Thursday, May 19, 2011

Today's Headlines


Bloomberg:

  • LinkedIn(LNKD) Surges in First Day of Trading. LinkedIn Corp., the largest professional-networking website, more than doubled in the first day of trading after its initial public offering. The stock surged as much as $77.70 to $122.70 and traded at $108.70 at 12:25 p.m. on the New York Stock Exchange under the symbol LNKD. LinkedIn sold 7.84 million shares at $45 each, the Mountain View, California company said in a statement yesterday. At $100 a share, LinkedIn is worth about $9.45 billion, or 25 times 2011 revenue, assuming first-quarter sales are matched over the next three quarters. Facebook, the world’s largest social-networking site, would be valued at about $100 billion using the same multiple.
  • Jobless Claims in U.S. Fall More Than Forecast to 409,000, Reversing Surge. Fewer Americans than forecast filed applications for unemployment benefits last week, making it more likely that the surge in April was caused by temporary events rather than a deterioration in the labor market. Jobless claims declined by 29,000 to 409,000 in the week ended May 14, Labor Department figures showed today in Washington. The median estimate of economists in a Bloomberg News survey called for a drop to 420,000. The four- week moving average, a less volatile measure than the weekly figures, rose to 439,000 last week from 437,750. The unemployment rate among people eligible for benefits, which tends to track the jobless rate, held at 3 percent.
  • Existing-Home Sales in U.S. Unexpectedly Fall. Sales of existing U.S. homes unexpectedly declined, manufacturing in the Philadelphia region slowed and consumer confidence dropped, pointing to an economy that is struggling to regain momentum following the surge in energy costs. Purchases of existing homes decreased 0.8 percent to a 5.05 million annual pace in April, the National Association of Realtors said today in Washington. The Federal Reserve Bank of Philadelphia’s general economic index fell in May to the weakest reading in seven months, and the Bloomberg Consumer Comfort Index slumped to a nine-month low, other reports showed.
  • Global Company Earnings to Grow Faster-Than-Estimated 18%, Citigroup Says. Global per-share earnings will rise 18 percent this year, faster than an earlier forecast, amid stronger revenue growth and sustained margins, according to Citigroup Inc. Earnings per share, or EPS, are estimated to increase 11 percent in 2012 and 9 percent in 2013, analysts led by Robert Buckland, Citigroup’s chief global strategist, wrote in a report yesterday. The brokerage had predicted in September earnings- per-share growth of 12 percent this year. The MSCI All Country World Index may end the year at 380, higher than an earlier forecast of 360, the analysts said. The MSCI index rose 0.2 percent to 344.60 as of 12:02 p.m. in Singapore. The index has jumped 21 percent in the past 12 months and is valued at 12.6 times estimated profits, compared with the average of 13.8 times over the last four years. “Companies are generating faster revenue growth than we originally expected,” Buckland said in the report. “In addition, cautious cost management means that current margins are at least sustainable for now.”
  • Obama Speaks as Arab World Questions Whether It Should Listen. When President Barack Obama outlines his vision of U.S. policy in the Middle East today, his challenge will be to get people in the region to care. The excitement generated by Obama’s call two years ago for a “new beginning” in U.S.-Arab relations evaporated as people waited for changes that haven’t come, said Robert Danin of the Council on Foreign Relations and others who study the region. As protests have swept the Arab world, toppling some leaders and challenging others, U.S. influence has been diminished by a response seen as cautious and inconsistent, Danin and other analysts said. And the U.S. has suffered some public diplomatic setbacks in dealing with Bahrain, Yemen, Syria, and the Israelis and Palestinians. “It’s not clear what the United States says right now matters to the people of the Middle East,” Danin said.
  • Libyan Rebel Official Says Death Toll After Revolt Reaches at Least 15,000. At least 15,000 people have been killed in Libya and NATO should step up attacks against Muammar Qaddafi’s forces besieging cities in the western mountain range, said Abdel Hafiz Ghoga, vice president of the rebels’ National Transitional Council.
Wall Street Journal:
  • Obama Endorses 1967 Borders for Israel. President Barack Obama called for Israelis and Palestinians to seek a two-state solution based on the 1967 borders in a speech that laid out a new vision for the Middle East, saying the U.S. is facing a historic opportunity to adapt to the rapid changes in a region.
  • IMF Succession Battle Mounts. The battle for the top job at the International Monetary Fund kicked into high gear Thursday, with Europeans staking their claim for the post and Asian and emerging nations arguing now is their time to lead the international institution.
MarketWatch:
  • 5 Money Moves One China Basher is Making Now. “China has a credit bubble that makes ours look like nothing,” said Bernstein, CEO of Richard Bernstein Advisors and former chief investment strategist and head of Merrill Lynch’s Investment Strategy Group. “Gold,” he added, “is not in a bubble but it is about as close as you can get.”
CNBC.com:
Business Insider:
Real Clear Markets:
Reuters:
Financial Times Deutschland:
  • The European Central Bank may no longer accept Greek sovereign debt as collateral if loan maturities are extended, citing European officials.
Handelsblatt:
  • German Chancellor Angela Merkel supports French Finance Minister Christine Lagarde as the new head of the IMF, citing people close to the government coalition.

Bear Radar


Style Underperformer:

  • Large-Cap Value (+.05%)
Sector Underperformers:
  • 1) Coal -1.74% 2) Semis -1.15% 3) Disk Drives -.71%
Stocks Falling on Unusual Volume:
  • TSL, NETL, SSYS, GPRO, ONXX, KLAC, CHBT, ENZN, WSM, AVEO, TDW, AAP, BIG and BKE
Stocks With Unusual Put Option Activity:
  • 1) YRCW 2) SPG 3) AMSC 4) CX 5) MEE
Stocks With Most Negative News Mentions:
  • 1) STP 2) ATK 3) CTRN 4) TDW 5) GA
Charts:

Bull Radar


Style Outperformer:

  • Large-Cap Growth (+.01%)
Sector Outperformers:
  • 1) Airlines +.77% 2) Road & Rail +.67% 3) Restaurants +.58%
Stocks Rising on Unusual Volume:
  • TOT, PHG, SI, CHU, IPGP, ETE, ELOS, PETM, JACK, DLTR, PETD, MAKO, BSFT, MERC, NTES, SFSF, VOLC, ZEUS, USTR, NDSN, IPSU, RAVN, SINA, TZOO, LCAPA, SXCI, TTC, BSFT, TMO, CEDC, FLO and PHG
Stocks With Unusual Call Option Activity:
  • 1) TTWO 2) XHB 3) CBOE 4) CHRW 5) CMA
Stocks With Most Positive News Mentions:
  • 1) AFL 2) TIF 3) SCHN 4) KEY 5) PFCB
Charts:

Wednesday, May 18, 2011

Thursday Watch


Evening Headlines


Bloomberg:

  • Japan's Economy Shrinks More Than Forecast. Japan’s economy shrank more than estimated in the first quarter after the March 11 earthquake and tsunami disrupted production and prompted consumers to cut back spending, sending the nation to its third recession in a decade. Gross domestic product shrank an annualized 3.7 percent in the three months through March, following a revised 3 percent drop in the previous quarter, the Cabinet Office said today in Tokyo. The median forecast of 23 economists surveyed by Bloomberg News was for a 1.9 percent drop.
  • Lagarde May Stake Claims as First Female IMF Chief. France may have to rely on Christine Lagarde’s track record as a euro crisis fighter if she’s to become the International Monetary Fund’s first female chief after the downfall of her compatriot Dominique Strauss-Kahn. Lagarde, 55, has the negotiating skills and an understanding of Europe’s sovereign debt crisis needed for the post, say analysts including Charles Grant at the Centre for European Reform. IMF shareholders will assess if those qualities are enough to allow France to keep the job for itself after securing four out of the 10 managing directors since 1946.
  • Corn, Soybeans, Wheat Futures Soar as U.S. Planting Delays Threaten Yields. Corn futures rose the most in six weeks, wheat had the biggest gain in two months, and soybean and rice prices surged as adverse weather from North Dakota to Louisiana to Europe threatened to erode crop production. In the U.S., corn planting was 63 percent complete as of May 15, down from the 75 percent average in the past five years, as soggy fields hindered fieldwork, mostly east of the Mississippi River and in northern states, government data show. Spring-wheat, soybean and rice sowing also were behind the pace of recent years. The Ohio Valley and North Dakota will see more rain this week, AccuWeather Inc. said. Corn futures for July delivery climbed 29.5 cents, or 4.1 percent, to settle at $7.4975 a bushel at 1:15 p.m. on the Chicago Board of Trade. Earlier, the price rose by the exchange limit of 30 cents. The grain has more than doubled in the past year on tightening global supplies and increasing demand from ethanol producers and livestock farmers. Wheat futures for July delivery surged 53 cents, or 6.9 percent, to $8.17 a bushel in Chicago, the biggest jump since March 17. The price has climbed 75 percent in the past year as drought slashed crops in Russia and threatened production in the U.S. Great Plains. Wheat futures in Minneapolis rose 6.4 percent, and prices in Paris gained 4.6 percent. Soybean futures for July delivery rose 38.5 cents, or 2.9 percent, to $13.795 a bushel on the CBOT, the biggest gain this month. The oilseed has climbed 47 percent in the past 12 months.
  • Baidu(BIDU) Accused of Aiding Chinese Censorship. Baidu Inc., the owner of China’s most popular search engine, was sued by eight Chinese residents of New York who say the company helps the Chinese government censor political expression in violation of the U.S. Constitution. The plaintiffs’ “writings, publications and coverage of pro-democracy events has been censored and banned from any search performed on the Baidu.com Inc. search engine,” they said in a complaint filed today in Manhattan federal court. China “openly and routinely uses censorship of political speech and information on the Internet to silence criticism of the government in China and the ruling Chinese Communist Party,” the plaintiffs allege in their complaint. The plaintiffs are also charging that Baidu and China violated New York State civil rights laws. They are demanding $16 million in damages from Baidu and the Chinese government, which is also a defendant. “China will be required to answer the complaint or there will be a default judgment against them,” Stephen Preziosi, the New York-based lawyer representing the plaintiffs, said in a telephone interview.
  • Longtop Short-Sellers Show Mistrust Undermines China IPO Market. The blog post accusing Longtop Financial Technologies Ltd. (LFT) of fraud appeared April 26. The Hong Kong-based maker of financial software, whose 2007 initial public offering was underwritten by Goldman Sachs Group Inc. (GS) and Deutsche Bank AG (DBK) and which had 11 analyst “buy” ratings, was no match for investor skepticism. Shares slumped 31 percent in a two-day rout that left them at the lowest since March 2009. Yesterday, a day after Nasdaq trading was suspended, the company announced it wouldn’t file financial statements on May 23 as previously planned. It didn’t set a new date.
  • IMF Chief Strauss-Kahn Seeks Court Review of Bail Denial.
  • Glencore IPO to Raise $10 Billion as BlackRock(BLK), Aabar Defy Commodity Rout. Glencore International Plc will start trading in London today after selling $10 billion of stock in an initial public offering that coincided with the worst rout in commodities in two years.
Wall Street Journal:
  • States May Turn to Munis to Repay Unemployment Loans. Some states already beset with budget woes may turn to the municipal-bond market in coming months to help them fix yet another problem: shoring up their underfunded unemployment-benefits programs.
  • Jewish Donors Warn Obama on Israel. Jewish donors and fund-raisers are warning the Obama re-election campaign that the president is at risk of losing financial support because of concerns about his handling of Israel. Some Jewish donors say President Barack Obama has pushed Israeli leaders too hard to halt construction of housing settlements in disputed territory, a longstanding element of U.S. policy. Some also worry that Mr. Obama is putting more pressure on the Israelis than the Palestinians to enter peace negotiations, and that the president has allowed relations with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to fray. One top Democratic fund-raiser, Miami developer Michael Adler, said he urged Obama campaign manager Jim Messina to be "extremely proactive" in countering the perception in the Jewish community that Mr. Obama is too critical of Israel.
  • Oystermen Scrape Bottom. Mississippi Flooding Threatens Louisiana Industry Reeling From 2010 Oil Spill.
  • Republican Plan to Speed Up Oil Drilling Is Defeated in Senate. For the second time in as many days, the U.S. Senate defeated an energy plan that attempted to combat skyrocketing gasoline prices as Democrats and Republicans continue their fight over energy policy.
MarketWatch:
  • Obama to Offer Debt Relief in Mideast Speech. President Barack Obama will offer debt relief and other aid to Egypt in a major speech about the Middle East on Thursday, senior U.S. officials said. Obama will outline a plan to bolster economic development in Egypt — as well as the region in general — in the wake of the political uprisings that swept through the area earlier this year. Obama will offer debt relief of about $1 billion over two to three years to Egypt, as well as U.S. government loan guarantees worth an extra $1 billion to finance infrastructure and create jobs, senior Obama administration officials told reporters Wednesday.
Business Insider:
Zero Hedge:
IBD:
CNNMoney:
NY Times:
OpenSecrets.org:
USA Today:
Financial Times:
  • Levin in 'Real Hope' of Fresh Goldman(GS) Probe. Carl Levin, chairman of the U.S. Senate Permanent Subcommittee on Investigations, said there's "real hope" law enforcement authorities would follow up his panel's report, which accused Goldman Sachs Group Inc.(GS) of misleading clients, citing an interview with Levin.
  • Greek Debt Talks Cast Doubt Over Sovereign CDS. In one sense, Greece may be about to get its revenge on the speculators blamed by politicians for exacerbating the country’s debt crisis. If eurozone leaders press ahead with plans to extend Greek bond maturities in a “soft” or voluntary debt restructuring, then traders in credit default swaps could be one of the main casualties.
Telegraph:Link
  • IMF Tells Greece to Stop Dragging Its Heels Over Reform. The International Monetary Fund has told Greece to step up its efforts to sort out its finances in the most stern warning yet from the bailed-out nation's rescuer. The Washington-based lender is worried the country will not meet the deficit-cutting targets agreed as part of its €110bn (£97bn) IMF/EU aid package. "The view that seems to be taking hold is that the government programme is not working," said Poul Thomsen, head of the IMF mission currently in Greece to measure the country's progress towards tax and spending goals. "The programme will not remain on track without a determined re-invigoration of structural reforms in the coming months," he told an Athens conference. "Unless we see this invigoration, I think the programme will run off track."
21st Century Business Herald:
  • China should raise deposit rate to eliminate negative real interest rates, citing central bank adviser Li Daokui.
Evening Recommendations
Citigroup:
  • Reiterated Buy on (DE), target $105.
  • Reiterated Buy on (ANF), target $86.
CSFB:
  • Reiterated Outperform on (DE), target $111.
Janney Montgomery:
  • Rated (ARUN) Buy, target $38.
  • Rated (BRCD) Buy, target $8.
  • Rated (JNPR) Buy, target $48.
  • Rated (EMC) Buy, target $34.
  • Rated (RVBD) Buy, target $45.
Night Trading
  • Asian equity indices are -.25% to +1.0% on average.
  • Asia Ex-Japan Investment Grade CDS Index 105.50 -1.5 basis points.
  • Asia Pacific Sovereign CDS Index 114.50 -1.0 basis point.
  • S&P 500 futures +.09%.
  • NASDAQ 100 futures +.15%.
Morning Preview Links

Earnings of Note
Company/Estimate
  • (PLCE)/1.05
  • (DLTR)/.75
  • (TDW)/.51
  • (FLO)/.46
  • (SSI)/-.01
  • (SHLD)/-1.12
  • (WSM)/.28
  • (BKE)/.73
  • (TTC)/1.61
  • (GME)/.54
  • (ROST)/1.48
  • (INTU)/2.28
  • (GPS)/.39
  • (ZUMZ)/.02
  • (ARUN)/.15
  • (ADSK)/.37
  • (CRM)/.27
  • (ARO)/.20
  • (FL)/.44
  • (RRGB)/.24
Economic Releases
8:30 am EST
  • Initial Jobless Claims for last week are estimated to fall to 420K versus 434K the prior week.
  • Continuing Claims are estimated to fall to 3728K versus 3756K prior.
10:00 am EST
  • Existing Home Sales for April are estimated to rise to 5.2M versus 5.1M in March.
  • Leading Indicators for April are estimated to rise +.1% versus a +.4% gain in March.
  • Philly Fed for May is estimated to rise to 20.0 versus 18.5 in April.
Upcoming Splits
  • (ALXN) 2-for-1
Other Potential Market Movers
  • The Fed's Dudley speaking, Fed's Evans speaking, 1Q Mortgage Delinquencies/Foreclosures, 10-Year TIPS Auction, weekly EIA natural gas inventory report, Bloomberg Economic Expectations Index for May, weekly Bloomberg Consumer Comfort Index, Morgan Stanley Refining Conference, Piper Jaffray Clean Tech Conference, BofA Merrill Transport Conference, (STM) analysts day, (LRG) investor breakfast, (HCN) investor day, (GFIG) investor day, (WY) investor meeting and the (IRBT) analyst day could also impact trading today.
BOTTOM LINE: Asian indices are mostly higher, boosted by commodity and industrial shares in the region. I expect US stocks to open modestly lower and to rally into the afternoon, finishing modestly higher. The Portfolio is 100% net long heading into the day.

Stocks Surging into Final Hour on Commodity Sector Bounce, Short-Covering, Bargain-Hunting, Earnings Optimism


Broad Market Tone:

  • Advance/Decline Line: Substantially Higher
  • Sector Performance: Almost Every Sector Rising
  • Volume: Slightly Below Average
  • Market Leading Stocks: Outperforming
Equity Investor Angst:
  • VIX 16.59 -5.47%
  • ISE Sentiment Index 131.0 +21.30%
  • Total Put/Call 1.0 -13.04%
  • NYSE Arms 1.10 +33.23%
Credit Investor Angst:
  • North American Investment Grade CDS Index 89.77 -.77%
  • European Financial Sector CDS Index 97.67 +2.17%
  • Western Europe Sovereign Debt CDS Index 179.33 +1.65%
  • Emerging Market CDS Index 203.93 -1.26%
  • 2-Year Swap Spread 19.0 unch.
  • TED Spread 22.0 unch.
Economic Gauges:
  • 3-Month T-Bill Yield .03% unch.
  • Yield Curve 262.0 +2 bps
  • China Import Iron Ore Spot $175.90/Metric Tonne -1.24%
  • Citi US Economic Surprise Index -43.90 -.1 point
  • 10-Year TIPS Spread 2.35% +5 bps
Overseas Futures:
  • Nikkei Futures: Indicating +48 open in Japan
  • DAX Futures: Indicating +39 open in Germany
Portfolio:
  • Higher: On gains in my Biotech, Medical, Retail and Tech sector longs
  • Disclosed Trades: Covered all of my (IWM)/(QQQ) hedges and some of my (EEM) short
  • Market Exposure: Moved to 100% Net Long
BOTTOM LINE: Today's overall market action is very bullish as the S&P 500 builds on yesterday's afternoon reversal despite eurozone debt worries, more hawkish fed commentary, emerging market inflation fears and rising food/energy prices. On the positive side, Road & Rail, HMO, Disk Drive, Semi, Computer, Ag, Oil Service, Alt Energy and Coal shares are especially strong, rising more than +2.0%. Small-caps and cyclicals are outperforming. The euro continues to trade poorly. Copper is jumping +2.5% and Lumber is gaining +1.1%. The US Muni CDS Index is falling -1.83% to 123.0 bps and the Saudi sovereign cds is falling -1.97% to 112.41 bps. On the negative side, Education, Airline and Education shares are down on the day. (XLF) has underperformed throughout the day. Oil is rising +2.56%, gold is gaining +.72% and the UBS-Bloomberg Ag Spot Index is surging +2.94%. The US price for a gallon of gas is falling -.01/gallon today to $3.93/gallon. It is up .79/gallon in 91 days. The Spain sovereign cds is rising +2.8% to 240.50 bps, the Greece sovereign cds is rising +3.07% to 1,313.15 bps and the US sovereign cds is jumping +11.1% to 45.75 bps. India's Sensex continues to trade very poorly, falling another -.28% overnight, despite gains in the rest of Aisa, and is now down -11.81% for the year. As well, Brazil's Bovespa is falling another -.84% today and is down -8.98% ytd. While today's commodities surge is a short-term positive for the broad market, it remains a longer-term negative as it intensifies emerging market inflation fears and raises the odds of hard-landings in those economies. The tone of the market is very positive today, however volume is lacking. I suspect stocks, after a brief pause, can build on recent gains through week's end. I expect US stocks to trade mixed-to-higher into the close from current levels on technical buying, short-covering, bargain-hunting, buyout speculation and earnings optimism.

Today's Headlines


Bloomberg:

  • Fed Favors Exit Strategy of Raising Rates. Federal Reserve policy makers began to coalesce last month on a strategy to reverse record monetary stimulus by first ending their reinvestment policy and later raising interest rates and selling assets. Almost all officials agreed that the “first step toward normalization” should be ceasing reinvestment of principal payments on mortgage debt that began in August, the Federal Open Market Committee said in records of its April 26-27 session, released today in Washington. A majority preferred to sell the Fed’s securities after raising short-term interest rates, and most wanted to put asset sales on a preannounced schedule while using federal-funds rate increases as an “active tool.” The talks over the exit strategy don’t mean that tightening “would necessarily begin soon,” the report said. Policy makers agreed that the Fed’s securities portfolio, set to reach $2.6 trillion next month, would be shrunk “over the intermediate term” and return to “essentially only Treasury securities,” the minutes said. Some of the 10 voting FOMC members said that “there would need to be a significant change in the economic outlook, or the risks to that outlook, before another program of asset purchases would be warranted.” Another “few” members saw the “increase in inflation risks as suggesting that economic conditions might well evolve in a way that would warrant the Committee taking steps toward less-accommodative policy sooner than currently anticipated,” the report said.
  • Oil Climbs Above $100 After Report Shows Unexpected Drop in U.S. Supplies. Crude oil climbed above $100 a barrel in New York after an Energy Department report showed an unexpected drop in U.S. inventories as refineries bolstered operating rates and imports declined. Oil advanced as much as 3.5 percent after the department said supplies fell 15,000 barrels to 370.3 million last week.
  • Commodities Gain Most in a Week as Drought, Low Stockpiles May Curb Supply. Commodities gained the most in a week as drought in Europe and the U.S., lower energy stockpiles and crop delays in Brazil revived speculation of reduced supplies. The Standard & Poor’s GSCI Index of 24 raw materials gained 3 percent to 692.76 as of 5:47 p.m. in London, the biggest advance since May 9. Copper rose 2.8 percent, crude oil climbed 3.8 percent, wheat gained 5.8 percent and raw sugar jumped 3.6 percent.
  • Silver May Drop 16% After Breaking 100-Day: Technical Analysis. Silver, which has plunged 33% since reaching a 31-year high last month, will drop another 16% by the end of the year, according to technical analysis by CommoditiesXpress LLC, a unit of MF Global.
  • TEPCO Misleading Public Over Nuclear Crisis. Tokyo Electric Power Co. has made misleading statements about when it will stabilize its nuclear reactors crippled by the March 11 earthquake and tsunami, said Tetsuo Ito, head of the Atomic Energy Research Institute at Kinki University in western Japan. The company, known as Tepco, yesterday reiterated the schedule on its so-called road map announced a month ago to achieve cold shutdown of the three radiation-leaking reactors as early as October. Setting a timetable without knowing the condition of the reactor cores doesn’t make sense, Ito said in a phone interview from Osaka. “Only after understanding what’s going on inside the buildings and reactors, will it be clear what parts of the timetable are achievable,” Ito said. “Devising a road map without that will give the public a false sense of security.”
  • Greek Debt Restructuring Would Jeopardize Rest of Europe, Bini Smaghi Says. European Central Bank Executive Board member Lorenzo Bini Smaghi rejected any debt restructuring for nations such as Greece as it would “jeopardize all of Europe.” A debt restructuring, whether “hard or soft,” would require a recapitalization of banks, which would be hard to carry out in a country that has defaulted, Bini Smaghi said in a speech in Milan today. “The state of public finances in Greece, Ireland and Portugal represents the biggest challenge of the coming years,” he said. “Time has been lost talking about how to come up with a way to reduce the debt, but if we accept this we’ll jeopardize all of Europe. A solution for reducing debt but not paying for it will not work.”
  • Fisher Sells More Than $1 Billion of Emerging Stock ETFs in Contrarian Bet. Billionaire Kenneth Fisher said a surge in investor optimism toward developing nations spurred his money-management firm to sell more than $1 billion of emerging- market exchange-traded funds last quarter. Fisher Investments sold 20.6 million shares of the iShares MSCI Emerging Markets Index fund and about 2 million shares of the Vanguard MSCI Emerging Markets ETF, according to regulatory filings. The Woodside, California-based firm, which had held more than 20 million shares in the iShares fund since at least September 2008, cut its stake by 99 percent and was the top seller among more than 400 investors that reduced holdings in the period ended March 31, data compiled by Bloomberg show. “This is about sentiment having gotten too ebullient, too sanguine,” Fisher, who oversees about $44 billion as chief executive officer of Fisher Investments, said in a phone interview yesterday. “Things that lead a bull market early on reach a period at some point, which we think is about now, where they start to run out of steam.”
  • Fed's Bullard Sees Europe Debt Crisis as Top Risk to U.S. Economic Outlook. Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis President James Bullard said the European sovereign-debt crisis has surpassed rising oil prices to become the biggest risk to the economic outlook in the U.S. “I would have said oil a few weeks ago, but now with those prices retreating, just sitting here today, I’m a little more worried about Europe than anything else,” Bullard said today in an interview at Bloomberg’s global headquarters in New York.
  • Apple(AAPL) iPad's 'Buzz Saw' Success Cuts Into PC Sales. The iPad is wreaking havoc on the personal-computer market. Hewlett-Packard Co. (HPQ)’s consumer PC sales plunged 23 percent last quarter, and the company lopped $1 billion off its annual sales forecast. And while rival Dell Inc. (DELL) beat analysts’ estimates because of corporate demand, its sales to consumers slumped 7.5 percent. More than 70 million tablets like the Apple Inc. (AAPL) iPad will be sold in 2011, a total that will balloon to 246 million in three years, Jefferies & Co. said yesterday. “You’re walking into a buzz saw,” Jane Snorek, a senior research analyst at Nuveen Asset Management in Milwaukee, said of the iPad. Her firm manages more than $200 billion in assets. “The tablet is going to replace at least the home computer.”
Wall Street Journal:
  • With $4 Gas, More Folks Skip the Trip. Americans living paycheck to paycheck are looking at the gas gauge before they run their errands, and that's hurting big retail chains such as Wal-Mart Stores Inc. and Lowe's Cos. "Our customers are consolidating trips due to higher gas prices," said Wal-Mart U.S. head Bill Simon during the retailer's earnings conference call Tuesday. "One in five Wal-Mart moms list gasoline as a top expense behind housing and car payments."
  • Check Out The Future of Shopping. A device that looks like a smartphone is making supermarket shoppers—and stores—happier. Perched on the handle of the shopping cart, it scans grocery items as the customer adds them to the cart. Shoppers like it because it helps avoid an interminable wait at the cashier. Retailers like it because the device encourages shoppers to buy more.
  • Deere's(DE) Earnings Rise 65%. Deere & Co.'s fiscal-second-quarter earnings surged 65%, and the company raised its sales and profit forecasts for the year, as favorable market conditions for farm commodities continues to drive demand for farm machinery. Deere beat expectations for the quarter as farmers around the world responded to high crop prices by stepping up their purchases of tractors and harvesting combines. But the company's margin on farm machinery weakened, despite a big increase in sales.
  • LinkedIn IPO Sizzles.
  • The IRS Gets Political. The taxman goes after campaign donors.
CNBC.com:
  • China Economic 'Facade' Starts to Show Cracks. China's economy is showing real signs of weakening, particularly in real estate, and even could tip into a recession, hedge fund manager Jim Chanos told CNBC. "The cracks are spreading in the facade," he said. "You're seeing real estate firms shutter, sales offices closed down. Some of the engine behind the boom is at least beginning to sputter." At least on the surface, the biggest perceived problem with China has been inflation.
Business Insider:
Zero Hedge:
New York Times:
  • Rules for Employees Put the S.E.C. in the Hot Seat. The Securities and Exchange Commission is feeling more heat in Washington. As it prepares final rules on whistle-blowers in an effort to encourage corporate employees to disclose wrongdoing at their own companies, the agency has come under renewed criticism in Congress over how it handles its own employees, who often leave for jobs at private law firms and financial companies. Questions continue to arise about whether S.E.C. officials show favoritism as they look for their next jobs.
TheStreet.com:
Seeking Alpha:
CSA Agency:
  • More than half of French people think that Dominique Strauss-Kahn is the victim of a plot, according to an opinion poll carred out by the CSA Agency. 57% replied that there was a plot against Strauss-Kahn while 35% said that this wasn't the case. The survey was carried out on May 16 by telephone with a sample of 1,007 people, CSA said.
The Financial Express:
  • Worst Performer Among BRIC, Indian Bonds to Extend Drop on Spiraling Fuel Prices. Indian bonds, the worst performers among Bric nations, may extend declines as the biggest increase in gasoline prices in three years threatens to accelerate inflation, banks and primary dealers say. Yields on 10-year government debt will rise 10 basis points, or 0.10 percentage point, by June 30 to 8.40%, the highest level since October 2008, according to the median estimate of nine analysts in a survey.