Monday, December 12, 2011

Today's Headlines


Bloomberg:
  • Sarkozy Says Loss of AAA Wouldn't Be 'Insurmountable'. President Nicolas Sarkozy said that the loss of France’s top credit rating wouldn’t be an “insurmountable” economic difficulty, according to an interview published in Le Monde newspaper. If the rating companies “pull it, we’ll face the situation coolly and calmly,” Sarkozy was quoted as saying by the newspaper. “It would be an additional difficulty but it’s not insurmountable. What is important is the credibility of our economic policy and our strategy of reducing spending.” Moody’s Investors Service said today it will review the ratings of all European Union countries after a summit last week Brussels failed to produce “decisive policy measures” to end the region’s debt turmoil. Standard & Poor’s placed the ratings of 15 euro nations, including AAA rated France and Germany, on review for possible downgrade on Dec. 5 pending an assessment of the summit. George Magnus, senior economic adviser at UBS AG, said he expects one of Europe’s AAA rated countries to lose its top rating. “It’s inevitable,” Magnus said in a interview with Maryam Nemazee on Bloomberg Television in London today. “It’s just a question of when S&P or the other rating agencies decide to pull the trigger.” Of the five euro zone countries with the top debt rating, France may be the most vulnerable. Its 10-year notes traded at 3.30 percent at 1:55 p.m. in Paris, higher than the other four, and 121 basis points above similarly dated German debt. Credit-default swaps on France climbed 13 basis points to 222 basis points today, while those on Germany rose half a point to 99.5 basis points.
  • Sovereign, Corporate Bond Risk Rise, Credit-Default Swaps Show. The cost of insuring against default on European sovereign and corporate debt rose, according to traders of credit-default swaps. The Markit iTraxx SovX Western Europe Index of swaps on 15 governments jumped 13 basis points to 376.5 at 9 a.m. in London, approaching the record 385 set Nov. 25. Contracts on the Markit iTraxx Crossover Index of 50 companies with mostly high-yield credit ratings rose 20.5 basis points to 770.5, according to JPMorgan Chase & Co. The Markit iTraxx Europe Index of 125 companies with investment-grade ratings climbed six basis points to 179.5 basis points. The Markit iTraxx Financial Index linked to senior debt of 25 banks and insurers increased 11 basis points to 307 and the subordinated index rose 17.5 to 547.5.
  • 5th European Solution Failing to Ease Stress: Credit Markets. The fifth agreement in 19 months intended to resolve Europe's sovereign crisis is failing to ease stress in the debt markets. A credit-default swaps index tied to Greece, Italy, Spain and 12 other western European nations rose today, extending a reversal of its biggest drop ever and approaching the record reached Nov. 25. A gauge of banks' reluctance to lend to one another in euros remains at about the highest since February 2009. The premium they pay to convert euro payments into dollars jumped the most in five weeks and is more than double this year's average.
  • EU Summit's Failure May Consign Top-Rated Bonds to History. Europe’s failure to agree on a comprehensive solution to the sovereign debt crisis threatens to consign AAA rated bonds in the region to history. Top-rated agencies in the 17-nation euro area have at least 847.5 billion euros ($1.1 trillion) of debt outstanding, according to data compiled by Bloomberg, and will be at risk should their sovereigns be downgraded. Moody’s Investors Service said today it will review the ratings of all European Union nations after last week’s summit failed to produce “decisive policy measures,” while Standard & Poor’s announced Dec. 5 it may cut 15 euro members, including AAA rated Germany and France. “Double A is the new triple A,” said Raphael Gallardo, the head of economic research at Axa Investment Managers in Paris, which manages about $690 billion. “De facto, there are no more highly liquid, risk-free assets. It’s a dangerous problem because in a market crash, liquid AAA assets are the dam that contains the total exodus of liquidity.” European leaders’ fifth attempt to draw a line under their debt woes ended in a fiscal accord that will bring tighter deficit rules, though with many details still to be ironed out and the U.K. vetoing an agreement among all 27 EU members. A lack of top-rated sovereigns would make it harder to gauge a risk-free benchmark for securities, reduce participation in euro-region debt markets and threaten ratings of agencies and supranationals such as the European Investment Bank and World Bank.
  • Italy's $71 Billion Needs Remain Crisis Flashpoint: Euro Credit. Italy holds the key to the euro's survival, shouldering one-third of the region's first-quarter funding burden as the debt crisis saps demand for its assets and shrinks its investor base. The euro zone's third-largest nation has to repay about 53 billion euros ($70.5 billion) in the first quarter from the region's total maturing debt of 157 billion euros, according to UBS AG. It owes a further 3.2 billion euros in interest payments based on the average five-year yield of the past three months. Italy's five-year borrowing costs rose to as much as 7.11 percent today, down from the Nov. 25 euro-era high of 7.85 percent. Credit-default swaps on the nation's debt surged 21 basis points to 555 on concern that crisis-fighting agreements forged by European leaders to end the region's crisis will prove insufficient. The first three months of 2012 "will be a very painful auction experience, which is detrimental to investor confidence," said Padhraic Garvey, head of developed-market debt strategy at ING Groep NV in Amsterdam. "Italian yields at about 7 percent represent fantastic value for investors, but demand is low because there's no confidence that the debt crisis can be solved quickly enough." The nation's debt-servicing costs will rise by about 30 billion euros in the next two years, Confindustria, Italy's employers' lobby, said on Dec. 1. Those costs will eat up 5.1 percent of gross domestic product next year, up from 4.2 percent this year, and climb to 5.6 percent in 2013, the report said.
  • Intel Says Q4 Revenue to Miss Forecast on Shortage. Intel Corp. (INTC), the world’s largest chipmaker, reduced its fourth-quarter revenue forecast by about $1 billion, saying a shortage of hard-disk drives is cutting customers’ production of personal computers. The company said revenue will be $13.7 billion, plus or minus $300 million, compared with a previous estimate of $14.7 billion, give or take $500 million, according to a statement today. Analysts predicted $14.7 billion, the average of estimates compiled by Bloomberg. While PC sales will rise in the fourth quarter from the prior three months, Intel said customers are stockpiling fewer parts because output has been hurt by a shortage of disk drives, the main data-storage devices in computers. The supply constraints, resulting from the worst flooding in Thailand in 70 years, will continue into the first quarter, the chipmaker said. The reduced outlook from Intel, whose microprocessors power more than 80 percent of all PCs, comes after some drive makers had indicated the industry was recovering from the floods in Thailand, home to production for about a quarter of the world’s hard-disk drives. The forecast sent the Philadelphia Semiconductor Index (SOX) down 3.6 percent. Intel’s customers have cut chip orders in the past two weeks after their hard-disk suppliers updated them on the availability of their products, Intel Chief Financial Officer Stacy Smith said on a conference call today.
  • Speculators Miss Oil Drop on European Debt Woes: Energy Markets. Hedge funds increased bullish bets on crude oil just before prices dropped the most in three weeks amid concern the European debt crisis will trigger a global economic slowdown. The funds and other large speculators boosted long positions, or wagers that prices will rise, 4.1 percent in the seven days ended Dec. 6, according to the Commodity Futures Trading Commission's Commitments of Traders report on Dec. 9. The net-long positions increased for a second week amid rising tensions with Iran, the second-largest producer in the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries. Futures dropped 2.1 percent on Dec. 8 on the New York Mercantile Exchange, the most since Nov. 17, after European Central Bank President Mario Draghi signaled policy makers wouldn't increase government bond purchases to stabilize the region's economy.
  • Crude Oil Declines on Moody's Review of European Ratings, China Exports. Oil extended last week’s decline as Moody’s Investors Service said it will review the credit ratings of all European Union countries and China’s export growth slowed to the weakest pace since 2009. Crude dropped as much as 1.9 percent after Moody’s said last week’s EU summit failed to deliver “decisive policy measures” to end the debt crisis. China’s exports rose 13.8 percent in November from a year earlier, compared with 15.9 percent in October, the customs bureau said Dec. 10. “The Moody’s announcement really affects market sentiment,” said Michael Lynch, president of Strategic Energy & Economic Research in Winchester, Massachusetts. “There is a pretty good chance that the global oil demand will be pretty weak next year because of the European crisis and China.” Crude for January delivery fell $1.43, or 1.4 percent, to $97.98 a barrel at 12:33 p.m. on the New York Mercantile Exchange. Prices dropped 1.5 percent last week and are up 7.2 percent this year. China’s November export growth was the least since December 2009, excluding distortions in January and February each year, customs data showed. Exports to the European Union, China’s biggest market, rose 5 percent from a year earlier, a quarter of the pace reported in July and August. “The news from China is another indicator of the economic weakness in Europe and it means China will use less oil,” said James Williams, an economist at WTRG Economics, an energy research firm in London, Arkansas. Libya pumped 500,000 barrels a day in November, from a low of 45,000 barrels in the midst of the rebellion against former leader Muammar Qaddafi, according to Bloomberg estimates.
  • Obama Backers Make President Top Fundraiser From Big Business. President Barack Obama, who has been characterized as anti-business by his political opponents, has received more in campaign contributions from business executives this year than any Republican presidential candidate. Obama raised $5.6 million from executives, or about a third of all their donations through Sept. 30, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. Republican candidate Mitt Romney raised $5.2 million, far outpacing his primary challengers. Former House Speaker Newt Gingrich, the front-runner in the latest national polls, raised about $272,000, or 5 percent of Romney’s total.
  • U.S. Economic Data is Surprising Forecasters. U.S. economic data are outperforming expectations by the most in nine months, a trend Federal Reserve officials may incorporate into their policy statement tomorrow. The Citigroup Economic Surprise Index, a daily measure of whether economic data is better or worse than economists’ projections, improved to 85.7 on Dec. 2, the highest since March 9.
  • India's Rupee Tumbles to Record as Factory Output Shrinks For 1st Time in 2 Years. India’s rupee tumbled to a record low after industrial production declined for the first time in more than two years. The currency fell 1.5 percent, the most in three weeks, as the Central Statistical Office said factory output shrank 5.1 percent in October from a year earlier, compared with the median estimate for a 0.7 percent contraction in a Bloomberg News survey. That was the first drop in output since June 2009. The Reserve Bank of India sold dollars today to curb the rupee’s slide, according to IndusInd Bank Ltd. “The bearish sentiment is very strong and there is nothing going for the rupee,” said J. Moses Harding, a Mumbai-based executive vice president at IndusInd. “The RBI has been intervening intermittently today at various levels.”
  • German Voters Dissatisfied With Merkel's Leadership in ARD Poll. German voters are dissatisfied with Chancellor Angela Merkel’s leadership during the euro crisis, according to an Infratest poll conducted for ARD television. Some 55 percent of those surveyed said they were “less satisfied” or “not satisfied at all” with Merkel’s handling of the criticism while 65 percent of the respondents said solidarity with troubled euro member countries is in Germany’s best interest. Last week’s EU accord wouldn’t help stabilize the euro area, according to 57 percent.
  • Martin Marietta Seeks to Buy Vulcan Materials(VMC) in $4.7 Billion Hostile Bid. Martin Marietta Materials Inc. (MLM) is seeking a hostile takeover of Vulcan Materials Co. in an all- stock transaction valued at $4.7 billion that would create the world’s largest aggregates supplier.
Wall Street Journal:
  • CFOs Less Optimistic About Growth In 2012 - BofA Survey. Financial chiefs at U.S. companies are less optimistic about economic growth in 2012 than in previous years, however, the majority don't expect work force reductions next year, according to a recent chief financial officer outlook survey by Bank Of America Corp. (BAC) According to the annual latest survey of 600 executives by Bank Of America Merrill Lynch, 38% of respondents said they expect the U.S. economy to grow in 2012, down from 56% a year ago and 66% the prior year. CFOs rated the economy a score of 44 out of 100 -- its lowest score in the survey's 14-year history. A year ago, CFOs gave the economy a score of 47.
  • Interview: Adecco Prepared For European Recession - CEO. Adecco SA (ADEN.VX) the world's largest staffing company, is preparing for a recession in Europe in 2012 and a long, slow recovery thereafter.
  • Banks Sit in a Tangled Web. Dozens of banks across Europe have sold large quantities of insurance to other banks and investors that protects against the risk of ailing countries defaulting on their debts, the latest illustration of the extensive financial entanglements among the continent's banks and governments. New data released last week by European banking regulators suggest the risks of banks suffering losses tied to European government bonds could be higher and more widespread than previously realised. The numbers show European banks have sold a total of €178bn worth of insurance policies, in the form of financial derivatives known as credit-default swaps, on bonds issued by the financially struggling Greek, Irish, Italian, Portuguese and Spanish governments. If those bonds default, as some investors fear they might, banks could be on the hook for making large payments to the holders of the swaps. The banks have at least partly insulated themselves from such potential losses by buying large quantities—roughly €169bn worth—of credit-default swaps tied to the same bonds, apparently in large part from other European banks, according to European Banking Authority data. The disclosures highlight another layer of risk interwoven through the continent's banking system.
  • Italian, Spanish Bond Yields Rise.
MarketWatch:
  • France's Hollande Wants to Renegotiate EU Deal. French presidential hopeful Francois Hollande said Monday that, if elected, he would seek to renegotiate the new euro-zone accord agreed by European leaders at last week’s Brussels summit, sparking concern that a power shift in France could derail the plan. In an interview with RTL Radio, Hollande said the treaty “is not the right answer” to the crisis, because it doesn’t respond to the current market pressure or stimulate sufficient growth. An LH2 poll on behalf Yahoo published on Sunday showed Hollande would capture 31.5% of the vote, while Sarkozy would win 26% in the first round of voting. The poll indicated Hollande would also triumph in a second round against Sarkozy, with a 57% majority, and therefore could act on his promise to revamp the euro-zone accord.
CNBC.com:
Business Insider:
Zero Hedge:
New York Times:
  • A Greek What-If Draws Concern: Dropping the Euro. It would be Europe’s worst nightmare: After weeks of rumors, the Greek prime announces late on a Saturday night that the country will abandon the euro currency and return to the drachma. The danger that Greece or some other deeply damaged country in the euro zone could leave the single-currency union can no longer be ruled out. And it was largely this prospect that drove leaders last week to agree to adopt strict fiscal rules that they hope will wrap the 17 European Union nations that use the euro into an even tighter embrace.
Washington Times:
  • Obama to Slash National Guard Force on U.S.-Mexico Border. Blaming budget cuts, the Obama administration early next year will cut the number of National Guard troops patrolling the U.S.-Mexico border by at least half, according to a congressman who was briefed on the plan. The National Guard said an announcement will be made by the White House “in the near future,” but Rep. Duncan Hunter, a California Republican who has learned of the plans, said slashing the deployment in half is the minimum number, and he said it will mean reshuffling the remaining troops along the nearly 2,000-mile border. In California, that will mean going from 264 Guard troops down to just 14, he said.
The Journal of Commerce:
Reuters:
  • Italy Starts Strikes Against Monti's Austerity. Italy began a week of strikes by the three biggest labour unions against Prime Minister Mario Monti's 33-billion-euro austerity package, which the government may soften slightly to meet some of their demands. Port, highway, and haulage personnel stopped work for three hours and metal workers -- including those at carmaker Fiat -- put down their tools for eight hours. Printing press operators stopped for a full shift and most newspapers won't publish on Tuesday. Public transport strikes will be held on Dec 15-16. Bank employees will halt work for the afternoon of Dec 16, and the public administration will close down for a whole day on Dec 19. For the first time in six years of division, the three main union leaders shared a stage together when they spoke to striking workers in front of parliament. "We're not giving up on the idea that the austerity package must be changed," Susanna Camusso, chief of the largest labour group Cgil, told the crowd. "It hurts workers, pensions and the country as a whole," she said.
  • Exclusive: Commerzbank in State Aid Talks. German lender Commerzbank (CBKG.DE) and the government have been in talks for several days over possible state aid, five people familiar with the matter told Reuters on Monday. The aim was to reach an agreement in principle by Christmas, coalition sources said on Monday. While Commerzbank, 25 percent-owned by Germany, wants to avoid state aid, it needs to find 5.3 billion euros ($7 billion) capital by mid-2012 to meet European Banking Authority capital rules. Since Germany's second-largest bank raised 5.3 billion euros from shareholders in June, writedowns on Greek sovereign debt and tougher capital rules have eroded its capital cushion. How Germany could help strengthen Commerzbank's balance sheet remains open, coalition and banking sources said.
  • Copper Falls on Economic Growth, Demand Concerns.
  • OECD Oct Indicator Signals Deeper Slowdown. All major economies are losing momentum, the Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development said on Monday, with activity across the think tank's member countries at its weakest in two years. The Paris-based organisation's October composite leading indicator for its member states fell to its lowest level since November 2009, easing to 100.1 from 100.4 in September, barely staying above its long-term average of 100. "Composite leading indicators (CLIs) ... point to a slowdown in economic activity in all major economies, but with some variation in the strength of the slowdown across countries," the OECD said in statement. The Group of Seven's CLI fell to 100.2 from 100.5 while the reading for the euro zone dropped to 98.5 from 99.2, slipping further from its long-term average of 100. Among major emerging market economies, China's CLI slipped marginally to 100.2 from 100.3, India's fell to 93.1 from 93.9 and Brazil's to 94.2 from 94.7.
  • S&P Says Eurozone May Need Another Shock. Ratings agency Standard & Poor's put more pressure on the euro zone on Monday, with its chief economist saying time was running out for the currency bloc to resolve its debt problems and that it might need another financial shock to get it moving.
Financial Times:
  • Wave of Insolvencies Looms for Shipping Industry. Fears are mounting that the eurozone financial crisis could spark a fresh wave of shipping insolvencies, after funding problems at many leading European banks accelerated falls in vessel values, triggered by the worst conditions in some shipping markets in 25 years.

Telegraph:

Kurier:
  • China's Vice Foreign Minister Fu Ying said it is 'important' for China that the euro area solves its crisis, and the nation is following closely the efforts led by Germany and France, according to an interview. "This is important for China, the EU is our biggest trade partner," she said. "Our exports to the EU dropping in October," she added.
Xinhua:
  • China Needs Long-Term Measures to Control Property Speculation, citing Zhang Liqun, a researcher at the State Council's development research center.
Shanghai Daily:
  • Shanghai Luxury House Sales Lift Price. THE improved sales of luxury house pushed the average cost of new homes in Shanghai to a three-month high even as the overall local buying sentiment weakened again.
  • China's Competitiveness On The Decline. CHINA'S industrial competitiveness showed signs of decline this year, with higher-tech industries suffering more than those at the lower end, the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences said yesterday. Whether China can rebound in 2012 depends on economic conditions in developed countries and the pressure on China's exchange rate, said Zhang Qizi, a researcher at the academy's Institute of Industrial Economics. Industrial competitiveness in the academy's report involves non-financial sectors dedicated to global trade. The global slump will put great pressure on exports and as protectionism against Chinese products is on the rise, global trade is unlikely to grow much, he said.

Bear Radar


Style Underperformer:

  • Small-Cap Growth (-2.70%)
Sector Underperformers:
  • 1) Coal -7.25% 2) Oil Service -4.90% 3) Steel -4.50%
Stocks Falling on Unusual Volume:
  • ROSE, PHG, DMND, ONXX, ADTN, YNDX, QCOR, INTC, TLEO, ATMI, OFIX, SGEN, CEVA, ZAGG, SHLD, TRS, AVGO, SKUL, HBHC, TITN, MAPP, BCA, VCO, XSD, IGV, XLK, FGP, FEU, RWR, IJR, DEG, KFRC, ARIA and IVC
Stocks With Unusual Put Option Activity:
  • 1) MTL 2) ADBE 3) XLI 4) KMI 5) HOG
Stocks With Most Negative News Mentions:
  • 1) CRM 2) TOL 3) OXY 4) INTC 5) CAM
Charts:

Bull Radar


Style Outperformer:

  • Large-Cap Value (-1.80%)
Sector Outperformers:
  • 1) Restaurants -.80% 2) Utilities -.91% 3) Gaming -1.03%
Stocks Rising on Unusual Volume:
  • VMC, EXP, ENDP, NFLX, MLM, TXI, EW and LNG
Stocks With Unusual Call Option Activity:
  • 1) AVGO 2) ENDP 3) TRGT 4) ATVI 5) HL
Stocks With Most Positive News Mentions:
  • 1) IR 2) BA 3) RTN 4) BLY 5) ALTR
Charts:

Monday Watch


Weekend Headlines

Bloomberg:

  • EU Banks Taking Government Cash Seen Sparking 'Vicious Cycle'. European banks turning to their governments to raise required capital could trigger a downward spiral of declining sovereign-debt prices and further losses for the lenders. The European Banking Authority ordered the region’s banks on Dec. 8 to raise 115 billion euros ($154 billion) by June. Faced with dwindling profits and unable to tap capital markets to sell new shares, firms may be forced to seek government help. About 70 percent of the capital requirement falls on lenders in Spain, Greece, Italy and Portugal, countries struggling to convince the world they can pay their debts. “If the Southern governments put money in their banks, their sovereign debt will go up, exacerbating their problems,” said Karel Lannoo, chief executive officer of the Centre for European Policy Studies in Brussels. “Then the banks’ losses will rise because they hold the government debt. That’s a vicious cycle. It’s hard to know which one to stabilize first, the sovereign bonds or the banks.” European Union leaders meeting in Brussels last week agreed to move toward a closer fiscal union, with harsher penalties for countries violating budgetary constraints. With the action, German Chancellor Angela Merkel and her counterparts aim to stem the erosion of confidence in the ability of some nations to pay their debts. Market reaction to the announcement was mixed, with stocks climbing and bonds falling.
  • Fifth European Solution Failing to Ease Stress: Credit Markets. The fifth agreement in 19 months intended to resolve Europe's sovereign crisis is failing to ease stress in the debt markets. A credit-default swaps index tied to Greece, Italy, Spain and 12 other western European nations rose last week, reversing its biggest drop ever and approaching the record reached Nov. 25. A gauge of banks' reluctance to lend to one another in euros remains at about the highest since February 2009. The premium they pay to convert euro payments into dollars jumped the most in five weeks and is more than double this year's average.
  • Bundesbank Cools ECB Bond-Buying Talk. Germany’s top central banker cooled speculation that the European Central Bank will extend its role as European leaders pressed their case that a new fiscal accord will deliver the region from its two-year-old debt crisis. Bundesbank President Jens Weidmann told the Frankfurter Allgemeine Sonntagszeitung that while the new accord represents “progress,” the onus is on governments rather than the Frankfurt-based ECB to resolve the crisis with financial backing. German Finance Minister Wolfgang Schaeuble said euro- area policy makers will now focus on implementing the Dec. 9 pact to strengthen budget rules as quickly as possible. “The mandate for redistributing taxpayer money among member states clearly does not lie in monetary policy,” Weidmann told the newspaper in an interview published yesterday. “Financing of sovereign debt through central banks is and remains forbidden by treaty,” the central banker said. The Franco-German-led agreement, which provides tighter budget rules and an additional 200 billion euros ($267 billion) to the euro war chest, is part of an effort to reassure investors that European leaders can master the crisis. ECB President Mario Draghi lauded the accord, stoking hopes among investors that the central bank might step up bond purchases.
  • Obama Says Righting U.S. Economy Will Be 'Long-Term Project'. President Barack Obama said restoring the U.S. to robust economic growth is “a long-term project” and will take more than one term and likely “more than one president.” Americans “have every reason to be impatient” with the pace of the recovery, Obama said in an interview with the CBS program “60 minutes,” according to an excerpt released by the network. “I didn’t underestimate how tough this was going to be,” Obama said. “I always believed that this was a long-term project.” The state of the economy likely will be the top issue in the presidential campaign as the Republican candidates have been making Obama’s policies a central part of their arguments. Unemployment will average 8.7 percent in 2012, according to the median forecast by economists surveyed by Bloomberg News from Dec. 2-8. Republicans, including former Massachusetts Governor Mitt Romney, among the front-runners for the party’s presidential nomination, have faulted Obama for a forecast released at the start of his administration that the stimulus package he pushed through Congress would keep the unemployment rate from rising above 8 percent. It’s been above that level since February 2009 and hit a peak of 10.1 percent in October of that year.
  • China Sovereign Fund Has About 60% of Assets Invested in U.S., Jin Says. China Investment Corp., the nation’s sovereign wealth fund, has about 60 percent of its assets in the U.S., which has many investment opportunities and a good legal system, Jin Liqun told CNBC in an interview yesterday. Jin, chairman of CIC’s supervisory board, said that much of the rest of the fund’s assets are in Europe, other nations in Asia and Canada, with investments in resources, real estate and “open-market transactions.” The fund needs to take a “serious look” at the financial industry in the U.S. and Europe to see if it’s ready for “serious discussions” about investment, Jin told the financial news channel. China Investment managed $409.6 billion at the end of 2010, making it the world’s fifth-largest national fund, according to Sovereign Wealth Fund Institute. “The European debt crisis can hardly get solved in the near term and banks there are likely to suffer further losses” from potential write-downs in debt holdings, said Lu Zhiming, a Shanghai-based analyst at Bank of Communications Co. “The timing doesn’t look right yet for investments.” China’s central bank plans to create a new investment vehicle to manage $300 billion in foreign reserves, Reuters reported yesterday, citing two unidentified people familiar with the matter. The vehicle will run two funds that pursue “more aggressive” investments in the U.S. and Europe markets to generate higher returns, the report said. Regarding aid for Europe, Jin said that China is still a developing, low-income nation; that its “hard-won” financial reserves are important for the nation’s economy; and that it’s not the job of CIC or any Chinese companies, state-owned or private, to rescue any country in distress.
  • Arab States May Suffer Foreign-Investment Slump. Arab states have suffered a slump in foreign direct investment of as much as 24 percent this year as political unrest sweeps the region, according to the group that insures such funding against non-commercial risks. Foreign financing will shrink to between $50 billion and $55 billion in 2011 from $66.2 billion the previous year, the Arab Investment & Export Credit Guarantee Corp., known as Dhaman, said in an e-mailed response to questions. The total value of insurance operations concluded by Dhaman in the first eight months was about $780 million, “a significant increase” versus last year, indicating heightened concern, Fahad al-Ibrahim, its director-general, said in the e-mail.Egypt is worst affected, with foreign direct investment dropping an estimated 92 percent to $500 million, according to a report issued by Dhaman in October. Tunisia, where the so-called Arab Spring began, is estimated to have drawn $1.2 billion in funding this year, a decline of 20 percent, the report said. Kuwait-based Dhaman’s figures, which have not been verified by individual governments, suggest Libya received about $500 million, down 87 percent, and Syria $484 million, where unrest continues, a decline of 65 percent. Bahrain, which witnessed anti-government protests by the majority Shiite population, may have suffered a 36 percent drop to $100 million.
  • Funds Cut Bets on Rising Food Costs to 27-Month Low: Commodities. Hedge funds cut bullish bets on agricultural prices to the lowest in more than two years on signs of expanding global supplies. A measure of speculative positions across 11 products from wheat to coffee to cattle fell 3.6 percent to 258,071 futures and options in the week ended Dec. 6, Commodity Futures Trading Commission data show. That’s the lowest since September 2009. Bullish wagers on corn fell 11 percent to a 17-month low, and bearish ones on cocoa increased for a fourth week.
  • US Online Holiday Sales Rise 15% to $24.6 Billion. U.S. online sales in the holiday season to date are up 15 percent to $24.6 billion, according to comScore. The research firm said Sunday sales on six individual days during the first 39 days of the November-to-December shopping season have exceeded $1 billion, led by Cyber Monday, the Monday after Thanksgiving, when sales hit $1.25 billion. Sales in the most recent week ended Dec. 9 rose 15 percent to $5.9 billion, the Reston, Va., company said. “As we enter what will be the heaviest week of the season for online retailers — beginning with ‘Green Monday’ on Dec. 12 — all signs are now pointing to a strong finish to the season,” comScore Chairman Gian Fulgoni said.
  • International Debt Sales at 6-Year Low on Euro Crisis, BIS Says. The euro-region’s debt crisis has affected financial markets globally, pushing up borrowing costs for banks and triggering sell-offs in emerging-market assets, according to the Bank for International Settlements. Gross debt issuance in international markets dropped to $1.66 trillion in the three months through September, the lowest since 2005 as buyers demanded higher compensation for risk, the BIS said in its Quarterly Review. Investors withdrew more than $25 billion from emerging-market funds in August and September as they sought to either reduce risk or sent money home to repair their balance sheets, it said. “News on the euro-area sovereign debt crisis drove most developments in global financial markets between early September and the beginning of December,” the report said. “Financial institutions with direct exposure to euro-area sovereigns saw their costs and access to funding deteriorate.” The problem was exacerbated by a deteriorating economic outlook, the BIS said. The European Central Bank on Dec. 8 revised down its growth forecast for next year to a range of minus 0.4 percent to plus 1.0 percent, from 0.4 percent to 2.2 percent previously.
  • China Stock Correlation Hits Record on Growth Concerns: Chart of the Day. Chinese shares traded in Hong Kong are moving in synch with mainland counterparts in becoming more pessimistic about the nation's equities amid slowing growth. The relationship between H shares in Hong Kong and yuan-denominated A shares in Shanghai was the closest ever, as measured by a correlation coefficient of .66 on Dec. 2, according to 120-day observation periods compiled by Bloomberg since January 1994.
  • U.S. to Give Jordan $120 Million in Support, Al Ghad Reports. The U.S. is due to transfer $120 million to Jordan by the end of the year as part of promised assistance for the kingdom’s efforts to introduce changes, Al Ghad said. The move came after Jordan implemented a series of measures to improve the business environment, promote investment and enhancing transparency, the newspaper said, citing an unidentified Jordanian official. The U.S. transferred $64 million to Jordan in November, it said. U.S. annual assistance to Jordan totals $660 million, of which $360 million is in economic assistance and the remainder in military aid, it said.
  • No One Says Who Took $586B in Fed Swaps. For all the transparency forced on the Federal Reserve by Congress and the courts, one of the central bank’s emergency-lending programs remains so secretive that names of borrowers may be hidden from the Fed itself. As part of a currency-swap plan active from 2007 to 2010 and revived to fight the European debt crisis, the Fed lends dollars to other central banks, which auction them to local commercial banks. Lending peaked at $586 billion in December 2008. While the transactions with other central banks are all disclosed, the Fed doesn’t track where the dollars ultimately end up, and European officials don’t share borrowers’ identities outside the continent. The lack of openness may leave the U.S. government and public in the dark on the beneficiaries and potential risks from one of the Fed’s largest crisis-loan programs. The European Central Bank’s three-month dollar lending through the swap lines surged last week to $50.7 billion from $400 million after the Nov. 30 announcement that the Fed, in concert with the ECB and four other central banks, lowered the interest rate by a half percentage point. “Increased transparency is warranted here,” given the size of the Fed’s aid and current pressures on European banks, said Representative Randy Neugebauer, a Texas Republican who heads the House Financial Services Subcommittee on Oversight and Investigations. Whether the U.S. should make disclosure of the recipients a condition of the swap lines is “probably a discussion we need to have,” possibly in a hearing that includes Fed Chairman Ben S. Bernanke, Neugebauer said.
  • Global Sweet Spot in Computer Stocks as Net Estimate Falls Least. Profit forecasts for computer and software makers are holding up better than any industry in the world, a sign of confidence that corporate spending will keep the American economy expanding next year. Net income at companies from Apple Inc. to Oracle Corp. will rise 11 percent in 2012 on average, according to more than 2,900 analyst projections compiled by Bloomberg. The profit estimate is down 2.3 percent from its peak this year, the smallest reduction of any industry in the MSCI World Index. Utility forecasts were cut the most at 29 percent.
Wall Street Journal:
  • Mortgage Fees Eyed to Offset Payroll Tax Reduction. Congress and the Obama administration are turning to an unlikely source to pay for the proposed extension of the payroll-tax cut: mortgage-finance giants Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac. The revenue source proposed by both Senate Democrats and House Republicans would boost fees that Fannie and Freddie collect from lenders. But that is raising hackles in the real-estate industry. Builders, Realtors and lenders say it would amount to a tax that would be passed on to mortgage borrowers.
  • Probe of GM's(GM) Volt Fires May Be Lengthy. General Motors Co. could be in for a lengthy investigation over why the batteries on several Chevrolet Volt cars caught fire, potentially hurting sales of the plug-in vehicle.
  • Hedge Funds' Fading Star. Once seen as the Gods of finance, hedge-fund managers need to work much harder to convince clients they are worth their fees.
  • German Bunds: Harbor or Storm? It is proving to be one of the toughest calls of 2012: Buy or sell German Bunds? Throughout the European financial crisis, German government bonds retained their haven aura, rewarding investors who clung to debt of the economic powerhouse. Now, though, many see a threat that measures taken to save the euro will leave Germany shouldering the burden, a negative for bond prices.
  • America's New Energy Security by Daniel Yergin. Thanks to new technology, the U.S. has become less dependent on petroleum imports from unstable countries. Every president since Richard Nixon has called for energy independence. Nevertheless, U.S. reliance on imported oil long seemed to be headed in only one direction—up—and that pointed to inevitably increasing dependence on the huge resources of the Middle East. No longer. U.S. petroleum imports, on a net basis, reached their peak—60%—of domestic consumption in 2005. Since then, they have been going in the other direction. They are now down to 46%. What's happening?
CNBC:
  • New United Nations Global Warming Deal Struck. Climate negotiators agreed a pact on Sunday that would for the first time force all the biggest polluters to take action on greenhouse gas emissions, but critics said the action plan was not aggressive enough to slow the pace of global warming. The package of accords extended the Kyoto Protocol, the only global pact that enforces carbon cuts, agreed the format of a fund to help poor countries tackle climate change and mapped out a path to a legally binding agreement on emissions reductions.
  • OECD Warns of Developed World Funding Crisis. Markets and governments face an uphill struggle to fund themselves next year amid extreme uncertainty over the eurozone and the global economy, as new figures reveal that the borrowing of industrialized governments has surged beyond $10 trillion this year and is forecast to grow further in 2012.
Business Insider:
Zero Hedge:
IBD:
NY Times:
  • European Banks Hunt for Ways to Increase Capital. As Europe continues to grapple with its sovereign debt crisis, many of the Continent’s banks are facing increased financing costs and limited access to much-needed cash, according to the Bank for International Settlements, an association of the world’s central banks. In its quarterly review to be published on Monday, the Swiss-based institution said European banks, including Commerzbank of Germany, BNP Paribas of France and Lloyds Banking Group of Britain, are selling assets and increasing customers’ interest rates in an effort to bolster their balance sheets. The steps come as the European Banking Authority has increased the amount that it expects banks will have to raise to meet new capital requirements.
NY Post:
  • Falcone Follies. Hedge-fund billionaire Phil Falcone got pummeled with a double dose of bad news yesterday — a one-two punch that could knock the legs out from under his already limping career. The 49-year-old’s $3 billion investment in LightSquared was slammed late yesterday when it emerged that the 4G wireless venture failed a major government test that is expected to severely cripple its chances of getting off the ground this year. That blow was preceded by the news that Falcone and two high-ranking employees of his $5.7 billion hedge fund, Harbinger Capital, were served with Wells Notices by the Securities and Exchange Commission for alleged securities violations. Such notices offer warning from SEC staffers that they plan to recommend that the agency proceed with a civil suit.
MSNBC:
  • Pakistan Says U.S. Drones In Its Air Space Will Be Shot Down. Pakistan will shoot down any U.S. drone that intrudes its air space per new directives, a senior Pakistani official told NBC News on Saturday. According to the new Pakistani defense policy, "Any object entering into our air space, including U.S. drones, will be treated as hostile and be shot down," a senior Pakistani military official told NBC News.
Washington Post:
  • Russians Turn Out To Demand End Of Putin Rule. (video) Tens of thousands of people held the largest anti-government protests that post-Soviet Russia has ever seen to criticize electoral fraud and demand an end to Vladimir Putin's rule.
CBS News:
  • Poll: Most Say Obama Doesn't Deserve Second Term. Less than one year out from Election Day 2012, voters remain overwhelmingly pessimistic about the economy, and their concerns are taking a toll on President Obama's re-election chances. Just 41 percent of Americans think Mr. Obama has performed his job well enough to be elected to a second term, whereas 54 percent don't think so. Views of how he has handled the economy is the obvious drag on the president's ratings: While just 33 percent approve, 60 percent disapprove. Similarly, just 35 percent approve his his handling of job creation while 58 percent disapprove. Views on the national economy remain very negative: Since early 2008, roughly three in four Americans (and sometimes even more) have said the economy is in bad shape. Now, 86 percent of Americans characterize the economy as at least somewhat bad, including 42 percent who say it is very bad. Just 21 percent think the economy is getting better, and 39 percent think it is getting worse, up from 32 percent last month. Another 40 percent think the economy isn't changing. When asked if Mr.Obama has made real progress fixing the economy, 68 percent say he has not, and just 28 percent say he has. And while 37 percent say the Obama administration's policies prevented the country from going into a deeper recession, just under half - 49 percent - say those policies did not do that. In addition, more think the policies of the Obama administration have mostly favored Wall Street (42 percent) than mostly favored average Americans (38 percent).

Reuters:

  • Hedge Fund Subscriptions Hit Post-Lehman High. Hedge funds look set to end 2011 with higher cumulative net subscriptions than at any time since the collapse of U.S. investment bank Lehman Brothers, as investors opt for alternative strategies to ride out stormy markets. The GlobeOp Capital Movement Index, which tracks monthly net subscriptions to and redemptions from hedge funds managing around $170 billion of assets, advanced 1.55 points to 141.01 points this month, topping the 140-point mark for the first time since October 2008, when Lehman's demise sent markets across the world into a tailspin.
  • Anti-Wall Street Activists Look to Block West Coast Ports. Anti-Wall Street protesters, hoping to briefly cripple a key supply chain of American commerce and re-energize their movement, plan to attempt to block major West Coast ports on Monday. The planned action comes after the Occupy movement that began in New York in September has seen its tent camps in most big West Coast cities dismantled in police raids, leaving the movement looking for new avenues to voice its discontent.
  • China Workshops Struggle, But Tougher Times Ahead. A broad and bruising downturn is sweeping through China's giant manufacturing sector, ensnaring thousands of factories already fighting for survival in the face of plunging profit margins. While the misery has not yet reached levels seen in 2008 when global financial turmoil caused trade to seize up, Chinese exporters across industries are battling hard times as Europe's crisis and tight credit conditions at home pummel sales. The tough times are clear from China's trade data released this weekend, which showed exports growth in November at its most sluggish in two years. Sales to Europe, China's biggest market, rose in single digits for the third straight month, a sharp slowdown considering growth averaged more than 18 percent in the first eight months of 2011.
  • More IMF in euro zone would be act of desperation - ECB's Stark. Higher involvement by the International Monetary Fund (IMF) in the euro zone's efforts to stem its debt crisis would be an act of desperation, outgoing European Central Bank chief economist Juergen Stark said, calling for a quantum leap by the currency bloc. "It would be an act of desperation," he was quoted as saying by Sueddeutsche Zeitung due for publication on Monday. Stark said he envisaged an informal panel of experts to check on member states' budgets. "That would be the nucleus for a future European finance ministry," he said.

AFP:

  • Austria Says Eurozone Deal Lacks 'Firepower'. A summit deal struck by all EU countries except Britain lacks the necessary "firepower" to tackle the underlying causes of the eurozone crisis, the Austrian chancellor said Saturday. "A firewall was created, but it is not strong or large enough to have a big deterrent effect on speculators and the financial markets in the coming years," Werner Faymann told the Salzburger Nachrichten daily in an interview. "The decisions taken lack the necessary firepower to have a sustained effect." He said that an agreement in Brussels on Friday on tighter budget discipline was a "large step on the path towards more independence from financial markets and (sovereign bond) creditors." But he added: "What is missing are financial market regulations, a European rating agency (and) European revenues from financial markets through a tax on financial transactions."

Telegraph:

  • Eurozone Leaders Deluded If They Think This 'Sticking Plaster' Treaty Can Solve The Debt Crisis. So, now we know what the latest euro-crisis summit has to offer. The fifth comprehensive effort to stabilise the eurozone in nineteen months, this latest Brussels gab-fest produced a slew of headlines and initiatives. But what did it really achieve? The single currency remains just as incoherent as it was last weekend, just as vulnerable to systemic collapse. The region’s banks and governments are still very highly indebted. Eurozone leaders are deluded if they think some diplomatic sticking plaster, and a lot of bluster, can hold together an inherently unstable structure. What’s more, to use a combination of borrowed and printed money to bail-out cash-strapped governments, which are insolvent largely because they, in turn, are standing behind insolvent banks, is to treat the symptoms of the crisis, not the cause. This historic policy error – tackling the results of the problem rather than the problem itself – has characterised the West’s response to this sub-prime fiasco from the very beginning, not just in the eurozone but in the UK and US too. Europe’s predicament is so much worse, though, given the restrictions imposed by the single-currency straitjacket.
  • EU treaty: Britain is being 'left behind' ... a rickety cart drawn by pantomime horse Merkozy. The EU treaty agreement shows eurozone politicians continue to be obsessed with the symptoms, ignoring the the underlying macro problems.
  • Merkel's Teutonic Summit Enshrines Hooverism in EU Treaty Law. Angela Merkel’s summit has sealed a 1930s outcome for Europe, further entrenching Germany’s misguided and contractionary policies without offering any viable way out of the crisis at hand.

The Spectator:

  • 10 Myths About Cameron's EU Veto. The EU veto that Cameron pulled in the early hours of Thursday morning has been widely misunderstood on all sides. Here are the 10 most common myths:

Der Spiegel:

  • The euro accord reached in Brussels last week requires thorough review to ensure it's constitutional, Bundestag President Norbert Lammert said in an interview. The German parilament will "carefully review potential constitutional problems that may arise through direct intervention" by European authorities in national budgets, Lammert, a member of the ruling Christian Democrats and parliaments' most senior lawmaker, said.

Tagesspiegel:

  • Allianz SE Chief Economist Michael Heise said the European Central Bank shouldn't massively widen its bond purchases, citing an interview. Heise said the ECB shouldn't do anything that reduces the member states' willingness to reform.
  • Bayer AG Expects the euro crisis to weigh on margins in its health unit as well as its plastics business as consumers cut spending on drugs, citing an interview with CEO Marijn Dekkers. Drug bills continue to go unpaid in Greece, Italy and Spain, citing Dekkers. Outstanding debts have reach a "significant three-digit million figure," Dekkers said.

Ansa:

  • Italy's banking association will oppose new capital requirements set by the European Banking Association "in every way" and is ready to take legal action should it be required, the association's head Giuseppe Mussari said.

TV2:

  • Denmark will have difficulty in supporting everything contained within the accord struck by European Union leaders on Friday, Foreign Minister Villy Soevndal said in an interview.

Edmonton Sun:

  • Financial Guru Lambasts Environment. Jobs. Oil. The Keystone XL pipeline's got 'em, and America needs 'em. So, git 'er done. That's the word from heavy hitters from Texas weighing in on the $7-billion project that would carry a million barrels of Alberta crude to the Gulf Coast — and U.S. markets — each day.

Toronto Sun:

  • Don't Pretend We Know What Causes Climate Change. Not only is the Kyoto Protocol technically flawed, the so-called science behind it is utter twaddle. Never mind complicated things like non-linear mathematics or, indeed, mathematics of any sort. The alarmists can't possibly know how to predict the future of Earth's climate because they can't explain its past.

Financial News:

  • China Smaller Developers May Face Repayment Pressure. A "turning point" is emerging in China's property prices and some small- and medium-sized developers may face pressure from maturing loans, China Banking Regulatory Commission Assistant Chairman Yan Qingmin wrote. The banking regulator will monitor banks' asset quality as the economy slows, Yan wrote.

Xinhua:

  • China has no intention to and wouldn't be able to use finance as a toll to control European nations, citing Fu Ying, a vice foreign minister.

Tehran Times:

  • Global demand for crude oil may decline in the second quarter of 2012 and OPEC members need to be vigilant, citing Mohammad Ali Khatibi, Iran's governor to the group.
Weekend Recommendations
Barron's:
  • Made positive comments on (CVS), (MET), (SJM), (EXPE) and (UNP).
Night Trading
  • Asian indices are -.25% to +1.25% on average.
  • Asia Ex-Japan Investment Grade CDS Index 193.50 -11.5 basis points.
  • Asia Pacific Sovereign CDS Index 153.0 -1.0 basis point.
  • FTSE-100 futures +.08%.
  • S&P 500 futures -.18%.
  • NASDAQ 100 futures -.11%.
Morning Preview Links

Earnings of Note
Company/Estimate
  • (NX)/.24
Economic Releases
2:00 pm EST
  • The Monthly Budget Deficit for November is estimated at -$139.0B versus -$150.4B in October.
Upcoming Splits
  • (ROST) 2-for-1
Other Potential Market Movers
  • The 3-Year Treasury Note Auction and the China 3-Day Annual Economic Summit could also impact trading today.
BOTTOM LINE: Asian indices are mostly higher, boosted by financial and industrial shares in the region. I expect US stocks to open modestly lower and to rally into the afternoon, finishing mixed. The Portfolio is 75% net long heading into the week.

Sunday, December 11, 2011

Weekly Outlook

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 mixed as better US economic data, seasonality, investor performance angst and lower food/energy prices offsets rising global growth fears, technical selling, profit-taking and more shorting. My intermediate-term trading indicators are giving neutral signals and the Portfolio is 75% net long heading into the week.

Friday, December 09, 2011

Market Week in Review


S&P 500 1,255.19 +.88%*

Photobucket

The Weekly Wrap by Briefing.com.

*5-Day Change