Friday, June 03, 2011

Bull Radar


Style Outperformer:

  • Large-Cap Value (-.57%)
Sector Outperformers:
  • 1) Oil Service +.79% 2) Coal +.70% 3) Homebuilders +.29%
Stocks Rising on Unusual Volume:
  • PLD, BHI, BAS, BTU, RL, DB, ESS, JPM, PBR, AIRM, TSLA, CECO, PANL, ASPS, SOLR, IPSU, VRUS, PSMT, SFLY, PEET, MELI, NFLX, LSTZA, SINA, AIXG, ARUN, CROX, OCN, KUB, COO, PCH and FRX
Stocks With Unusual Call Option Activity:
  • 1) MHS 2) IPI 3) AKS 4) BBY 5) ITW
Stocks With Most Positive News Mentions:
  • 1) UPL 2) CYBX 3) WMT 4) WAG 5) MYL
Charts:

Friday Watch


Evening Headlines


Bloomberg:

  • Economic Recovery Languishes as Americans Wait for Signal of Better Times. In Boulder, Colorado, Michael Englund, chief economist at Action Economics, hears the grumbling on the sidelines at his children’s sports matches. “The whole country’s talking about monetary policy, and it’s pretty hostile,” says Englund. “They’re asking me, ‘Are we still going to have a dollar in five years?’ ”
  • U.S. Mortgage Proposal May Lead to 'Rental Entrapment,' MBA's Stevens Says. Minorities and the working class may find it harder to buy homes under a U.S. plan that would require larger down payments to qualify for lower-cost mortgages, according to lenders, consumer groups and lawmakers. Bankers and consumer advocates, often at odds on policy issues, united today to make the case for revising the government proposal and released data that they said shows the rule would deny loans to millions of borrowers while doing little to reduce defaults.
  • Kan Pledge Sets Off Succession Maneuvering. Naoto Kan’s pledge to step down as prime minister set off a contest to select Japan’s next leader, adding to the risk of delays in reconstruction and revenue bills needed to restore growth and assuage credit concerns. “This is a new stage of real chaos in Japanese politics, and I don’t see any scenario where things will suddenly get better,” said Koichi Nakano, a political science professor at Sophia University in Tokyo. “Japan is paying a very high price for the instability at the top.”
  • Berkshire(BRK/A) Failed to Apply Sokol Standard at RV Unit, Ex-Manager Mart Says. Warren Buffett’s Berkshire Hathaway Inc., which investigated former executive David Sokol and said he violated insider-trading rules, failed to enforce its code of ethics when told of abuses at its recreational-vehicle unit, according to an ex-manager who is suing the company.
  • Groupon Files to Raise $750 Million in IPO. Groupon Inc., the top online-coupon provider, filed to raise $750 million in an initial public offering, riding a wave of Web-company share sales and giving investors a chance to bet on the surging daily-deal market. The IPO will be handled by Morgan Stanley (MS), Goldman Sachs Group Inc. (GS) and Credit Suisse Group AG (CSGN), according to the filing. Chicago-based Groupon, founded in 2008, will trade under the ticker GRPN.
  • Boehner Proposes Libya Resolution Demanding Details on U.S.'s Objectives. House Speaker John Boehner moved to head off a resolution seeking an end to U.S. military involvement in Libya by proposing an alternative demanding that President Barack Obama more fully spell out the mission’s purpose. “The president really does need to step up and help the American people understand why these missions are vital to the national security interests of our country,” Boehner, an Ohio Republican, told reporters today at a news conference in Washington. House Republicans met in private later in the day to discuss several resolutions voicing disapproval of U.S. support for the bombing campaign in Libya by the North Atlantic Treaty Organization to protect rebels and pressure dictator Muammar Qaddafi to step aside.
  • China's Boom Threatened by Enron-Style Tricks: William Pesek. Credit downgrades can elicit fascinating reactions. Take a January move by Standard & Poor’s to cut Japan’s rating to the same level as China’s. I expected the backlash to come from Tokyo. Instead, it was the Chinese who were aghast. Every Chinese official I’ve met since is bewildered that 10 percent growth and $3 trillion of currency reserves don’t buy a better grade than the AA- China shares with an overly indebted, aging nation that names a new prime minister every year. Many in China even think their economy deserves a higher score than the U.S., with its AAA rating. These views are as tantalizing as they are wrong. Credit risks are rising before our eyes as China battles a worsening inflation threat, the result of which will be slower growth. The process poses bigger risks to China’s creditworthiness and the world economy than investors may realize. The secret to China’s success? A huge, unreported accumulation of debt. Scattered around China are 20 cities that want international airports, glistening skyscrapers, five-star hotels, six-lane highways, world-class universities and cultural centers, Prada stores, Mercedes-Benz showrooms and ample housing. It is the largest urbanization in modern history. This building boom is taking place quietly, largely beyond the control of Beijing and financed with easy credit and local debt issuance. The surge of loans by banks to local authorities may spark a wave of bank failures that hobbles economic growth. The jump in local debt, which is tough to measure, increases the risk of default around the nation and leaves Beijing with a touchy question: Must it bail out local governments that went too far? Cities and provinces can’t borrow directly from banks, so they set up more than 8,000 investment companies to skirt regulations. Fitch Ratings predicts that, because of lending to these vehicles and to real estate developers, bad loans might reach 30 percent of the total at China’s banks. Expect a huge effort to push liabilities off balance sheets, Enron-style, as bankers scramble to mask the extent of their lending to local governments. It’s these kinds of financial shenanigans that have hedge fund managers like Jim Chanos of New York’s Kynikos Associates LP betting against China.
  • Sino-Forest Plunges as Short Seller Block Targets Stock Owned by Paulson. Sino-Forest Corp. (TRE), whose biggest shareholder is hedge fund Paulson & Co., plunged the most since October 2008 in Toronto trading after short seller Carson C. Block said it overstated timberland holdings and production in China’s Yunnan province. Sino-Forest, which is based in Hong Kong and Mississauga, Ontario, dropped as much as 25 percent and was C$3.75 lower at C$14.46 when trading was suspended on the Toronto Stock Exchange yesterday.
  • The euro may weaken to $1.30 this year, as increasing demand for options to sell the currency signal that recent gains have been driven by an "irrational" market, according to Mizuho Corporate Bank Ltd. "While the bond market has kept setting off all sorts of warning bells, the foreign-exchange market has been relatively bullish on the euro for the past six months, solely because of higher interest-rate expectations in the euro zone," said Daisuke Karakama, a market economist in Tokyo at Mizuho Corporate Bank. "The currency market is irrational, and the risk-reversals suggest that the euro should be corrected."
  • Fiat to Pay U.S. $500 Million for Chrysler Stake. Fiat SpA (F) will pay $500 million for the U.S. government’s remaining 6 percent stake in Chrysler Group LLC, ending the Treasury’s involvement in the automaker. The U.S. Treasury said it will receive an additional $60 million as part of a deal for Fiat to acquire the government’s rights to buy a union trust fund’s stake in Chrysler. The Canadian government will get $15 million from that part of the transaction, the Treasury said yesterday in a statement. With the new option to buy all of the Chrysler shares held by the United Auto Workers’ retiree health-care trust, Chief Executive Officer Sergio Marchionne may not need to hold an initial public offering.
  • If India and Pakistan Come to Nuclear Blows, Blame U.S.: Mishra. Are India and Pakistan likely to stumble into nuclear war? This appalling possibility has long been kept alive by conflicts between the two historical enemies, but it may have been pushed closer to fulfillment by a catastrophic failure of U.S. foreign policy in South Asia. In recent weeks, a cover story in the Economist on the world’s "most dangerous border" described Pakistan’s rush to militarize its nuclear capacity, and former U.S. Secretary of State Henry Kissinger warned of a pre-World War I, Balkans-like scenario in South Asia that leads to a global conflict. Other developments, which have largely escaped the radar of Western commentators, give deeper cause for foreboding. A day after U.S. Navy seals killed Osama Bin Laden, the Indian army and air chiefs declared that the Indian military was capable of mounting similar operations in Pakistan. Pakistan’s spy chief, Lieutenant General Ahmad Shuja Pasha, responded with the claim that the Pakistani military had already rehearsed retaliatory strikes on India. This isn’t just playground posturing.
Wall Street Journal:
  • Syrian Violence Tests U.S. Security forces loyal to Syrian leader Bashar al-Assad pressed a sustained assault against protesters Thursday in one of the bloodiest episodes in the so-called Arab Spring, exposing the quandary that President Barack Obama faces in trying to deal with a man he once thought he could convert into an ally. The killing of at least 70 people around the central town of Homs in the past five days, according to activists, brought to an estimated 1,100 the total toll in Mr. Assad's months-long crackdown and sparked tougher condemnation from the Obama administration.
  • SEC Probes China Auditors. The Securities and Exchange Commission is investigating some accounting firms over their audits of Chinese companies whose shares trade in the U.S., and the inquiry is expected to lead to enforcement cases, people familiar with the situation said. The SEC has Linkpublicly indicated it was examining accounting and disclosure issues regarding Chinese companies that engaged in "reverse mergers," which allow companies to list on U.S. exchanges without as much regulatory scrutiny as an initial public offering. People familiar with the matter say the investigation also includes auditors, which hadn't previously been known.
  • Gmail Hack Targeted White House. People who work at the White House were among those targeted by the China-based hackers who broke into Google Inc.'s Gmail accounts, according to one U.S. official. The hackers likely were hoping the officials were conducting administration business on their private emails, according to lawmakers and security experts.
  • Probe Deepens of Alleged Inside Trades at FDA. A federal inquiry into insider trading at the Food and Drug Administration, which has focused on an agency chemist who was charged in March, is expanding to look at other government employees, according to people familiar with the matter.
  • Former NPR Boss Schiller Hired by NBC. NBC News said Thursday that it had hired Vivian Schiller, who quit as chief executive of NPR in March, to a new role overseeing the news unit's digital strategy.
MarketWatch:
CNBC:
  • PBS Hackers Claim to Breach Sony Pictures. Just days after threatening to undertake an operation that it called "the beginning of the end for Sony," a hacker group claims to have compromised the personal information of over 1 million users of SonyPictures.com.
Business Insider:
  • Forget The Debt Ceiling, The White House Has A Whole New Problem On Capitol Hill. Moody's brought the debt ceiling back into focus today with its warning on the US credit rating, and Tim Geithner met with House freshmen on the issue. But we hear from a DC source that wasn't what all the buzz is about in Congress. Instead it's Libya. Congressman Mike Turner introduced a one page bill that basically just says: The Congress does not approve of Obama's actions. It's not binding or anything, but it does already have 62 co-sponsors. Where it gets interesting, according to The Hill, is that liberal Progressive Representative Dennis Kucinich actually introduced a measure that would mandate an immediate withdrawal from Libya, and it was going to come to a vote, until the GOP leadership realized it might actually pass, at which point their weight was thrown behind the more symbolic measure from Turner. For what it's worth, the Defense Department even came out with a warning about dire consequences if Libya funding were cut.
  • Why The Eurozone is Doomed to Extinction. Unless their economies rapidly start to mend, continuing in the euro will be economic suicide for the PIIGS once the backdoor subsidies stop. In this week's column, Robert Samuelson notes just how dire things are "Already, unemployment is 14.1% in Greece, 14.7% in Ireland, 11.1% in Portugal and 20.7% in Spain. What are the limits of austerity? Steep spending cuts and tax increases do curb budget deficits; but they also create deep recessions, lowering tax revenues and offsetting some of the deficit improvement." Add on top of this the drawbacks of an expensive currency and a tight monetary policy for a troubled economy, and they'd have to be crazy to stay. Maybe they are crazy--now. But clinging to a failed monetary peg causes problems that can drag on for years. Look at Argentina in the 1990s, or the entire developed world during the Great Depression: the longer a country clung to the gold standard, the longer and deeper the economic suffering. I think the chances of the euro zone surviving intact are now less than 50%. They're not 0%. But they do seem to be shrinking every day.
  • 5 Things You Need to Realize About China's Gigantic Bailout of Local Governments.
Zero Hedge:
IBD:
Reuters:
  • US Senate Bill Would Force CFTC to Act on Position Limits. An outspoken U.S. senator who criticized the country's futures regulator for failing to crackdown on energy speculation said on Thursday he will introduce legislation next week that will force the agency to act. Senator Bernie Sanders said the legislation would force the head of the U.S. Commodity Futures Trading Commission to use emergency authority to impose limits on the positions investors can take in crude oil, gasoline and heating oil. The move could occur without support from the majority of the agency's commissioners. The bill also would raise margin requirements in the markets and force big Wall Street houses to live within prescribed limits. "We cannot allow Wall Street speculators to continue to rip off the American people at the gas pump any longer," said Sanders, an Independent from Vermont. The Sanders legislation, which was still being drafted, would increase margin requirements for speculative trading in crude oil and heating oil to 25 percent. In addition, it would end all bona-fide hedging exemptions for bank holding companies including any of their affiliates and subsidiaries, such as Goldman Sachs (GS.N), Morgan Stanley (MS.N), JP Morgan Chase (JPM.N), Citigroup (C.N), Bank of America (BAC.N), and Credit Suisse (CSGN.VX).
  • China Under Suspicion in U.S. for Lockheed(LMT) Hacking. Suspicion that some individual or entity in China was behind a recent cyber attack on Lockheed Martin is growing among experts and agencies looking into the incident. "It's unclear at this point precisely who conducted the attacks, but given past history with these sorts of things, there's a strong tendency to look east. The Far East, in fact, and a country that not so long ago hosted the Olympics," said one U.S. official who asked for anonymity, but was reluctant to point the finger at China by name.
Standard:
  • Deferred payment programs offered by some Hong Kong real estate developers to home buyers are a sign that the city's property market has peaked and prices may start dropping soon, citing Chong Tai-leung, executive director of the Institute of Global Economics and Finance, at Chinese University of Hong Kong. Developers are seeking to sell as many apartments as possible while the prices are at their highest, citing Chong.
Wen Wei Po:
  • The Chinese central bank is expected to rely less on interest rate increases to control monetary policy this year, citing Fan Gang, head of the National Economic Research Institute of the China Reform Foundation.
Shanghai Securities News:
  • Residential land sales in 128 Chinese cities dropped 14% in the first five months of 2011 from a year earlier, citing investment advisor CEMB Group. Residential sales fell 84% in Beijing in the first five months from a year earlier and declined 44% in Shanghai.
China Securities Journal:
  • China's central bank may raise interest rates "asymmetrically," according to a commentary published in the China Securities Journal. The monetary authority may also raise banks' reserve requirement ratios this month depending on changes of liquidity in the banking system.
Evening Recommendations
  • None of note
Night Trading
  • Asian equity indices are -.50% to +.50% on average.
  • Asia Ex-Japan Investment Grade CDS Index 109.25 -.25 basis point.
  • Asia Pacific Sovereign CDS Index 113.50 +.25 basis point.
  • S&P 500 futures -.17%.
  • NASDAQ 100 futures -.15%.
Morning Preview Links

Earnings of Note
Company/Estimate
  • None of note
Economic Releases
8:30 am EST
  • The Change in Non-Farm Payrolls for May is estimated at +165K versus +244K in April.
  • The Unemployment Rate for May is estimated to fall to 8.9% versus 9.0% in April.
  • Average Hourly Earnings for May are estimated to rise +.2% versus a +.1% gain in April.
10:00 am EST
  • ISM Non-Manufacturing for May is estimated to rise to 54.0 versus a reading of 52.8 in April.
Upcoming Splits
  • None of note
Other Potential Market Movers
  • The Fed's Tarullo speaking, Fed's Warsh speaking, Fed's Rosengren speaking and the ASCO Meeting could also impact trading today.
BOTTOM LINE: Asian indices are slightly lower, weighed down by industrial and automaker shares in the region. I expect US stocks to open modestly higher and to weaken into the afternoon, finishing mixed. The Portfolio is 75% net long heading into the day.

Thursday, June 02, 2011

Stocks Slightly Lower into Final Hour on Growing Global Growth Worries, Rising Food Prices, Emerging Markets Inflation Fears, Eurozone Debt Concerns


Broad Market Tone:

  • Advance/Decline Line: About Even
  • Sector Performance: Mixed
  • Volume: About Average
  • Market Leading Stocks: Performing In Line
Equity Investor Angst:
  • VIX 17.88 -2.3%
  • ISE Sentiment Index 56.0 -32.53%
  • Total Put/Call 1.07 -5.31%
  • NYSE Arms .79 -82.40%
Credit Investor Angst:
  • North American Investment Grade CDS Index 93.10 +2.70%
  • European Financial Sector CDS Index 113.25 +3.53%
  • Western Europe Sovereign Debt CDS Index 196.58 -.17%
  • Emerging Market CDS Index 217.85 +.35%
  • 2-Year Swap Spread 20.0 +1 bp
  • TED Spread 22.0 +1 bp
Economic Gauges:
  • 3-Month T-Bill Yield .04% unch.
  • Yield Curve 257.0 +5 bps
  • China Import Iron Ore Spot $168.80/Metric Tonne unch.
  • Citi US Economic Surprise Index -90.90 +.4 point
  • 10-Year TIPS Spread 2.25% +4 bps
Overseas Futures:
  • Nikkei Futures: Indicating +20 open in Japan
  • DAX Futures: Indicating +34 open in Germany
Portfolio:
  • Slightly Higher: On gains in my Tech and Biotech sector longs
  • Disclosed Trades: Covered all of my (IWM)/(QQQ) hedges and some of my (EEM) short, then added back (IWM)/(QQQ) hedges
  • Market Exposure: Moved to 75% Net Long
BOTTOM LINE: Today's overall market action is mildly bullish as the S&P 500 trades near session highs, despite global growth concerns, rising food prices, more weak US economic data and emerging market inflation fears. On the positive side, Education, Airline, Road & Rail, Steel and Oil Service shares are especially strong, rising more than +1.0%. Cyclical shares are outperforming. Tech shares are also relatively strong. (XLF) is trading well today despite more negative financial sector news. The 10-year yield is bouncing +9 bps to 3.03%, which is also a positive. On the negative side, Tobacco, Retail, Medical Equipment, Paper, Coal and Telecom shares are under mild pressure, falling more than -.50%. (IYR) has underperformed again throughout the day. Copper is falling -.17%, oil is rising +.5% and lumber is falling -1.9%. Moreover, the UBS-Bloomberg Ag Spot Index is surging +2.1% and is very close to breaking out of its recent downtrend, which increases the odds of hard landings in key emerging markets. The US price for a gallon of gas is unch. today at $3.78/gallon. It is up .64/gallon in less than 4 months. The Japan sovereign cds is rising +1.05% to 87.0, the Brazil sovereign cds is gaining +1.85% to 106.76 bps and the California Muni cds is gaining +4.98% to 124.62 bps. Eurozone cds are not confirming recent euro currency strength, which is likely the result of very poor US economic data and US debt limit worries. US stocks continue to display exceptional resiliency in the face of mounting headwinds. A worse-than-expected jobs report tomorrow is likely priced in at this point, however the eurozone debt situation remains a large concern and traders are intensely focused on movements in the euro currency. I expect US stocks to trade mixed-to-lower into the close from current levels on global growth worries, eurozone debt concerns, emerging markets inflation fears, rising food prices and more shorting.

Today's Headlines


Bloomberg:

  • China Local-Government Debt Risk Needs 'Attention,' Bank of China Says. China’s central bank urged “paying attention” to the credit risks of local-government financing vehicles because their debts have long maturities and are difficult to oversee. Some companies set up by provincial and municipal governments to fund infrastructure projects are unsustainable, the People’s Bank of China said in a report on its website late yesterday. The loans are “generally large, with long maturities, and it is difficult to oversee their use,” the central bank said. China is increasing scrutiny of local-government borrowing to fund the construction of roads, airports and other infrastructure because of the risk of banks being saddled with bad loans. Local governments, barred from selling bonds or borrowing directly from banks, had set up more than 10,000 financing vehicles by the end of 2010 to raise money, mostly for infrastructure, the central bank said.
  • U.S. Jobless Claims Fell Less Than Forecast. More Americans than forecast filed applications for unemployment benefits last week, signaling the job market is weakening as employers trim staff to cut costs. Jobless claims fell by 6,000 to 422,000 in the week ended May 28, exceeding the 417,000 median forecast of economists surveyed by Bloomberg News, according to Labor Department figures today in Washington.
  • Sudden China Slowdown May Mean 50% to 75% Drop in Commodities, S&P Says. A “sudden” slowdown in China may lead commodity prices to fall as much as 75 percent from current levels, Standard & Poor’s said. Unexpected shifts in government policies or problems in the banking sector may trigger such a slowdown, S&P said in a report e-mailed today. The floor for aluminum is 65 cents to 70 cents a pound ($1,433 to $1,543 a metric ton), compared with about $1.20 a pound now and copper’s floor is $1.50 to $1.75 a pound, compared with $4.10 a pound currently, S&P said. “Given the extent to which China has bolstered commodity prices, that’s something that we have to be concerned about,” S&P analyst Scott Sprinzen said by telephone from New York. “The efforts by the government in China to slow growth are having an effect on commodity prices. It’s been a pretty modest correction so far.” In case of a sudden slowdown in the world’s biggest consumer of commodities, iron ore’s floor is $85 to $95 a metric ton compared with about $170 now, seaborne coking coal at the mine has a floor of $100 to $120 a ton, compared with about $180 now, and hot rolled coil steel’s floor is $475 to $525 a ton compared with about $750 now, according to the report. Commodities may “easily” drop 25 to 40 percent in the next 12 months, presenting an “enormous opportunity” for investors, David Stroud, chief executive officer of TS Capital, a hedge fund manager in New York, said in an e-mail today. Markets are “starting to look a lot like 2008,” he said. That year, the GSCI dropped 43 percent.
  • Goldman(GS) Said to Get Subpoena From New York Prosecutor. Goldman Sachs Group Inc. (GS), the fifth- biggest U.S. bank by assets, received a subpoena from the Manhattan District Attorney’s office seeking information on the firm’s activities leading into the credit crisis, according to two people familiar with the matter.
  • Company Bond Risk Rises to Six-Week High in Europe, Swaps Show. The cost of protecting European corporate bonds from default rose to the highest in six weeks, according to traders of credit-default swaps. Contracts on the Markit iTraxx Crossover Index of 40 companies with mostly high-yield credit ratings increased 7 basis points to 379, the widest since April 18, according to JPMorgan Chase & Co. at 4 p.m. in London. The Markit iTraxx Europe Index of 125 companies with investment-grade ratings rose 1.25 basis points to 104.5 basis points. The Markit iTraxx Financial Index linked to senior debt of 25 banks and insurers climbed 4.5 basis points to 159 basis points and the subordinated index was up 5 at 261.
  • Oil Declines After U.S. Reports Unexpected Increase in Crude Inventories. Crude oil futures fell for a second day after a U.S. government report showed an unexpected increase in inventories to the highest level in two years. Crude dropped as much as 1.8 percent after the Energy Department said supplies climbed 2.88 million barrels to 373.8 million in the week ended May 27, the highest level since May 2009. Inventories were forecast to decline by 1.6 million barrels, according to the median of 13 analyst estimates in a Bloomberg News survey. Gasoline inventories also gained. “The fact that there is a quite large build in gasoline seems very bearish,” said Sean Brodrick, a natural resource analyst with Weiss Research in Jupiter, Florida. “Refiners are not making distillates because they intentionally want to bring inventories down to a more manageable, healthier level and because they don’t see demand,” said Evans. The rate at which refineries operated fell to 86 percent from the previous week’s 86.3 percent. “Overall, the numbers are quite bearish,” said Todd Horwitz, chief strategist at Adam Mesh Trading Group in New York. “I am looking for prices to fall to $95 by next week.”
  • Sports-Gear Prices May Rise in Sign of Consumer Inflation. Retailers are poised to boost prices on athletic footwear, apparel and sports equipment as they join other industries in passing along rising costs for commodities, foreign labor and freight. More than 90 percent of sporting-goods manufacturers paid higher input costs in the first quarter, and 41 percent of these companies already increased wholesale prices, according to a quarterly survey of private, independent vendors and retailers conducted by Robert W. Baird & Co. “This clearly demonstrates the emerging cost and price pressure across the sporting-good space,” said Peter Benedict, a retail analyst in Stamford, Connecticut, at Baird. “We’re hearing a consistent message from vendors and retailers that cotton, fuel and wage costs are starting to go up, and they’re slowly going to come through on the retail side later this year and certainly in 2012.”
  • Fed's QE2 Failed to Boost U.S. Spending, Pimco's El-Erian Says: Tom Keene. The Federal Reserve’s quantitative easing policy failed to meet the “ultimate objective” of boosting employment and economic growth, said Mohamed El-Erian, chief executive officer at Pacific Investment Management Co. While the bond-purchase program pushed investors into higher-yielding assets such as stocks, the “transmission mechanism” to lower unemployment by driving more money into the economy didn’t work, El-Erian of Pimco, the world’s biggest manager of bond funds, said in a radio interview on “Bloomberg Surveillance” with Tom Keene. “If success is defined in terms of the ultimate objective, which is pushing up valuation in order for people to spend more on goods and services and therefore get the economy to grow and unemployment to come down rapidly, then the answer is no,” El- Erian said from Newport Beach, California.
Wall Street Journal:
  • Gas Prices, Economy Leave Retailers With Mixed May Sales. Upscale merchants and retailers that sell gasoline turned in the best sales growth in May, continuing to see strength while the momentum of many other retailers waned. Uncertainty over the economy and high gasoline prices contributed to U.S. shoppers' reluctance to spend. The 24 retailers tracked by Thomson Reuters posted 4.9% growth in May same-store sales, missing expectations for a 5.4% gain. This is retailers' first miss since December. The results follow 2.6% growth a year earlier.
Business Insider:
Seeking Alpha:
Politico:
  • FCC Could Make VoIP Providers Pay to Connect Calls. More and more Americans are abandoning home telephone lines in favor of mobile phones, Skype, Google Voice and Vonage — and that leaves the Federal Communications Commission with a problem: figuring out what digital-age companies should pay to connect calls to the old Ma Bell network. One possible upshot: higher rates for low-cost or “free” Internet calls.
Reuters:
  • EU Agrees in Principle on New Greek Bailout - Sources. Senior euro zone officials have agreed in principle on a new international bailout of Greece that will give it more time to try to resolve its debt crisis, a source close to the talks said on Thursday. The Economic and Financial Committee of deputy ministers and senior officials of the 17-nation currency zone approved the plan in principle in talks in Vienna that ended in the early hours of the morning, the source said. The second bailout of Greece, which will effectively replace a 110 billion euro ($160 billion) scheme launched in May last year, will run until mid-2014, giving Athens an additional year of financial support beyond the original plan, the source said.
Efe:
  • Talks between Spanish unions and employers over changes to collective wage-bargaining rules have broken down, citing people in the unions.

Bear Radar


Style Underperformer:

  • Mid-Cap Value (-.33%)
Sector Underperformers:
  • 1) Retail -.90% 2) Hospitals -.78% 3) Medical Equipment -.77%
Stocks Falling on Unusual Volume:
  • LO, UVV, JCP, KSS, NSANY, USNA, TTM, FTO, USMO, SNB, TIN, CYBX, VRA, TFM, ZUMZ, JOSB, CPRT, PCH, THRX, BANRD, SNDA, CBRL, DEST, ULTA, RSTR, GIFI, NNBR, IDXX, PANL, OMCL, CRDN, SEE, PIQ, BXS and VRA
Stocks With Unusual Put Option Activity:
  • 1) JOE 2) DHI 3) ACI 4) XLP 5) LO
Stocks With Most Negative News Mentions:
  • 1) CBRL 2) ASCA 3) CHKP 4) SJM 5) GIS
Charts:

Bull Radar


Style Outperformer:

  • Mid-Cap Growth (+.18%)
Sector Outperformers:
  • 1) Education +11.06% 2) Airlines +1.21% 3) HMOs +.58%
Stocks Rising on Unusual Volume:
  • ESI, STRA, APOL, CECO, LOPE, LINC, EDMC, JOYG, ELS, DV, WPO, MOV, BPI, QNST, UNG, RLD and GNW
Stocks With Unusual Call Option Activity:
  • 1) BRCD 2) COCO 3) APOL 4) CECO 5) ESI
Stocks With Most Positive News Mentions:
  • 1) SKS 2) ALNY 3) BKE 4) OSIS 5) NRGY
Charts: