Monday, July 11, 2011

Monday Watch


Weekend Headlines

Bloomberg:

  • Euro Drops as European Leaders to Meet Amid Contagion Concerns. The euro fell to a two-week low against the dollar and yen after a meeting of the chiefs of the European Union and European Commission was enlarged amid concern Italy may be engulfed in the region’s sovereign debt crisis. The meeting today will now include European Central Bank President Jean-Claude Trichet, Luxembourg Prime Minister Jean- Claude Juncker and European Economic Commissioner Olli Rehn, ahead of a monthly gathering of euro-area finance ministers, according to the European Union President’s office. “Italy is a very large economy, and if indeed we do see contagion spread toward Italy, then the ECB, EU and IMF will need to come up with a totally different plan to deal with it,” said Khoon Goh, head of market economics and strategy at ANZ National Bank Ltd. in Wellington. News of the meeting has “got the market off to a nervous and risk-off start and we’re seeing the euro decline.” The 17-nation euro fell 0.4 percent to $1.4208 as of 8:09 a.m. in Tokyo from $1.4265 on July 8, after earlier touching $1.4198, the lowest level since June 27.
  • Italy Moves to Curb Short Selling After Contagion Concerns Slam Markets. Italy’s financial-market regulator moved to curb short selling after the country’s benchmark stock index fell the most in almost five months and bonds tumbled on investor concern Italy would be the next victim of the region’s debt crisis. The regulator known as Consob ordered last night that short sellers must reveal their positions when they reach 0.2 percent or more of a company’s capital and then make additional filings for each additional 0.1 percent. The measure takes effect today and lasts until Sept. 9. Consob’s commissioners held the emergency meeting yesterday after the country’s benchmark FTSE MIB index (FTSEMIB) plunged 3.5 percent on July 8, led by a decline in UniCredit SpA (UCG) and other bank shares that are the among the largest holders of the country’s debt. The yield on Italy’s 10-year bond rose to a nine-year high of 5.27 percent, driving the premium investors demand to hold the country’s debt over German bunds to a euro-era high of 244 basis points. UniCredit, the country’s largest bank, plunged 7.9 percent and Banca Intesa SpA, the second-biggest lender, dropped 4.6 percent. Both hit lows not seen since the period when markets were emerging from the crisis spawned by the collapse of Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc.
  • China Inflation Surging Past 6% Leaves Wen With 'Delicate' Balancing Act. China’s inflation accelerated to the fastest pace in three years, highlighting the challenge for policy makers of sustaining growth while taming prices. The consumer price index increased 6.4 percent in June, the National Bureau of Statistics said yesterday, exceeding the 6.2 percent median estimate of economists surveyed by Bloomberg News. The world’s second-biggest economy is already cooling after the government curbed lending by boosting lenders’ reserve requirements to a record and raising interest rates five times since September, most recently on July 6. A deeper-than- anticipated slowdown in China would curtail a global expansion imperiled by a potential default by Greece and signs the U.S. recovery is faltering. China “is in a delicate position right now,” said David Cohen, a Singapore-based economist for Action Economics Ltd. who previously worked at the U.S. Federal Reserve. The government “wants to remain vigilant on inflation, but they don’t want to slam on the brakes too hard,” Cohen said. Inflation was mainly driven by a 14 percent gain in food costs and also pushed up by an unfavorable base for comparison a year earlier. Pork, a Chinese staple, rose 57 percent. Producer prices rose 7.1 percent in June from a year earlier, the statistics bureau said yesterday, compared with 6.8 percent in May and the 6.9 percent median estimate in a Bloomberg News survey. Consumer-price inflation compared with 5.5 percent in May. Non-food consumer prices climbed 3 percent, the biggest gain since at least 2005, yesterday’s report showed. Housing- related costs rose 6.2 percent. “China’s inflation pressures remain strong,” said Liu Li- Gang, who formerly worked for the World Bank and is chief China economist at Australia & New Zealand Banking Group Ltd. in Hong Kong. The central bank is likely to raise interest rates again by the end of September, as “very high” producer-price inflation “implies that China’s inflation is unlikely to peak this month,” he said.
  • PBOC Adviser Says China Needs Prudent Policy, Securities Reports. Chinese central bank adviser Xia Bin said the nation needs to maintain prudent monetary policy during the next several years, the China Securities Journal reported. The central bank should continue using open market operations and reserve requirement ratio increases to drain "unreasonable" additional cash from the economy, citing Xia. China should also keep the yuan's exchange rate flexible to some extent and gradually push real interest rates toward positive territory, Xia said. The country should introduce taxes on capital inflows and also institute reserve requirements for capital inflows, for which there are no interest payments, to deter "hot money," Xia said.
  • ECB Seeks Expansion of Euro-Rescue Fund to Help Italy, Welt Says. The European Central Bank is seeking to have the euro-rescue fund expanded to include help for Italy, Die Welt reported, citing unidentified “high ranking” people at central banks. The fund may have to be doubled to 1.5 trillion euros ($2.14 trillion) to cover a crisis in Italy, the ECB said according to the German newspaper. Central banks are no longer ready to buy government debt, so the rescue fund should take on that task instead, according to the bankers, Die Welt said preview of an article for tomorrow's edition.
  • Gillard Sets A$23 Carbon Tax to Reduce Australia’s Fossil Fuel Dependence. Prime Minister Julia Gillard unveiled Australia’s first tax on greenhouse gas emissions from July 2012 to reduce dependence on fossil fuels and encourage renewable energy in the world’s biggest-coal exporting country. Australia expects to raise some A$27.8 billion ($30 billion) in three years by making polluters pay an initial charge of A$23 ($24.74) a ton of carbon dioxide, then lifting the price by 2.5 percent a year, plus inflation, Gillard said today in Canberra. The tax will switch to a cap-and-trade system in 2015, while the plan provides about A$47 billion through 2020 to help households and industries and spur renewable energy. Gillard, Australia’s least popular prime minister for 13 years, wants to cut emissions in the developed world’s biggest per-capita polluter to at least 5 percent below 2000 levels by 2020. She already has support from the Greens party and the three independent lawmakers needed to pass the program after plans to price carbon and tax profits of miners cost her predecessor, Kevin Rudd, his job.
  • Iron Ore Imports by China Decline as Monsoon Rains in India Slow Shipments. China, the world’s biggest buyer of iron ore, cut purchases by 4 percent in June from the previous month as India’s wet season curbed shipments and as Chinese mills sought supplies from domestic mines. Imports were 51.09 million metric tons last month compared with 53.3 million tons in May, according to China’s General Administration of Customs. That’s 8 percent higher than 47.2 million tons a year earlier, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.
  • Investors Cut Bullish Agriculture Bets to One-Year Low on Supply Outlook. Funds trimmed bets on rising agriculture prices for a third straight week, sending holdings to the lowest in a year as supply concerns eased. Speculators reduced their net-long position in 11 U.S. farm goods by 6.6 percent to 564,174 futures and options contracts in the week ended July 5, government data compiled by Bloomberg show. That’s the lowest since July 6, 2010. Investors more than doubled their net-short bets for wheat. Corn holdings slumped 16 percent.
  • Qaddafi Threatens Europe, Vows Regime Won't Fall. Libyan leader Muammar Qaddafi said his regime won’t fall and threatened to retaliate against Europe for its involvement in attempts to overthrow him. “Libyans will advance toward Europe willing to commit suicide, for we will go to heaven and they will go to hell,” Qaddafi said, according to a recording of his speech that was aired yesterday on Al Arabiya television. “Tens, hundreds or thousands of Libyans might die in Europe. We will raid their houses, women and children, like they raided us, and I told you an eye for an eye, a tooth for a tooth,” Qaddafi said. “We are threatening them now.”
  • Big Companies 'A Bit Wary' on Technology Spending, HP Chief Says. Large corporations are exercising caution about large-scale information technology spending amid concerns about global economic growth and fiscal uncertainty, Hewlett-Packard Co. (HPQ) Chief Executive Officer Leo Apotheker said. While technology upgrades are under way at many companies, “everybody’s a bit cautious in an environment like this,” Apotheker said today on the sidelines of the Rencontres Economiques conference in Aix-en-Provence, France. “People are still a bit wary.”
  • Kiplinger Warns Customers Hackers Got Account, Credit Card Information. Kiplinger Washington Editors Inc., the publisher of Kiplinger’s Personal Finance, warned customers that hackers breached its computer network at least as early as June 25 and stole account data, including credit card numbers. Doug Harbrecht, the company’s director of new media, said the attackers stole user names, passwords and encrypted credit card numbers from as many as 142,000 subscribers to the magazine or the company’s various newsletters, including the Kiplinger Letter.
  • Asia Doubles Silicon Factories, Pursues Gain Through Glut as Prices Dive. Asia’s largest makers of silicon for solar panels are almost doubling their factory size this year just as surplus production sends prices tumbling for the main raw material for the $35 billion industry. Korea’s OCI Co. and GCL-Poly Energy Holdings Ltd. (3800) of China said they’ll increase capacity to a combined 88,000 metric tons a year from 48,000 tons. Global demand for the material, known as polysilicon, is growing at less than a third of that rate, and spot prices fell 32 percent in the second quarter, Bloomberg New Energy Finance estimated. Asians are deploying equipment to refine silicon crystals more quickly than Western competitors. They anticipate gaining share from the world’s largest suppliers, Hemlock Semiconductor Corp. of the U.S. and Germany’s Wacker Chemie AG (WCH), as customers increasingly demand lower prices for the key material used in panels to convert sunlight into electricity.
  • Best Currency Forecasters Say Dollar Slump Over as Index Tumbles. The best currency forecasters say that the dollar’s 13 percent slide over the past year is coming to an end as Europe’s deepening debt crisis discourages bets against the world’s reserve currency.
  • Fed on Hold Longest Since 1940s as Curve Shows Slower Growth. The Federal Reserve may keep interest rates at record lows for the longest period since World War II as the economic slowdown that sparked a four-month bond rally worsens, according to Treasury market signals. The 3 percentage point gap between yields for three-month and 10-year Treasuries indicates the economy may grow 1.1 percent in the 12 months ending June 2012, a study by the Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland says. That’s less than half the central bank’s current forecast, and may delay any rate increase from the zero-to-25 basis point range held since December 2008.
  • China Three-Year Local Government Debt Fails. China’s finance ministry failed to sell all of the three-year debt offered at an auction on behalf of local governments as a cash crunch curbed demand. The ministry sold 23.9 billion yuan ($3.7 billion) of bonds at a yield of 3.93 percent on behalf of 11 provinces and municipalities, falling short of its 25 billion yuan target, said a trader at a finance company required to bid at the auction. The Shanghai interbank offered rate, or Shibor, for three-month yuan loans, was fixed at 6.24 percent today, near a record high of 6.46 percent reached on June 28. “While the interbank borrowing cost is so high, investors won’t spend money on local government debt,” said Huang Yanhong, a bond analyst at Bank of Nanjing Co. in Nanjing. “Demand is low also because the debt’s secondary-market trading isn’t active. After you buy it, you can only hold it till maturity.”
Wall Street Journal:
  • Deficit Negotiators Hit Reset. President Barack Obama and Republican leaders in Congress clashed Sunday over the scope of an effort to cut the federal deficit, one that could be shorn of its most ambitious elements, including revamping the tax code and significantly reducing growth in benefit programs.
  • Little Hiring Seen by Small Businesses. The U.S. labor market could stay sluggish for a while, with small-business executives reluctant to hire amid the murky economic outlook. Almost two-thirds—64%—of small-business executives surveyed said they weren't expecting to add to their payrolls in the next year and another 12% planned to cut jobs, according to a U.S. Chamber of Commerce report to be released Monday. Just 19% said they would expand their work forces. This comes after a Labor Department report Friday showed employers added few jobs in June, and unemployment rose to 9.2%.
  • A Falling Dollar Pushes Exports, Draws Risks. Since hitting a peak in February 2002, the dollar is down about 28%, according to an inflation-adjusted index from the Federal Reserve based on the values of a wide variety of other currencies. Aside from making U.S. products cheaper for foreigners, a weaker dollar raises the cost of imported items Americans want or need. Worse, if the dollar falls too far or too fast, foreign investors and creditors will lose confidence in the U.S. economy. "We shouldn't think that driving the dollar to the bottom of the sea is the answer to all our problems," said Robert Dye, a senior economist at PNC Financial Services Group Inc.
  • Monsanto(MON), Sinochem in Deal Talks. Chemicals conglomerate Sinochem Corp. is in advanced discussions with Monsanto Co. to deepen their ties significantly, people familiar with the discussions said, an important sign of China's growing appetite for U.S. crops and biotechnology. The two companies have been in talks for months, the people said. It was unclear what form an agreement might take, though arrangements could include a large joint venture, the sale of a minority stake or Sinochem assuming a larger role marketing Monsanto products in China.
  • Taxes Upon Taxes Upon... Obama wants $1 trillion in taxes on top of what he's already signed.
CNBC:
IBD:
NY Times:
  • U.S. Is Deferring Millions in Pakistani Military Aid. The Obama administration is suspending and, in some cases, canceling hundreds of millions of dollars of aid to the Pakistani military, in a move to chasten Pakistan for expelling American military trainers and to press its army to fight militants more effectively. Coupled with a statement from the top American military officer last week linking Pakistan’s military spy agency to the recent murder of a Pakistani journalist, the halting or withdrawal of military equipment and other aid to Pakistan illustrates the depth of the debate inside the Obama administration over how to change the behavior of one of its key counterterrorism partners. Altogether, about $800 million in military aid and equipment, or over one-third of the more than $2 billion in annual American security assistance to Pakistan, could be affected, three senior United States officials said.
  • Summer Camps Make Shift to Build Competitive Skills.
  • Shelia Bair's Bank Shot. ‘They should have let Bear Stearns fail,” Sheila Bair said. It was midmorning on a crisp June day, and Bair, the 57-year-old outgoing chairwoman of the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation — the federal agency that insures bank deposits and winds down failing banks — was sitting on a couch, sipping a Starbucks latte. We were in the first hour of several lengthy on-the-record interviews. She seemed ever-so-slightly nervous. Long viewed as a bureaucratic backwater, the F.D.I.C. has had a tumultuous five years while being transformed under Bair’s stewardship.
Business Insider:
Zero Hedge:
Boston Herald:
  • Fukushima Government Eyes Drastic Measure on Cattle After Cesium Scare. As excessive levels of radioactive cesium have been detected in beef cattle shipped from near the Fukushima No. 1 nuclear power plant, the Fukushima prefectural government is considering asking livestock farmers to voluntarily stop shipping cows, officials said Saturday. The request would apply to cattle in areas that have been designated as "emergency evacuation preparation zones," which lie mostly between 12.42 and 18.64 miles from the nuclear plant.
Washington Post:
  • Short-Termism and the Risk of Another Financial Crisis. The nation is still struggling with the effects of the most serious financial crisis and economic downturn since the Great Depression. But Wall Street seems all too ready to return to the same untenable business practices that brought it to its knees less than three years ago.And some in government who claim to be representing Main Street seem all too ready to help.
PostStar.com:
  • Many Concerned About Impact of Proposed New Rule to Boost Mortgage Down Payments to 20%. When legislators passed the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act passed last year, they intended sweeping reform of the financial system, including unscrupulous mortgage practices responsible for the subprime meltdown. Many say they did not, however, have any intention of requiring 20 percent down payments on residential mortgages. Earlier this year, the regulatory agencies responsible for interpreting the Dodd-Frank mandates proposed some specific rules regarding mortgages, among them a requirement for larger down payments for the vast majority of loans. The proposal has spurred a vociferous reaction from some lawmakers, consumer organizations, lenders, real estate professionals and insurers, who say it would stifle the housing recovery and prevent a majority of buyers from obtaining loans.
TVNewser:
  • CNBC Names Carl Quintanilla, Melissa Lee New 'Squawk on the Street' Anchors. CNBC has decided on its new anchors for the 2-hour “Squawk on the Street” morning show. The business channel is tapping several veterans to fill the seat left vacant following the death May 25th of longtime anchor Mark Haines and the departure three weeks earlier of co-anchor Erin Burnett, now at CNN. CNBC SVP Nik Deogun announced that starting tomorrow, Melissa Lee and Carl Quintanilla will co-anchor the show, with contributions from Jim Cramer, Simon Hobbs and David Faber.
Baltic Economy Watch:
  • Smoke On The East European Horizon? With so much emphasis being placed on what has been happening farther to the South, economic realities on Europe's Eastern periphery have largely been escaping the close scrutiny of media and analyst attention.
Rasmussen Reports:
  • Daily Presidential Tracking Poll. The Rasmussen Reports daily Presidential Tracking Poll for Sunday shows that 21% of the nation's voters Strongly Approve of the way that Barack Obama is performing his role as president. Forty percent (40%) Strongly Disapprove, giving Obama a Presidential Approval Index rating of -19 (see trends).
Reuters:
  • EU Protectionism Blocking Bank Recapitalisation - Zhu. Protectionism in Europe is hampering the recapitalisation of the region's banks and the stabilisation of the financial sector, IMF adviser Min Zhu said on Sunday. "The key issue to stabilise the financial sector is to raise capital," Zhu told a conference in southern France. "The capital raising process in the banking sector in this region is being left behind the other countries in the world. Why? Because there is still protectionism." He cited state ownership of banks and barriers to cross-border mergers and acquisitions as two significant obstacles to recapitalisation. "If we can solve this issue, then the banking sector will be able to raise money from the private sector and raise their capital ratios," he said. IMF sources told Reuters this week that Zhu, a Chinese national who was a special adviser to former IMF Managing Director Dominique Strauss-Kahn, was expected to fill a new deputy managing director post to be created by the Fund's new chief, Christine Lagarde.
Financial Times:
  • Europe May Accept Greek Bond Defaults in Bailout Plan. European leaders are prepared to accept that Greece should default on some of its bonds as part of a new bailout plan for the country that would put its total debt levels on a sustainable footing, citing unnamed senior officials. The new plan, to be discussed at a meeting of euro area finance ministers tomorrow, could also include new concessions by European lenders to reduce Greece's debt, including further lowering interest rates on bailout loans and a broad-based bond buyback program, the FT said.
  • US Retail Industry Embraces Alternative Strategies.
  • Hedge Fund Industry Faces Shake-Up. By 2013, a volley of regulatory missiles will descend on hedge funds, imposing considerable constraints on a once-unconstrained industry. The impact of Dodd-Frank, the Alternative Investment Fund Managers Directive , the Foreign Account Tax Compliance Act and others could see some smaller funds squeezed out. Funds of any size operating at marginal levels of profitability are also at risk. In addition, there is also a possibility that part of the industry currently domiciled in Europe and the US could migrate to Asia.
  • US Hedge Funds Bet Against Italian Bonds. US hedge funds are placing large bets against the value of Italian government debt, directly shorting the bonds of the eurozone’s third-largest economy. The funds have increased the size of short positions in the last month, speculating that investor concerns over the country’s ability to fund itself may spread from Europe’s periphery to Italy, according to investors in the funds briefed on the strategy.
  • US Banks Set for Lackluster Reporting Season. Tepid trading activity, low interest rates and mounting legal costs have all weighed on the profitability of US banks such as JPMorgan Chase and Bank of America, leaving investors in search of fresh signs of optimism as the big banks’ quarterly reporting season kicks off on Thursday.
Sunday Times:
  • The U.K.'s economy may have shrunk by as much as .2% over the past three months, citing estimates by Citigroup Inc. and Scotia Capital.
Corriere della Sera:
  • Italian Finance Minister Giulio Tremonti said a political attacks leading to his resignation may damage both Italian bonds and the euro, citing an interview. Such an attack may "bring the euro down," citing Tremonti.
El Economista:
  • Regulation and supervision of bond rating companies is an "urgent" priority because of the "distortion" they create, Francisco Luzon, head of Banco Santander SA's Latin American business, was quoted as saying. Spain needs to complete its overhaul of the financial system and address regional financing and collective-wage bargaining to reduce borrowing costs, he said.
Caijing:
  • China may halt banks from packaging loan-based assets, including trust and entrusted loans, in their wealth management products, citing an internal meeting by the China Banking Regulatory Commission.
Financial News:
  • It is "difficult" to loosen monetary policy now as asset price bubbles including real estate and investment products are still "relatively serious," the Financial News newspaper reported today on its front page.
Hexun.com:
  • China should cut public infrastructure investments as many projects yield low returns and fuel cost increases, citing Liu Yuhui, a researcher with the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences.
People's Daily:
  • China's consumer prices will increase at a more than 5% pace in the third quarter, citing Ba Shusong, a researcher at the State Council's Development Research Center. Recently high levels of inflation don't mean that government polices to rein in prices are yet to take effect, Ba said. There is still the possibility of raising the reserve requirement ratio one or two more time in the second half, Ba said.
  • Chinese local government officials may face monetary penalties for allowing "excessive" debt in their administration, citing Yuan Shuhong, deputy director of the State Council's Legislative Affairs Office.
gulfnews.com:
  • China Oil Imports Fall to Eight-Month Low. Beijing: China's net imports of crude oil fell to an eight-month low in June amid refinery maintenance and slowing energy demand in the fastest-growing major economy. Net imports last month fell 10 per cent from a month earlier and 12 per cent from a year earlier to 19.43 million metric tonnes, or about 4.7 million barrels a day, according to Bloomberg calculations based on data released Sunday by the General Administration of Customs. That's the lowest since October, the data show, as the nation imported 19.7 million tonnes and exported 270,000 tons of crude.
Weekend Recommendations
Barron's:
  • Made positive comments on (RUTH) and (ELY).
  • Made negative comments on (SYT).
Night Trading
  • Asian indices are -1.25% to -.50% on average.
  • Asia Ex-Japan Investment Grade CDS Index 115.0 +3.5 basis points.
  • Asia Pacific Sovereign CDS Index 118.0 +1.5 basis points.
  • S&P 500 futures -.58%.
  • NASDAQ 100 futures -.61%.
Morning Preview Links

Earnings of Note
Company/Estimate
  • (AA)/.32
  • (NVLS)/.76
Economic Releases
  • None of note
Upcoming Splits
  • (LULU) 2-for-1
  • (OKS) 2-for-1
  • (TGI) 2-for-1
Other Potential Market Movers
  • The 3-Month/6-Month Treasury Bill Auctions could also impact trading today.
BOTTOM LINE: Asian indices are lower, weighed down by technology and commodity shares in the region. I expect US stocks to open modestly lower and to maintain losses into the afternoon. The Portfolio is 75% net long heading into the week.

Sunday, July 10, 2011

Weekly Outlook

Link
U.S. Week Ahead by MarketWatch (video).
Wall St. Week Ahead by Reuters.
Stocks to Watch Monday by MarketWatch.
Weekly Economic Calendar by Briefing.com.

BOTTOM LINE: I expect US stocks to finish the week modestly lower on US debt ceiling concerns, more shorting, global growth worries, profit-taking and emerging market inflation fears. My intermediate-term trading indicators are giving neutral signals and the Portfolio is 75% net long heading into the week.

Friday, July 08, 2011

Market Week in Review


S&P 500 1,343.80 +1.75%*

Photobucket

The Weekly Wrap by Briefing.com.

*5-Day Change

Weekly Scoreboard*


Indices

  • S&P 500 1,343.80 +1.75%
  • DJIA 12,657.20 +1.96%
  • NASDAQ 2,859.81 +3.11%
  • Russell 2000 852.57 +3.04%
  • Wilshire 5000 14,115.20 +1.96%
  • Russell 1000 Growth 625.86 +2.68%
  • Russell 1000 Value 676.64 +1.07%
  • Morgan Stanley Consumer 779.59 +1.16%
  • Morgan Stanley Cyclical 1,101.58 +1.50%
  • Morgan Stanley Technology 673.74 +2.44%
  • Transports 5,548.66 +2.30%
  • Utilities 436.75 +.75%
  • MSCI Emerging Markets 47.98 +1.65%
  • Lyxor L/S Equity Long Bias Index 1,047.52 +2.77%
  • Lyxor L/S Equity Variable Bias Index 891.46 +1.51%
  • Lyxor L/S Equity Short Bias Index 595.07 -4.48%
Sentiment/Internals
  • NYSE Cumulative A/D Line 131,235 +2.21%
  • Bloomberg New Highs-Lows Index +37 -249
  • Bloomberg Crude Oil % Bulls 33.0 +32.0%
  • CFTC Oil Net Speculative Position 138,390 +2.85%
  • CFTC Oil Total Open Interest 1,522,391 -.13%
  • Total Put/Call 1.02 +10.87%
  • OEX Put/Call 1.41 unch.
  • ISE Sentiment 87.0 -20.18%
  • NYSE Arms 2.01 +148.14%
  • Volatility(VIX) 15.95 -3.45%
  • G7 Currency Volatility (VXY) 10.50 -1.59%
  • Smart Money Flow Index 10,556.70 +2.67%
  • Money Mkt Mutual Fund Assets $2.687 Trillion +.10%
  • AAII % Bulls 41.77 +9.03%
  • AAII % Bears 24.68 -18.25%
Futures Spot Prices
  • CRB Index 343.55 +1.63%
  • Crude Oil 96.20 +1.14%
  • Reformulated Gasoline 309.26 +4.33%
  • Natural Gas 4.20 -3.95%
  • Heating Oil 309.64 +5.43%
  • Gold 1,541.60 +2.72%
  • Bloomberg Base Metals 262.55 +3.12%
  • Copper 441.20 +3.34%
  • US No. 1 Heavy Melt Scrap Steel 416.67 USD/Ton unch.
  • China Hot Rolled Domestic Steel Sheet 4,762 Yuan/Ton +.49%
  • UBS-Bloomberg Agriculture 1,684.93 +4.45%
Economy
  • ECRI Weekly Leading Economic Index Growth Rate 1.8% -10 basis points
  • S&P 500 EPS Estimates 1 Year Mean 95.99 unch.
  • Citi US Economic Surprise Index -91.40 -6.2 points
  • Fed Fund Futures imply 21.8% chance of no change, 78.2% chance of 25 basis point cut on 8/9
  • US Dollar Index 75.18 +1.19%
  • Yield Curve 263.0 -8 basis points
  • 10-Year US Treasury Yield 3.03% -15 basis points
  • Federal Reserve's Balance Sheet $2.854 Trillion +.15%
  • U.S. Sovereign Debt Credit Default Swap 49.98 -.51%
  • Illinois Municipal Debt Credit Default Swap 179.0 -10.7%
  • Western Europe Sovereign Debt Credit Default Swap Index 252.0 +12.25%
  • Emerging Markets Sovereign Debt CDS Index 165.12 +12.41 -5.71%
  • Saudi Sovereign Debt Credit Default Swap 95.07 +.60%
  • Iraqi 2028 Government Bonds 91.32 +.49%
  • 10-Year TIPS Spread 2.31% -9 basis points
  • TED Spread 23.0 unch.
  • N. America Investment Grade Credit Default Swap Index 93.01 +3.29%
  • Euro Financial Sector Credit Default Swap Index 131.95 +20.40%
  • Emerging Markets Credit Default Swap Index 208.69 +2.11%
  • CMBS Super Senior AAA 10-Year Treasury Spread 179.0 -18 basis points
  • M1 Money Supply $1.955 Trillion +.47%
  • Business Loans 642.80 -.29%
  • 4-Week Moving Average of Jobless Claims 424,800 -.70%
  • Continuing Claims Unemployment Rate 2.9% -10 basis points
  • Average 30-Year Mortgage Rate 4.60% +9 basis points
  • Weekly Mortgage Applications 507.0 -5.22%
  • Bloomberg Consumer Comfort -45.5 -1.6 points
  • Weekly Retail Sales +3.80% +30 basis points
  • Nationwide Gas $3.59/gallon +.03/gallon
  • U.S. Cooling Demand Next 7 Days 15.0% above normal
  • Baltic Dry Index 1,449 +1.90%
  • Oil Tanker Rate(Arabian Gulf to U.S. Gulf Coast) 37.50 unch.
  • Rail Freight Carloads 236,988 +.94%
Best Performing Style
  • Small-Cap Growth +3.46%
Worst Performing Style
  • Large-Cap Value +1.07%
Leading Sectors
  • Education +9.39%
  • Disk Drives +6.38%
  • Gaming +4.56%
  • REITs +4.22%
  • Internet +3.96%
Lagging Sectors
  • Banks +.04%
  • Telecom -.13%
  • I-Banks -.29%
  • Alternative Energy -.74%
  • Oil Tankers -2.33%
Weekly High-Volume Stock Gainers (11)
  • BLUD, AMN, MLI, ABFS, KCI, AIR, ARJ, EBIX, ASCMA, TROX and USNA
Weekly High-Volume Stock Losers (4)
  • FRC, BABY, NTCT and LL
Weekly Charts
ETFs
Stocks
*5-Day Change


Broad Market Tone:

  • Advance/Decline Line: Substantially Lower
  • Sector Performance: Almost Every Sector Declining
  • Volume: Light
  • Market Leading Stocks: Outperforming
Equity Investor Angst:
  • VIX 16.42 +2.95%
  • ISE Sentiment Index 81.0 -19.80%
  • Total Put/Call 1.03 +25.61%
  • NYSE Arms 2.04 +169.86%
Credit Investor Angst:
  • North American Investment Grade CDS Index 93.01 +2.21%
  • European Financial Sector CDS Index 130.33 +4.57%
  • Western Europe Sovereign Debt CDS Index 252.0 +2.58%
  • Emerging Market CDS Index 209.16 +1.30%
  • 2-Year Swap Spread 25.0 +1 bp
  • TED Spread 23.0 unch.
Economic Gauges:
  • 3-Month T-Bill Yield .02% unch.
  • Yield Curve 262.0 -5 bps
  • China Import Iron Ore Spot $171.20/Metric Tonne +.29%
  • Citi US Economic Surprise Index -91.40 -17.7 points
  • 10-Year TIPS Spread 2.30% -8 bps
Overseas Futures:
  • Nikkei Futures: Indicating -141 open in Japan
  • DAX Futures: Indicating +29 open in Germany
Portfolio:
  • Higher: On gains in my Retail, Biotech, Technology longs and Emerging Markets shorts
  • Disclosed Trades: Added to my (IWM)/(QQQ) hedges and then covered some of them
  • Market Exposure: 75% Net Long
BOTTOM LINE: Today's overall market action is just mildly bearish as the S&P 500 trades well off session lows despite a very weak US jobs report, being technically overbought, emerging markets inflation fears, rising eurozone debt angst, US debt ceiling worries, increasing food prices and global growth concerns. On the positive side, Ag, Gaming and Biotech shares are flat-to-higher on the day. Growth stock leaders continue to strongly outperform. Oil is falling -2.2% and Lumber is rising +2.9%. On the negative side, Road & Rail, I-Banking, Bank, Networking, Semi, Steel, Oil Tanker, Coal, Hospital and Insurance shares are especially weak, falling more than -1.75%. Cyclicals are underperforming. (XLF) has underperformed throughout the day. The UBS-Bloomberg Ag Spot Index is up +.7%, Gold is up +.82%, copper is falling -1.0% and Rice is up +.4%. Rice futures are up +21.4% in 6 days. The US price for a gallon of gas is +.01/gallon today to $3.59/gallon. It is up .45/gallon in less than 5 months. The Spain sovereign cds is up +3.96% to 313.67 bps, the Ireland sovereign cds is gaining +5.15% to 898.33 bps, the Italy sovereign cds is surging +10.6% to 239.83 bps, the UK sovereign cds is rising +3.5% to 68.5 bps, the Belgium sovereign cds is up +6.4% to 172.67 bps and the Portugal sovereign cds is up +3.18% to 1,015.35 bps. Moreover, the European Investment Grade CDS Index is up +4.76% to 87.46 bps. The Italy sovereign cds is approaching its record high of 275.0 bps. The Portugal and Ireland sovereign cds are hitting new record highs again. European contagion fears continue to intensify, which is a major negative. India's Sensex fell -1.15% last night, finishing at session lows after a failure at its 200-day moving average. Brazil's Bovespa continues to trade very poorly, falling another -.94% today, and is now down -11.1% ytd. Moreover, Italian(-3.47%), French(-1.67%) and Spanish(-2.53%) stocks took a drubbing today and finished at session lows. US stocks remain extremely resilient given the still developing significant headwinds. Many growth stock leaders are either flat or higher on the day. Investor complacency regarding the deteriorating situation in Europe is high. As well, with stocks still technically overbought, key sentiment indicators registering too much bullishness, likely weaker-than-expected guidance during earnings season and US growth unlikely to bounce back in any meaningful way, the risks are to the downside for stocks in the short-term. One of my longs, (SODA), has risen over +40% in less than two weeks. The stock is too extended short-term. However, I still see substantial upside to the shares from current levels over the longer-term. I expect US stocks to trade mixed-to-higher from current levels into the close on short-covering, falling energy prices and growth stock optimism.

Today's Headlines


Bloomberg:

  • U.S. Payrolls Grow at Slowest Pace in 9 Months. American employers added jobs at the slowest pace in nine months in June and the unemployment rate unexpectedly climbed to 9.2 percent, sending global stocks tumbling on concern the world’s biggest economy is faltering. Employers increased payrolls by 18,000 workers, less than the most pessimistic forecast in a Bloomberg News survey of economists, which called for growth of 105,000. The increase followed a 25,000 gain that was less than half the initial estimate. Hiring by companies was the weakest since May 2010. “Stunned,” was how Chris Rupkey, chief financial economist at Bank of Tokyo-Mitsubishi UFJ Ltd. in New York, described his reaction. “This number will really turn your hair gray, that’s for sure. The economy remains mired in its soft patch, which is looking more like a deep bog." The unemployment rate, which rose in June to the highest level this year, was forecast to hold at 9.1 percent, according to the survey median. Estimates ranged from 8.9 percent to 9.2 percent. The jobless rate rose even as the participation rate declined to 64.1 percent, the lowest since March 1984. The Labor Department’s survey of households, used to calculate the unemployment rate, showed a 445,000 decrease in employment and a 173,000 increase in unemployment.
  • Italian Yields Reach Nine-Year High as Debt Crisis Spreads; Bunds Surge. Italian bonds slid for the fifth straight day, driving yields to a nine-year high, as contagion from Greece’s fiscal crisis intensified in the region’s biggest government-debt market. The yield on 10-year Italian securities jumped to a euro-era record over German bunds as data showed industrial production in the Mediterranean nation dropped while Italian bank stocks fell, paced by UniCredit SpA. (UCG) A European Union document said governments should be ready to help banks that fail stress tests as a last resort. Spanish, Irish and Greek bonds also fell. “If you are talking about a default in Greece where contagion spreads through Ireland, Portugal and Spain, then Italy is the next stop,” said Charles Diebel, head of market strategy at Lloyds Bank Corporate Markets in London. “Italy has an awful lot of debt.” The yield on 10-year Italian bonds rose 10 basis points to 5.27 percent at 5:03 p.m. in London, up from 4.87 percent a week ago. The yield reached 5.38 percent, the highest since June 2002. The 4.75 percent securities due in September 2021 fell 0.715, or 7.15 euros per 1,000-euro ($1,424) face amount, to 96.455. Italy’s two-year note yield jumped as much as 29 basis points to 3.61 percent, the most since November 2008. Credit- default swaps on Italy rose 23.5 basis points to 241, the highest level since Jan. 11, according to CMA. The difference in yield, or spread, between German and Italian 10-year debt touched 247 basis points, headed for its biggest weekly increase since at least January 2010. The difference in the price of Italian and German bond futures widened to a record as the Italian securities fell 0.8 percent to 104.57. The yield spread between Italian and Spanish 10-year bonds narrowed to 42 basis points, the least since March. “The reality now is that those pesky bond vigilantes have caught sight of Italy, and that is basically all that matters,” Michael Riddell, a London-based fund manager at M&G Investments, said in his blog on the company’s website. “Rising sovereign and bank borrowing costs will lead to credit-rating downgrades. In other words, credit ratings partly get cut because the bond prices fall.” Spanish 10-year yields rose four basis points to 5.66 percent. Yields on similar-maturity Irish bonds increased 20 basis points to 12.92 percent. Greek 10-year yields jumped 17 basis points to 16.86 percent, and the nation’s two-year note yields touched an all-time high 30.40 percent. Irish two-year note yields reached a record 16.74 percent. Portuguese 10-year bonds rose, pushing the yield down nine basis points to 12.82 percent.
  • Portugal, Ireland Bond Risk Rises to Record, Credit-Default Swaps Indicate. The cost of insuring against default on Portuguese, Irish and Greek government debt rose to records, leading a gauge of the region’s sovereign risk to an all-time high, according to traders of credit-default swaps. Contracts on Portugal climbed 38 basis points to 1,016, signaling a 58 percent probability of default within five years, according to CMA prices at 3:30 p.m. in London. Swaps on Ireland jumped 59 basis points to 914, Greece surged 25 to 2,175, and the Markit iTraxx SovX Western Europe Index of swaps on 15 governments increased 10 to 256. Swaps on Italy increased 27.5 basis points to 245, the highest level since Jan. 11, while Spain climbed 7.5 to 310 and Belgium was up 13 at 174. The Markit iTraxx Crossover Index of contracts linked to 40 companies with mostly high-yield credit ratings jumped 11 basis point to 421, according to JPMorgan Chase & Co. The Markit iTraxx Europe Index of 125 companies with investment-grade ratings climbed 3 basis points to 112. The Markit iTraxx Financial Index linked to senior debt of 25 banks and insurers rose 7.5 basis points to 171 and the subordinated index increased 14 to 303.5.
  • Oil Tumbles, Trimming Weekly Gain, as U.S. Jobless Rate Climbs. Crude oil dropped, paring a second weekly gain, after the U.S. added fewer jobs than forecast in June and the unemployment rate climbed, damping optimism for the economic rebound and fuel demand growth. Futures fell as much as 3.1 percent after the Labor Department said U.S. employers added the fewest workers in nine months and the unemployment rate rose to 9.2 percent, the highest level this year. The premium of London’s Brent oil over New York crude rose above $20 for the first time since June 15. Crude oil for August delivery declined $2.39, or 2.4 percent, to $96.28 a barrel at 12:33 p.m. on the New York Mercantile Exchange. The contract yesterday climbed to $98.67, the highest settlement since June 14. Prices are up 1.4 percent this week and have increased 28 percent in the past year.
  • Copper Slides Most in Two Weeks on 'Disappointing' U.S. Employment Report. Copper fell the most in almost two weeks after U.S. payrolls rose less than forecast in June, damping growth prospects. Copper futures for September delivery declined 4.45 cents, or 1 percent, to $4.39375 a pound at 9:19 a.m. on the Comex in New York.
  • China Debt Sale Fails for Third Time This Year as Cash Crunch Curbs Demand. China’s finance ministry failed to sell all of the debt offered at an auction for the third time this year as a cash crunch damped demand from banks. The ministry sold 11.76 billion yuan ($1.82 billion) of 182-day bills, falling short of its 15 billion yuan target, according to traders at financing companies required to bid at the auctions. The seven-day repurchase rate, which measures interbank funding availability, has almost doubled in the past month to 6.25 percent after the central bank pushed lenders’ reserve-requirement ratios to a record 21.5 percent on June 14. “Demand has declined as a cash shortage continues,” said Guo Caomin, a bond analyst at Industrial Bank Co. in Shanghai.
  • 'Rogue Executives' From Chinese Firms Dodge Singapore Laws by Staying Home. Singapore investors are demanding tougher rules to prosecute executives of China-based companies traded in the city-state after scandals from New York to Hong Kong have wiped out the market value of such firms. U.S. and Hong Kong regulators have been ramping up Chinese company probes as Muddy Waters LLC said last month that Sino- Forest Corp. overstated its timber holdings, erasing as much as 82 percent of the China-based tree plantation owner’s market capitalization in Toronto. With more than one in 10 Chinese firms listed in Singapore delisted or suspended since 2008, regulators must seek a balance between the need for investor protection and a desire to attract companies to Singapore’s exchange. Lawyers said executives of Chinese firms that trade in Singapore, so-called S-chips, are beyond the reach of current law as long as they remain in China.
  • Greek Debt Woes Scuttle New Loans as Costs Jump to Highest Level for Year. The cost to raise money in the U.S. leveraged-loan market jumped to the highest level this year as sovereign-debt concerns threatened to dampen the global economic recovery. The spread on institutional term loans rated B+ or B by Standard & Poor’s rose to 6.42 percentage points yesterday, the highest level since November, according to Standard & Poor’s Leveraged Commentary & Data. Virtu Financial LLC increased the spread it offered investors by 1 percentage point this week as two deals worth $700 million were shelved the previous week, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.
  • iPad, Android Drive 6% Increase in IDC's 2011 Tablet Sales Forecast. International Data Corporation raised its 2011 forecast for global sales of tablet computers by 6.2 percent to 53.5 million units on the strength of Apple Inc. (AAPL)’s iPad and Google Inc. (GOOG)’s Android operating system. Though sales in the first calendar quarter fell 28 percent from the prior quarter, Framingham, Massachusetts-based IDC raised its forecast for the year citing increased competition between tablets.
  • Goldman Sachs(GS) Says U.S. Earnings Estimates Are Too Optimistic. Goldman Sachs Group Inc., the bank with the highest equities-trading revenue, said its rivals are too enthusiastic about second-quarter earnings prospects for Standard & Poor’s 500 Index companies. Operating profit will total $23.75 a share for the period, or 2.3 percent less than the average Wall Street estimate, said David Kostin, an equity strategist at New York-based Goldman Sachs. He said 2011 and 2012 earnings-per-share forecasts will be reduced by 2 percent and 8 percent, respectively.
  • Syrian Forces Kill at Least Eight During Rallies Against Assad Government. Syrian security forces killed at least eight demonstrators as thousands of anti-government protesters rallied across the country against the rule of President Bashar al-Assad, activists said. Three people died today in Maat al-Numan, in Idlib, the northern province where at least 60 tanks were deployed along with helicopters this month, said Ammar Qurabi, head of the National Organization for Human Rights in Syria.
Wall Street Journal:
  • Chasing Fraud, Then Chasing Cash. It is easier for regulators to get their man than it is to get their money. Since late 2005, the Securities and Exchange Commission and Commodity Futures Trading Commission have ordered $12.3 billion in penalties for alleged wrongdoing. The total includes fines, the return of ill-gotten profits and repayment of restitution to investors. But more than $4.5 billion hasn't been paid yet, according to the two agencies. The SEC is owed $3.78 billion, while the CFTC hasn't collected $752 million in fines alone.
  • More Vacancies at U.S. Malls. Vacancy rates at U.S. malls and strip-mall centers continued to rise in the second quarter as small-store owners struggled with the sluggish economy and malls grappled with follow-on store closures. The average vacancy rate at malls in the top 80 U.S. markets increased to 9.3% in the second quarter from 9.1% in the first, according to real-estate research company Reis Inc. Those vacancy figures are the highest Reis had recorded for malls since it started tracking malls in 2000. Meanwhile, average lease rates at U.S. malls remained steady at $38.77 per square foot per year, unchanged from the first-quarter rate, according to Reis. The situation is similar for strip-mall centers, which are smaller shopping centers often anchored by a grocery store or big-box retailer. The average strip-center vacancy rate increased to 11% in the second quarter from 10.9% in the first, while lease rates remained steady at $16.54. Reis forecasts that, later this year, average strip-center vacancies will exceed 11.1%, their peak from the recession of the early 1990s.
  • Few Easy Choices for Fed in Wake of Jobs Report.
CNBC.com:
Business Insider:
Zero Hedge:
FINalternatives:
  • Hedge Fund Replicators, Like Replicatees, Slammed in June. One set of hedge fund replication indices certainly lived up to their name in June, to the detriment of their investors. IndexIQ's suite of hedge fund beta indices took a beating in June, replicating the pitiful performance of most hedge fund indices. All six of IndexIQ's strategy indices were in the red last month, as well as its IQ Hedge Composite Beta Index, which lost 1.22% on the month (up 0.63% year-to-date).
Bank Investment Consultant:
  • 38% of Hedge Fund Managers Bearish on S&P 500. Hedge fund managers have turned decidedly bearing on U.S. equities and the economy, according to a survey of 87 managers by TrimTabs Investment Research and BarclayHedge. Thirty-eight are bearish on the S&P 500, up from 29% in May and at the highest level since February. Conversely, 27% are bullish, down slightly from 30% in May. “Downbeat views on domestic stocks characterized the first half of 2011,” said Sol Waksman, founder and president of BarclayHedge. “Hedge fund managers were net bearing on the S&P 500 in four of the six months of the year. The grim mood coincides with weak performance.
Seeking Alpha:
  • The ECRI Weekly Leading Index: 11 Consecutive Weeks of Slowing Growth. (chart) The Weekly Leading Index (WLI) growth indicator of the Economic Cycle Research Institute (ECRI) declined to 1.8 from last week's 1.9, a downward revision from 2.0. This is the eleventh consecutive week of decline from the 11-month interim high of 7.8 for the week ending on April 15.
Politico:
  • Entitlement Talk Spooks Dems. Freshman Rep. Kathy Hochul put Medicare in the starkest political terms Thursday during a closed-door Democratic meeting in the Capitol basement: Drastic slashes are a loser for her party. Across the Capitol on Thursday, Democrats openly fretted about the potential reforms to Medicare and Social Security now at the center of President Barack Obama’s talks with congressional leaders to slash $4 trillion in exchange for raising the national debt ceiling.
Rasmussen Reports:
  • Daily Presidential Tracking Poll. The Rasmussen Reports daily Presidential Tracking Poll for Friday shows that 23% of the nation's voters Strongly Approve of the way that Barack Obama is performing his role as president. Forty-one percent (41%) Strongly Disapprove, giving Obama a Presidential Approval Index rating of -18 (see trends).
Reuters:
  • EU States Ready to Rescue Bank Test Failures. European governments are ready to bail out those banks which cannot raise capital from investors after the EU details on July 15 which lenders have failed its latest, more vigorous stress test. European Banking Federation Secretary General Guido Ravoet said some banks may struggle to find enough capital. "Is the European financial market deep enough to respond to the needs for capital? We are not the only sector looking for capital," Ravoet said. News that EU governments appear serious about supporting banks that fail to maintain core capital of 5 percent in the face of several theoretical markets shocks lifted Bund futures and UK gilts. "In essence that puts even more pressure on the periphery (euro zone countries) to come up with measures, not only to shore up their budgets, but to support their banking sectors, which they can ill afford to do," said Marc Ostwald, strategist at Monument Securities. "It's basically a charge to safety on the back of this. This is a market which is living in mortal fear of anything to do with the euro zone and anything that puts the banking sector under more stress," Ostwald said. The Italian/German 10-year yield spread hit fresh euro-era highs amid fears that already fiscally stretched countries like Italy might have to dig into their pockets to bail out banks that fail the test as well. Shares in Italian bank UniCredit fell more than 5 percent on fears that Italy could be pulled into the debt crisis that has already forced Greece, Ireland and Portugal to take bailouts. Unlisted banks in Spain and Germany and a batch of banks that are already raising funds are the most likely to fail this year's health check, analysts at Nomura said.
  • Euro States Should Give Up Debt Powers: Bini Smaghi. Euro zone countries should hand over their debt-issuing powers to Brussels while bailouts should not require unanimous support, European Central Bank Executive Board member Lorenzo Bini Smaghi said on Friday. The euro zone debt crisis continues to be the main source of worry for financial markets. ECB heavyweight Bini Smaghi warned the bloc was struggling to bring the problems under control and this was pushing up the cost of an eventual solution. "The longer a decision is delayed, the more unpalatable it ultimately becomes, as the action required to calm the markets and to restore stability has to be even stronger," he told a seminar organized by the Hellenic Foundation for European and Foreign Policy. "Crises then drag out as one quick fix gives way to another."
  • Limiting US Healthcare Tax Break Weighed - Rep. Levin. U.S. deficit-reduction negotiators are looking at possibly imposing new limits on the existing tax breaks for employer-provided health insurance, a senior Democrat in the U.S. House of Representatives said on Friday. "I think limiting the deduction for the higher income brackets is something that is on the table" in the negotiations, Representative Sandy Levin told Reuters. Levin is the senior Democrat on the tax-writing House Ways and Means Committee.
Handelsblatt:
  • The private sector contribution to Greece's aid package will amount to no more than 15 billion euros, half of what was originally planned, citing an EU-diplomat.
Ansa:
  • Moody's Investors Service Senior Analyst Alexander Kockerbeck said the rating company is waiting to see whether the Italian government can implement its planned 40 billion euros in austerity measures. The analyst said it remains to be seen whether Italy's current political situation will allow for a successful implementation of the measures.