92.99 -2.35%
  • European Financial Sector CDS Index 87.17 -.50%
  • Western Europe Sovereign Debt CDS Index 182.08 bps +.18%
  • Emerging Market CDS Index 204.56 -.47%
  • 2-Year Swap Spread 17.0 unch.
  • TED Spread 22.0 unch.
Economic Gauges:
  • 3-Month T-Bill Yield .05% unch.
  • Yield Curve 274.0 +4 bps
  • China Import Iron Ore Spot $178.50/Metric Tonne -.17%
  • Citi US Economic Surprise Index +19.80 -.1 point
  • 10-Year TIPS Spread 2.62% -1 bp
Overseas Futures:
  • Nikkei Futures: Indicating +79 open in Japan
  • DAX Futures: Indicating +14 open in Germany
Portfolio:
  • Slightly Higher: On gains in my Biotech, Retail and Tech sector longs
  • Disclosed Trades: Covered all of my (IWM)/(QQQ) hedges, covered some of my (EEM) short, added to my (ISRG) long, took profits in another long
  • Market Exposure: Moved to 100% Net Long
BOTTOM LINE: Today's overall market action is bullish as the S&P 500 trades near session highs, back above its 50-day moving average, despite US/European debt fears, emerging markets inflation worries, rising food/energy prices, Mideast unrest, Financial sector earnings jitters and Japan concerns. On the positive side, Networking, Disk Drive, Semi, Computer, Software, Internet, Steel, Energy, Coal, Defense and Wireless shares are especially strong, rising more than 2.0%. Cyclicals and Small-caps are outperforming. The MS Tech Index is surging back to slightly above its 50-day moving average. Copper is rising +2.51%. The Japan sovereign cds is falling -3.5% to 83.20 bps and the US sovereign cds is falling -4.19% to 45.75 bps. On the negative side, Education, Road & Rail and Bank shares are under mild pressure, falling more than .5%. Oil is rising +3.06%, the UBS-Bloomberg Ag Spot Index is rising +.63% and lumber is declining -3.64%. The US price for a gallon of gas is unch. today at $3.84/gallon. It is up .72/gallon in 64 days. The Portugal sovereign cds is rising +4.23% to 635.32 bps, the Ireland sovereign cds is climbing +4.41% to 622.54 bps and the Greece sovereign cds is gaining +2.24% to 1,331.39 bps. The Greece and Portugal sovereign cds are making new record highs. The Ireland sovereign cds is now approaching its record. The Shanghai Composite rose only +.27% night with the Shanghai Property Index dropping -1.54%. The quality of today's rally is improved as breadth, volume and leadership are better. Investor complacency remains fairly elevated. It is also a bit of a worry to see the lack of participation by financials and transports. The US dollar continues to trade very poorly given the rise in sovereign cds is the eurozone peripherals. One of my longs, (AAPL), reports after the close. I suspect they will easily exceed estimates, but give very conservative guidance on supply chain issues. I plan to add to my long position on any meaningful decline in the share price from current levels related to these issues. I expect US stocks to trade mixed-to-higher into the close from current levels on short-covering, less tech sector pessimism, technical buying and more economic optimism.

Today's Headlines


Bloomberg:

  • Intel(INTC), IBM(IBM) Show Return of Corporate Computing Demand. Intel Corp. (INTC) and International Business Machines Corp. (IBM) issued sales and profit forecasts that reflected demand from companies eager to upgrade computer systems left fallow during the recession. IBM, the largest computer-services provider, boosted its full-year profit forecast, while Intel, the top chipmaker, forecast second-quarter sales higher than analysts predicted. VMware Inc. (VMW), EMC Corp. and Juniper Networks Inc. (JNPR), three other business-technology providers, also met or topped analysts’ projections. The quartet of results suggests that after the recession ended in 2009 a rebound in demand may be gathering steam. Companies are outfitting data centers capable of delivering storage, software and other computing tasks over the Internet. The global market for such cloud-related services may more than double to $148.8 billion in 2014 from $58.6 billion in 2009, according to researcher Gartner Inc. in Stamford, Connecticut.
  • Greek Bond Yields Rise to Record on Debt Restructuring Concern. Greek bonds tumbled, leading declines by securities from Europe’s most indebted countries, as a German government adviser said the Mediterranean nation will probably have to restructure its debt burden. The slide drove yields on Greece’s two- and 10-year bonds to euro-era records. Portuguese and Irish bonds also fell after Lars Feld, a member of German Chancellor Angela Merkel’s council of economic advisers, said Greek restructuring is probable. Spanish bonds rose after demand increased at an auction of 10- year debt. German 10-year bunds fell for a second day as equities rose, sapping demand for the safest assets. “Talk of Greek restructuring dominates sentiment and is pushing peripherals lower,” said Charles Diebel, head of market strategy at Lloyds Bank Corporate Markets in London. “The bond market continues to push spreads wider, suggesting the reality of the restructuring risk.” Greek two-year yields climbed 134 basis points to 22.06 percent at 3:48 p.m. in London, the highest since at least 1998, when Bloomberg began collecting the data. The 4.6 percent security due 2013 fell 1.45, or 14.5 euros per 1,000-euro ($1,451) face amount, to 73.45. The Greek 10-year yield rose 27 basis points to 14.75 percent, after reaching a euro-era record of 14.80 percent. The extra yield, or spread, over German debt rose to a record 11.44 percentage points. “I fear that Greece can’t get out of this situation without some kind of restructuring,” Feld told Deutschlandfunk radio today. While “that doesn’t have to mean an actual default,” it could include “the buyback of bonds through a European institution,” he said, without elaborating. The cost of insuring Greek sovereign debt jumped 30 basis points to a record 1,271 basis points, according to CMA prices for credit-default swaps. The cost signals a 66 percent chance of default within five years. Portugal’s two-year yield rose to a euro-era record of 10.46 percent, while the nation’s 10-year yield rose 17 basis points to 9.26 percent after reaching a record 9.29 percent. The nation’s borrowing costs increased at an auction of 320 million euros of six-month bills. The securities due in November were issued at an average yield of 5.529 percent, compared with 5.117 percent the last time the securities were sold on April 6. Ireland’s two-year note yields rose 62 basis points to 10.30 percent, the highest since March 24. Ten-year yields gained 26 basis points to 10.06 percent, the first time they have yielded less than the two-year note since March 23, according to closing-price data compiled by Bloomberg. The spread between Spain’s 10-year bonds and similar- maturity German bunds narrowed to 214 basis points after reaching 232 basis points yesterday, the most since March 3. The Portuguese-German spread widened to 592 basis points, the most since Bloomberg began collecting the data in 1998.
  • U.S. Existing Home Sales Rise, Fail to Recover Ground Lost. A gain in sales of U.S. previously owned homes in March failed to make up for the ground lost the prior month, a sign that the housing market is taking time to recover. Purchases increased 3.7 percent to a 5.1 million annual rate, exceeding the 5 million median forecast of economists surveyed by Bloomberg News, figures from the National Association of Realtors showed today in Washington. The median price declined from a year earlier, and 40 percent of the sales were distressed properties. Of all purchases, cash transactions accounted for 35 percent, which is probably the highest share on record, Yun said. The realtors group began tracking the monthly figure in August 2008, and the share on a yearly basis before that was around 10 percent, Yun said. Sales rose in three of four regions in March, led by an 8.2 percent gain in the South. The West fell 0.8 percent. The median sales price fell 5.9 percent from March 2010 to $159,600 last month. The number of previously owned homes on the market rose to 3.55 million from February. At the current sales pace, it would take 8.4 months to sell those houses compared with 8.5 at the end of the prior month. Supply in the eight months to nine months range is consistent with stable home prices, the group has said.
  • Commodity Assets at Record $412 Billion in March, Barclays Says. Commodity assets under management rose to a record $412 billion in March, led by the biggest ever jump for agriculture products, Barclays Capital said. Investment flows into raw materials for the first quarter totaled $16.8 billion, with $7.1 billion added to agriculture and $6.8 billion to energy, Barclays analyst Roxana Mohammadian Molina said in a report e-mailed today. Precious metals got $300 million, the smallest ever, Barclays said. Pricier food contributed to riots across north Africa and Middle East this year, toppling leaders in Egypt and Tunisia and leading central banks from Brazil to China to raise interest rates. “Oil and food prices are already at levels that are raising inflation fears and by implication, threatening the performance of other assets,” Molina wrote in the report.
  • Crude Oil Advances as Increasing Equities Bolsters Optimism On The Economy. The U.S. currency’s drop sent gold to a record and silver to a 31-year high. Oil extended gains after the Energy Department reported an unexpected decline in U.S. crude supplies. “The dollar is getting hammered again and all the commodities are flying,” said Todd Horwitz, chief strategist at Adam Mesh Trading Group in New York. “The falling dollar and inventories as well as the outlook for increasing demand are pushing the oil market higher.” Crude oil for June delivery climbed $2.26, or 2.1 percent, to $110.54 a barrel at 10:56 a.m. on the New York Mercantile Exchange. The May contract expired yesterday at $108.15. Prices are up 32 percent from a year ago.
  • Gold Rises Above $1,500 to a Record on Slumping Dollar, Inflation Concern. Gold futures rose to a record for the ninth time this month as a weakening dollar boosted investment demand for the precious metal as an alternative asset. Silver topped $45 an ounce for the first time since 1980. Gold reached $1,506.50 an ounce in New York as the dollar slipped as much as 1 percent against a basket of six major currencies to trade at a 16-month low. Before today, gold rose 32 percent in the past year as the dollar fell 7.4 percent. Earlier this week, Standard & Poor’s revised its long-term outlook for U.S. debt to negative from stable. “For the dollar, the S&P statement was like getting kicked when you’re already down,” said Matt Zeman, a senior market strategist at Kingsview Financial in Chicago. “The dollar is losing its status as the king of the hill, and gold is looking to take its place.” Gold futures for June delivery rose $11.30, or 0.8 percent, to $1,506.40 at 11:47 a.m. on the Comex in New York. The difference between yields on U.S. 10-year notes and Treasury Inflation Protected Securities, a gauge of trader expectations for inflation, today widened to as much as 2.66 percentage points. The spread reached 2.67 percentage points on April 11, the most in three years.
  • Cotton Farmers in China Fail to Boost Crop, Top Agency Says; Prices Climb. Cotton plantings in some areas of China, the largest importer, have fallen as record prices failed to spur increased acreage, according to the top economic planning agency, which highlighted a problem in the biggest producing region. Futures reversed losses to gain 1 percent.
  • China Orders Halt to Aluminum Projects to Curb 'Huge Waste'. China will immediately suspend approval of new aluminum projects as the world’s biggest producer and consumer of the metal faces overcapacity. Aluminum in London advanced to the highest level since 2008. The country faces a “really pressing” overcapacity and the government will “red light” new projects and cancel local- level preferential policies for the metal, Zhu Hongren, a spokesman for the Ministry of Industry and Information Technology, said at a briefing in Beijing today.
  • Banks Lag S&P as Slower Loan Growth Outweighs Higher Dividends. Bank stocks are underperforming the Standard & Poor’s 500 Index, even after Federal Reserve stress tests showed some financial institutions have regained enough strength to boost dividends and buy back their shares. Sluggish loan growth and increased costs from new regulations plague the industry, according to Paul Miller, a former examiner for the Fed Bank of Philadelphia and a bank analyst at FBR Capital Markets in Arlington, Virginia. He maintains a “neutral-to-negative” outlook for the sector. “I don’t think we’ll get enough economic growth to spur strong loan demand, which is the primary revenue-driver,” he said. “Some investors are concerned the economy will just slug around for the next three or four more years.” The Financial Select Sector SPDR Fund (XLF), an exchange-traded fund that tracks the largest financial companies, has lagged behind the S&P 500 since April 14, 2010, off 15.7 percent as of 10:30 a.m. today in New York Stock Exchange composite trading, hitting a new 52-week low on a relative basis.
  • VIX Drops to Lowest Level Since '07 as Intel(INTC), Yahoo(THOO) Earnings Top Estimates. The benchmark index for U.S. stock options slumped to its lowest intraday level since June 2007 as shares rallied on better-than-estimated quarterly reports from companies including Intel Corp. (INTC) and Yahoo! Inc. The VIX, as the Chicago Board Options Exchange Volatility Index is known, decreased 6.4 percent to 14.82 at 10:30 a.m. in New York, after falling as low as 14.30.
  • Obama May Require Contractors to Disclose Political Donations. The Obama administration has drafted an executive order that would require government contractors to disclose some of their political donations, White House press secretary Jay Carney said. Carney said a draft of the order exists. He declined to confirm any specifics, saying it “could change over time.” President Barack Obama “is committed to improving our federal contracting system,” Carney told reporters traveling with the president on Air Force One to California. “His goal is transparency and accountability.”
  • Syrian Military Response to Protest in Homs Leaves at Least 10 People Dead. Syrian activists said at least 18 protesters have died in clashes in the three days since President Bashar al-Assad ordered the Cabinet to make changes aimed at calming dissent. The government blamed terrorists for the violence, saying a general and three relatives were killed.
Wall Street Journal:
  • Budget Watchdog: Obama Deficit Plan 'Falls Short'. A soon-to-be-released analysis from a nonpartisan budget watchdog group suggests that there’s somewhat less deficit reduction than meets the eye in President Barack Obama’s new framework. It’s another setback for the president’s deficit plan, which already has been criticized for providing little if any detail in some crucial areas, and for fuzzing up the size of its proposed tax increases. The draft analysis by the Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget says that “the President’s framework falls short” in deficit reduction, particularly when compared to plans put out by House Republicans and by Mr. Obama’s blue-ribbon fiscal commission panel. Those other plans deliver about $4 trillion in deficit reduction over the next 10 years, according to the analysis. Mr. Obama’s plan promises $4 trillion over 12 years but delivers only about $2.2 trillion over 10 years (the standard budget measure), according to the analysis.
  • Emerging Economies' Fear: Easy Credit. Housing prices are rising rapidly in Australia, Canada, China, Hong Kong, Israel, Singapore, South Africa and Sweden. Housing prices are flat—or falling—in Britain, France, Germany, Ireland, Italy and the U.S. Welcome to the two-speed global economy.
  • IEA Urges China to Reduce Energy Subsidies. The head of the International Energy Agency called on China to more quickly reduce subsidies on gasoline, diesel and electricity. In an interview Wednesday with The Wall Street Journal, Nobuo Tanaka, executive director of the industrialized world's energy watchdog, said prices in China should reflect the fact that the age of cheap energy is over, a reality underlined by the Japanese nuclear crisis.
CNBC.com:
Business Insider:
Zero Hedge:
New York Times:
  • Borrowing Costs Rise for Spain and Portugal. Spain and Portugal on Wednesday managed to raise the targeted amounts in their latest debt auctions, an important test of market confidence amid Lisbon’s negotiations for a financial bailout and Madrid’s attempts to avoid needing one. Spain sold €3.37 billion, or $4.9 billion of debt, with the average yield on the benchmark 10-year bond rising to 5.47 percent from 5.16 percent last month. The auction met with strong demand and was at the top end of its target. That was an improvement on a Treasury bill auction on Monday, when Spain barely managed to meet its minimum target despite offering higher rates to investors.
Fox Business:
  • NYSE(NYX) CEO May Be Asked to Recuse Himself From Bid Consideration Process. Officials at the NYSE Euronext (NYX) may have accepted a deal from Deutsche Boerse, but rival exchanges aren’t walking away quietly. Sources tell FOX Business that the NASDAQ OMX(NDAQ) and IntercontinentalExchange(ICE) are considering asking NYSE CEO Duncan Niederauer to recuse himself from the process of considering their joint bid. The demand would come in a letter to Niederauer citing conflicts of interest that may impair his judgment as to whether a NASDAQ/ICE bid would be better for shareholders than Deutsche Boerse’s $35.29 a share offer. It is speculated that Niederauer, who has served as CEO since 2007, would be out of a job under a NASDAQ/ICE deal.
Politico:
  • Jan Brewer: White House Snubbed Me On Immigration Talks. Arizona Gov. Jan Brewer says that the White House gave her a “snub” by leaving her off the guest list for a meeting about immigration reform. “I wish I would have been invited,” the Republican said Tuesday night on Fox News. “You would have thought one of the governors would have been invited, since we are on the front lines fighting for security there. It was a little bit of a snub, if you will.” More broadly, she said, the meeting illustrated a disconnect between President Barack Obama’s immigration policy goals and the reality on the ground in border states.
  • Bobby Jindal Hammers President Obama on Drilling. The people of Louisiana have been “resilient” in responding to the spill, which came on the heels of five tough years following Hurricane Katrina and other storms that hit the Gulf Coast, he said. He encouraged Americans to support the region by buying Gulf Coast seafood and taking trips to the area. “It’s the safest, most delicious seafood you’ll ever find. … If you’re a tourist, visit the coastal areas. They would love your business.” But Jindal’s message wasn’t all boosterism. As he touted his state’s progress, he once again criticized the Obama administration for its moratorium last summer on deepwater drilling. “One of the side effects, one of the things we need to recover from is the administration imposed a one-size-fits-all moratorium after the spill,” he said. “We want drilling to be done safely but we don’t want to lose thousands of jobs down here.”
Reuters:
  • China Set to Unearth Shale Power. China has spent tens of billions of dollars buying into energy resources from Africa to Latin America to slake the unquenched thirst for fuel from its growing industry and burgeoning cities. But China may have more energy riches under its own soil than policy makers in the world's second-largest economy ever dared imagine. Just over a year ago, Beijing awakened to a technology revolution that has unlocked massive reserves of gas trapped within shale rock formations in the United States.
  • Exclusive: Gaddafi's Libya Dodges Fuel Sanctions Via Tunisia. Muammar Gaddafi's government is circumventing international sanctions to import gasoline to western Libya by using intermediaries who transfer the fuel between ships in Tunisia.
  • Rajaratnam Guilt 'Overwhelming' - US Closes at Trial. Raj Rajaratnam wanted to "conquer the stock market at the expense of the law," a U.S. prosecutor said in closing arguments of the hedge fund manager's insider trading trial on Wednesday.
Le Soir:
  • Belgian Finance Minister Didier Reynders doesn't support a restructuring of Greece's public debt, citing an interview.
Le Monde:
  • The U.S. "lacks a credible plan, in the medium term, to reduce its budget deficit," Olivier Blanchard, chief economist at the IMF said in an interview. "There are reasons to be worried," Blanchard said. European Union governments facing financial problems won't save themselves by budgetary measures alone, he said. "Given that it's impossible for them to devalue because of the common currency - the euro - they must improve productivity considerably or cut salaries, or both," Blanchard said.
Kyodo News:
  • Tokyo Electric Power Co. said it's possible that melting has occurred in the core of the No. 1 reactor at the Fukushima Dai-Ichi nuclear plant.
China Business News:
  • China's consumer price index will keep "high levels" in the second quarter, citing Zhou Wangjun, a deputy director of the National Development and Reform Commission's pricing department.
Haaretz.com:
  • Abbas: Britain and France Would Recognize Palestinian State. In interview to Palestinian daily Al-Ayyam, Palestinian President says PA seeks to fulfill Obama's vision to see a Palestinian state established in September. Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas reiterated that the Palestinians are ready for statehood, but that the PA does not agree with the Israeli idea of temporary borders. Speaking to the Palestinian daily Al-Ayyam, Abbas also said the PA would fulfill the vision of U.S. President Barack Obama, who said he wanted to see a Palestinian state established in September as determined by the Quartet of Mideast peacemakers.

Bear Radar


Style Underperformer:

  • Mid-Cap Value (+1.14%)
Sector Underperformers:
  • 1) Road & Rail -3.11% 2) Education -1.40% 3) Banks -.83%
Stocks Falling on Unusual Volume:
  • BTM, CREE, TNE, BBBB, URI, CSX, WFC, CCK, UNP, DLLR, DTG, DV, PKG, APOL, CCIH, TESO, SOHU, PWRD, MOBI, RVBD, CYOU, ISRG, LUFK, TDSC, BODY, DLLR, FCFS, WTFC, FMCN, MMYT, NTES, SNDA, PJC, FIX, RRR, DTG, KNX, SYK, USG, SCO and DST
Stocks With Unusual Put Option Activity:
  • 1) OCZ 2) SWC 3) WDC 4) VMW 5) WFC
Stocks With Most Negative News Mentions:
  • 1) TROW 2) RIG 3) CBS 4) AMR 5) CHK
Charts:

Bull Radar


Style Outperformer:

  • Mid-Cap Growth (+1.98%)
Sector Outperformers:
  • 1) Semis +3.17% 2) Disk Drives +2.71% 3) Software +2.52%
Stocks Rising on Unusual Volume:
  • SMCI, MU, TIN, UTX, TOT, TRS, INTC, MICC, WYNN, MYL, ASIA, ASML, GLNG, VMED, YHOO, RGLD, CBST, DPL, WF, PII, HBI, WNS, ALB, GRA, VMW, IL, CIT, KCG, CRM, APH, NANO, OCZ, DLB, APKT, TRGP, GORO, HUBG, PVH, AES, RAX, TRW, CHMT, FCX, NOR, BC, ULTA, CTXS, ADSK, MPWR, JCI, SMH, VMED, EMC, HAR, LTD and SIL
Stocks With Unusual Call Option Activity:
  • 1) DISH 2) AMAT 3) KLAC 4) CAKE 5) MMM
Stocks With Most Positive News Mentions:
  • 1) VMW 2) AOS 3) INTC 4) UTX 5) STJ
Charts:

Wednesday Watch


Evening Headlines

Bloomberg:
  • NATO Sees 'Limit' to Airstrikes' Power to Stop Qaddafi Forces. A NATO commander said “there is a limit” to the alliance’s ability to stop the Libyan regime’s shelling of Misrata, as the U.K. sent a team of military advisers to assist rebels fighting to end Muammar Qaddafi’s 42- year rule. Qaddafi’s troops have been using artillery and rockets in Misrata, under siege for about 50 days, with rebels holding part of the city and the port area that is their only supply link. Unicef, the UN Children’s Fund, said a ship carrying first aid kits, drinking water and other supplies for up to 25,000 people was expected to reach the port today, and the World Health Organization described Misrata Hospital as “overwhelmed,” with 120 civilian patients in need of emergency evacuation.
  • Fiscal Conservatives Dodge $10 Trillion Debt: Simon Johnson. Washington is filled with self- congratulation this week, with Republicans claiming that they have opened serious discussion of the U.S. budget deficit and President Barack Obama’s proponents arguing that his counterblast last Wednesday will win the day. The reality is that neither side has come to grips with the most basic of our harsh fiscal realities. Start with the facts as provided by the nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office. Compare the CBO’s budget forecast for January 2008, before the outbreak of serious financial crisis in the fall of that year, with its latest version from January 2011. The relevant line is “debt held by the public at the end of the year,” meaning net federal government debt held by the private sector, which excludes government agency holdings of government debt. In early 2008, the CBO projected that debt as a percent of gross domestic product would fall from 36.8 percent to 22.6 percent at the end of 2018. In contrast, the latest CBO forecast has debt soaring to 75.3 percent of GDP in 2018. What caused this stunning reversal, which in dollar terms works out to a $10 trillion swing for end-year 2018 debt, from $5.1 trillion to $15.8 trillion?
  • Swaps Regulator Watchdog Failed U.S. Government Standards Audit. The U.S. Commodity Futures Trading Commission’s internal watchdog has “significant deficiencies” in its auditing systems and received a failing grade in a government-required review completed in March. From October 2006 through March 2010, the agency’s Office of the Inspector General failed to meet government standards for quality control procedures, overseeing independent accountants, documenting budget requests, and auditing contractors, according to the 37-page review. The IG’s office also failed to regularly make its reports available on the Internet, the review said.
  • Georgia Joins Dissenters Opposing Writedown Plan in State Foreclosure Deal. Georgia Attorney General Sam Olens said he has “significant concerns” about a proposal to reduce loan balances for some homeowners as part of a settlement of a nationwide foreclosure probe, joining at least seven other states that have criticized such a plan. A deal with the top mortgage servicers in the U.S. that includes writedowns could encourage homeowners who are current on their loans to stop making payments, Olens, a Republican, said today in a telephone interview. “You’re declaring in advance who the winners and losers are,” Olens said. “I’m a little concerned that this process disengages the normal market forces.” Republican attorneys general in Virginia, Texas, Florida, South Carolina, Oklahoma, Nebraska, and Alabama have signed letters opposing the imposition of writedowns.
  • UAW Said to Seek Early Labor Agreements With GM(GM), Ford(F), Chrysler. The United Auto Workers is seeking an early contract settlement in talks with the U.S. automakers this year, breaking a pattern of brinksmanship that stretches at least four decades, two people familiar with the plan said. UAW Vice President Joe Ashton, who leads bargaining with General Motors Co. (GM), has said the union wants a deal before the current four-year agreements with GM, Ford Motor Co. (F) and Chrysler Group LLC expire on Sept. 14, said the people, who asked not to be identified revealing internal discussions. The union may seek a deal with GM first, one of the people said.
  • Wasteful U.S. Federal Spending Grows 15% Led By Health Agencies. Wasteful spending by U.S. agencies increased 15% to $125.4 billion in fiscal year 2010, with federal health care agencies making the most improper or unnecessary payments, according to congressional auditors. The increases in improper payments is "alarming," Kay Daly, the General Accountability Office's director of financial management and assurance, said in written testimony to a House Oversight and Government Reform subcommittee. The U.S. Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services made $70.4 billion in erroneous payments last year, the most of any agency, according to Daly's testimony.
  • BofA(BAC) Said to Plan Spinoff of $5 Billion Private-Equity Unit. Bank of America Corp. (BAC), the biggest U.S. lender by assets, plans to wind down its flagship $5 billion buyout fund, according to a person with knowledge of the plan.
  • Japan's Exports Fall a More-Than-Expected 2.2% After Quake. Japan’s exports fell more than economists expected in March as shipments of automobiles tumbled, declines analysts said may worsen as companies struggle to restore facilities and output in the wake of a record earthquake. Overseas shipments declined 2.2 percent from a year earlier, the first drop since November 2009, the Finance Ministry said in Tokyo today. The median estimate of 19 economists surveyed by Bloomberg News was for a 1.1 percent drop. Car exports fell 28 percent from a year earlier and shipments for electronic devices also slid as the disaster prevented companies from transporting goods.
Wall Street Journal:
  • Austerity Chills the Ardor for Muni Debt. For many cities and states, the love affair with debt has cooled, as governments cut back on spending and as borrowing comes under political attack.
  • None Dare Call It Default. For nearly a year, Europe's official refusal to acknowledge even the possibility of a Greek debt default has bordered on the comical. But with Greek two-year bonds yielding 20% and credit-default swaps priced as if a default is more likely than not, EU denial has gone from amusing to dangerous. Media reports this week have cited Greek, German, EU and IMF officials anonymously admitting the obvious: Even if Greece meets the targets agreed in its bailout package, it will be saddled with a debt burden that is unsustainable, which makes a restructuring of those debts, now approaching 150% of GDP, inevitable. All these reports have so far been met with strenuous denials from spokesmen and other officials. Behind these official denials lies a more sophisticated narrative that says a default or restructuring would hurt so many institutions that might need their own bailouts that relieving Greece of some of its burden will do more harm than good. According to this argument, it would be better for Greece to continue to muddle through for now on EU and IMF life support than to expose creditors, including Greek and other European banks, to potential losses on Greek debt. We could add a third argument, which is that openly discussing debt restructuring might make it inevitable, leading to capital flight. None of this is persuasive. With debt yields on Greek bonds at record highs, the market has already priced in the likelihood that Athens will never make good on its obligations on time and in full. At this stage, it makes more sense to inform taxpayers, investors and governments about where the exposure and risks lie, which is why it's vital that Europe's current stress tests look carefully at sovereign-default scenarios. If Greece must restructure its debt—and that seems very likely—better that it do so in an orderly fashion than to wait until its hand is forced. The conventional wisdom about the collapse of Lehman Brothers is that the worst of the financial panic could have been averted if only Lehman had been saved from going under. That wisdom is wrong. Lehman's collapse triggered a full-blown crisis in no small part because investors had little clarity about who was solvent and who wasn't, and who would be saved and who would be left to fail. The way to prevent Greece from becoming Europe's sovereign-debt Lehman isn't to pretend that a restructuring can't happen, but to start explaining how such an event could be handled, together with much greater disclosure of who could be hurt and how. Banks that are vulnerable can then get their houses in order before it's too late. One lesson from September 2008 is that pretending that the all-but-inevitable is inconceivable doesn't make it impossible. But it will make a crisis that much more acute when it arrives.
  • Facebook Seeking Friends in Beltway. President Barack Obama will travel to Facebook Inc.'s Silicon Valley headquarters Wednesday to hold a "town hall" meeting on the economy with users of the social-networking site. But Facebook is still trying to find a path to Washington, where the company has only a fledgling lobbying operation, even though it finds its privacy policies under increasing scrutiny and is trying to navigate a politically sensitive expansion into China.
  • Banker Darts Around Loan Gridlock.
  • Spill's Toll on Oil Output Grows Clearer. One year after the BP PLC oil spill, Gulf of Mexico energy output is beginning to show the impact of the Obama administration's 10-month freeze on deep-water drilling. Offshore oil production, most of which comes from the Gulf, is expected to average 1.55 million barrels a day this year, down 13% from 2010, according to the U.S. Energy Information Administration. Following the April 20, 2010, blast on the Deepwater Horizon drilling rig operated by BP and the subsequent oil spill, the Obama administration stopped awarding permits for deep-water drilling until late February. The drilling suspension, along with a new, slower permitting process, will result in the loss this year of about 375,000 barrels of oil a day, according to energy consultancy Wood Mackenzie.
  • The Other Medicare Cutters. Obama's plan relies on a politically insulated board of experts. The debate over Paul Ryan's Medicare reform ideas has largely been healthy, even amid the liberal distortions. But why has there been so little scrutiny of President Obama's new Medicare proposal? Anyone worrying about more individual choice and responsibility in health care might be interested to learn that the alternative is turning every one of these decisions over to a 15-member central committee.
  • China Economist: Current Interest Rates Not High Enough To Control Inflation. An economist with a Chinese state-run think tank said Wednesday that current interest rates are not high enough to control inflation and China should further raise the benchmark interest rates to strengthen its management of inflation expectations. Wang Jun, a researcher at the China Center for International Economic Exchanges, said at a conference that China's economy currently faces major risks from high inflation and real estate bubbles, and the authorities should continue to adopt a combination of policy tools, such as tightening monetary policy, to control liquidity, according to a transcript published on the website of the Xinhua News Agency. Wang said China should also increase flexibility in the yuan's exchange rate and use currency tools to curb the current high inflation. He said that China has been seeing a very strong hot money inflows since last year, which is an important contributor to China's excess liquidity and inflation because the central government has to issue more money to buy the new forex. China's central bank and financial institutions bought a net CNY407.9 billion worth of foreign exchange in March, up from CNY214.5 billion in February, according to a Dow Jones Newswires calculation based on central bank data. Wang added that inflationary pressure may probably remain high throughout this year. "Moderate inflation might be a long-term trend, " he said.
CNBC:
Zero Hedge:
IBD:
Forbes:
Institutional Investor:
TradersMagazine:
  • Hedge Fund In A Box. Trading shops looking to quickly deploy high-frequency trading strategies have a new ally. Rickard & Winans, a Chicago start-up, has built a combination order management/trading infrastructure platform for high-frequency traders. The system allows hedge funds or broker-dealers to integrate their trading strategies into an all-in-one platform that itself plugs into the markets. And while there are other vendors offering similar services - such as Portware or Ften - Rickard & Winans claim a distinction that, execs there say, improves performance.
Global Pensions:
  • Public Funds Increase Hedge Fund Exposure 50%. The research firm said 295 public pension plans worldwide are now known to be allocating to hedge funds, up from 196 in 2007. The mean allocation to the asset class has also grown in the same period from 3.6% to 6.6% and is now one percentage point higher than the average private equity allocation of these investors. Preqin found public pension systems generally invest in hedge funds for capital preservation and portfolio diversification purposes and seek absolute returns of 6.1%. This is lower than the average expectations of other investor types, which stand at 7%. Funds of hedge funds are also popular with pension funds - four-fifths of public pension systems making their first investments into the asset class in 2010 did so through multi-manager allocations. Overall, some 70% of all pension funds investing in hedge funds have funds of funds commitments in their portfolios. Hedge funds have outperformed public pension funds' average annualised return expectations of 6.15% by producing average returns of 9.8%. Despite negative returns over a three-year timeframe, public pension system investors have increased their allocations to the asset class. This is in stark comparison to the many high-net-worth counterparts that have reduced their hedge fund commitments during the period, Preqin said.
CharlotteObserver:
  • Letting The Banks Off The Hook. Judging by last week's performance, it looks as though the country's top bank regulator is back to its old tricks. Though, to be honest, calling the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency a "regulator" is almost laughable. The Environmental Protection Agency is a regulator. The OCC is a coddler, a protector, an enabler of the institutions it oversees.
USA Today:
  • Had A Naughty Misdial? Porn Firm Snaps Up 1-800 Numbers. Records obtained by The Associated Press show that over the past 13 years, a little-known Philadelphia company called PrimeTel Communications has quietly gained control over nearly a quarter of all the 1-800 numbers in the U.S. and Canada, often by grabbing them the moment they are relinquished by previous users. As of March, it administered more 800 numbers than any other company, including Verizon and AT&T. And many, if not most, of those 1.7 million numbers appear to be used for one thing: redirecting callers to a phone-sex service.
Reuters:
  • NRG Energy Abandons Texas Nuclear Expansion Plan. NRG Energy Inc said on Tuesday that regulatory uncertainty in the United States in the wake of Japan's Fukushima nuclear accident would force the company to abandon a plan for two additional reactors in Texas and to write off its investment in the project. NRG will record a first-quarter 2011 pretax charge of about $481 million for the impairment of net assets of Nuclear Innovation North America (NINA), its nuclear development joint venture with partner Toshiba American Nuclear Energy Corp (TANE), an affiliate of Toshiba Corp.
  • Intel(INTC), VMWare(VMW) Give Downtrodden Tech Sector a Lift. Strong results from a clutch of technology heavyweights, led by top global chip maker Intel Corp (INTC.O) and "cloud computing" specialist VMware Inc (VMW.N), may give the battered U.S. tech sector a boost. International Business Machines Corp (IBM.N) also blew past Wall Street targets, raising its profit forecast and citing strong sales of mainframe computers and brisk business in emerging markets. Those results set a brighter tone for a bedraggled tech sector than recent analysis might have suggested.
  • Intuitive Surgical(ISRG) Q1 Profit Tops Street View. Intuitive Surgical Inc (ISRG.O) reported higher-than-expected first-quarter profit on increased sales of its da Vinci robotic surgical systems and growth in procedures using its high priced equipment. Intuitive sold 120 da Vinci systems in the quarter at a cost of nearly $1.4 million each. That exceeded Wall Street estimates for 112 and brought total systems placed worldwide to 1,840. The company sold five da Vinci systems in Japan, which has been seen as an important area of future growth once Intuitive receives procedure reimbursement approvals there. However, the sales took place before the massive March earthquake and tsunami that has caused serious disruptions to Japan's healthcare system, Intuitive said.
Yomiuri:
  • The Japanese government may contribute several trillion yen to create a fund that will help Tokyo Electric Power Co. compensate victims of its nuclear accident, citing a person familiar with the plan.
  • Japan's three biggest banking groups will take a combined charge of 150 billion yen for a decline in the value of shares in Tokyo Electric Power Co.
Economic Observer:
  • China's National Development and Reform Commission is drafting a plan for an society-wide wage increase to help spur domestic consumption.
China Securities Journal:
  • Chinese central bank adviser Xia Bin said the nation may continue to increase interest rates because of the country's negative real rates and because property control measures have yet to be satisfactory. Xia said that short-term efforts to control consumer price gains are aimed at preventing the economy from overheating and that the central bank will use the reserve requirement ratio to control the nation's money supply. China's short term goal for the property market is to curb unreasonably rapid price increases, Xia said.
National Business Daily:
  • Nestle SA, Ausnutria Dairy Corp. and Friesland Foods raised milk powder prices in China by an average of about 20%.
Evening Recommendations
Citigroup:
  • Rated (REGN) Buy, target $68.
  • Reiterated Buy on (PKG), target $33.
  • Reiterated Buy on (WMB), target $38.
Night Trading
  • Asian equity indices are +.50% to +1.75% on average.
  • Asia Ex-Japan Investment Grade CDS Index 107.0 -4.0 basis points.
  • Asia Pacific Sovereign CDS Index 115.75 -.75 basis point.
  • S&P 500 futures +.58%.
  • NASDAQ 100 futures +.70%.
Morning Preview Links

Earnings of Note
Company/Estimate
  • (HCBK)/.18
  • (TXT)/.17
  • (ETN)/.80
  • (UTX)/1.07
  • (DGX)/1.00
  • (EMC)/.31
  • (NDAQ)/.60
  • (MO)/.44
  • (STJ)/.78
  • (ABT)/.90
  • (WFC)/.67
  • (FCX)/1.26
  • (APH)/.71
  • (UNP)/1.30
  • (T)/.57
  • (QCOM)/.80
  • (YUM)/.64
  • (FFIV)/.85
  • (ETFC)/.12
  • (GILD)/.97
  • (AMGN)/1.29
  • (WDC)/.67
  • (MAR)/.27
  • (BSX)/.04
  • (EW)/.42
  • (NE)/.18
  • (AAPL)/5.39
  • (AXP)/.92
  • (MI)/-.17
Economic Releases
10:00 am EST
  • Existing Home Sales for March are estimated to rise to 5.0M versus 4.88M in February.
10:30 am EST
  • Bloomberg consensus estimates call for a weekly crude oil inventory build of +1,300,000 barrels versus a +1,627,000 barrel increase the prior week. Distillate inventories are expected to rise by +150,000 barrels versus a -2,681,000 barrel decline the prior week. Gasoline supplies are estimated to fall by -1,750,000 barrels versus a -7,000,000 barrel decline the prior week. Finally, Refinery Utilization is expected to rise by +.88% versus a -3.0% decline the prior week.
Upcoming Splits
  • None of note
Other Potential Market Movers
  • The weekly MBA mortgage applications report and the Bank of America Merrill Auto Summit report could also impact trading today.
BOTTOM LINE: Asian indices are higher, boosted by commodity and technology shares in the region. I expect US stocks to open modestly higher and to maintain gains into the afternoon. The Portfolio is 75% net long heading into the day.