Style Outperformer:
Sector Outperformers:
- 1) Disk Drives +1.59% 2) Computer Hardware +1.24% 3) Biotech +1.18%
Stocks Rising on Unusual Volume:
- NXY, HK, UNXL, INFI, GEO, MCP, ARIA, BKS, CNQR and INVN
Stocks With Unusual Call Option Activity:
- 1) EMN 2) PSX 3) FNSR 4) GRA 5) NWS
Stocks With Most Positive News Mentions:
- 1) MCD 2) COHR 3) IN 4) IR 5) CVS
Charts:
Weekend Headlines
Bloomberg:
- Italy Vote Will Test EU Nobel Winners After Greek Buyback. The
imminent end of Italian Prime Minister Mario Monti’s government
threatens to open a new front in Europe’s crisis fight before a year-end
summit, as Greece wraps up a six-month effort to secure a new bailout
payment. European Union leaders, gathering in Oslo today to collect
the Nobel Peace Prize, were set to check an item off their to-do list
with the completion of a 10 billion-euro ($13 billion) Greek debt
buyback. At the same time, former Italian Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi’s pledge to topple Monti with his
German-skeptic, anti-austerity message may rattle investors.
- Euro Near 2-Week Low on Monti Resignation Plan.
- Italian Bonds Decline as Berlusconi Threatens Government. Italian
10-year government bonds posted their first weekly drop in four after
former Premier Silvio Berlusconi threatened to withdraw his party’s
support for Prime Minister Mario Monti’s coalition government. Declines
yesterday pushed the yield to the most since Nov. 28 as Berlusconi’s top
political deputy called for an “orderly end” to Monti’s government,
saying the administration failed to develop a strategy to halt the
recession. Germany’s two-year notes advanced amid speculation the
European Central Bank will cut interest rates after a report yesterday
showed the country’s industrial production declined in October. Finnish
and Dutch two-year yields fell below zero yesterday. The drop in
Italian bonds “gives us a good clue as to how much the market doesn’t
like the idea of the politicians being back in power,” said Marc
Ostwald, a rates strategist at Monument Securities Ltd. in London. There
may be “a drift
higher in yields,” he said.
- Spanish Bailout Caution Grows as Business Lobbies Back Rajoy. Spain’s biggest business lobby is
getting as cautious as Mariano Rajoy’s government on a possible
bid request because of concern on just how stringent conditions
might be to trigger European Central Bank bond-buying. A rescue “could impose a criminal pace of reduction in
public spending,” Alberto Nadal, vice secretary-general of
CEOE, Spain’s main business group, said in an interview.
The group’s newfound skepticism contrasts with their
earlier support for a request following the ECB’s unveiling of
its bond-buying program in September after President Mario Draghi committed to do “what it takes” to save the euro.
- Spain Bad Bank Profit Pledge Seen Hindered by Housing. Spain’s pledge to generate profit
from its bad bank will be undermined by two more years of
property-price declines and the cost of maintaining the
repossessed homes it will own, according to real estate and
finance professor Jose Luis Suarez. The bank, known as Sareb, was
created to purge toxic assets
from the books of troubled Spanish lenders. Most of it will be
linked to residential property and development land in Spain
that will continue a price decline that started when the country’s
housing bubble burst in 2007, said Suarez of the IESE business school in
Madrid.
- Republicans Firm Against Higher Tax Rates, McCarthy Says. U.S. House Republicans insist on
broadening the tax base to generate revenue rather than raising
rates, Representative Kevin McCarthy said, signaling no
softening in the chamber’s standoff with President Barack Obama. Republicans have offered $800 billion in additional revenue
over the next decade, achieved in a way that would be less
damaging to the economy than higher rates, McCarthy, the third-
ranking Republican in the House, said today on NBC’s “Meet the
Press.” “The best way to get that is through closing special
loopholes,” the California congressman said.
- Japan Sinks Into Recession as Abe Calls for More Stimulus Steps.
Japan’s economy sank into recession in the second and third quarters,
fueling opposition leader Shinzo Abe’s calls for more stimulus and
highlighting the risk that weak growth will derail a planned sales-tax
rise. Gross domestic product shrank an annualized 3.5 percent in the three months through September,
the Cabinet Office’s second estimate showed in Tokyo today, matching a
preliminary reading. The government revised the previous quarter to a
0.1 percent contraction, matching the textbook definition of a
recession.
- China Survey Shows Wealth Gap Soaring as Xi Pledges Help. China’s
wealth gap is now 50 percent higher than a risk level for social
unrest, according to a central bank-backed survey, underscoring new
Communist Party chief Xi Jinping’s warning that corruption may endanger
its rule. The Gini coefficient, an index measuring income
inequality, was 0.61 in 2010, based on a survey of 8,438 households by
the Survey and Research Center for China Household Finance, a body
set up by the Finance Research Institute of the People’s Bank of
China and Southwestern University of Finance and Economics.
- Speculators Cut Bullish Bets as U.S. Talks Stall: Commodities. Investors cut bullish commodity bets
for the first time in three weeks as U.S. lawmakers appeared no
closer to an agreement to avert more than $600 billion in
automatic tax increases and spending cuts and Europe cut its
growth outlook. Speculators and money managers decreased net-long positions
across 18 U.S. futures and options by 3.4 percent to 898,380
contracts in the week ended Dec. 4, U.S. Commodity Futures
Trading Commission data show. Gold holdings fell 25 percent, the
biggest drop since March, as Goldman Sachs Group Inc. said the
longest winning streak in at least nine decades will peak next
year. Wheat bets fell for the second time in three weeks.
- Apple(AAPL), Google(GOOG) Team Up for Surprise Alliance in Kodak Patent Bid. Apple
Inc. (AAPL) and Google Inc. have joined forces to offer more than $500
million to buy Eastman Kodak Co. (EKDKQ)’s patents out of bankruptcy,
said people familiar with the situation. The two companies, competing
for dominance of the smartphone market, have partnered after leading two
separate groups this summer to buy some of Kodak’s 1,100 imaging
patents, said the people, who asked not to be
identified because the process is private.
Wall Street Journal:
- Obama, Boehner Meet as Urgency Over Talks Increases. President
Barack Obama and House Speaker John Boehner met at the White House
Sunday for budget talks, the first face-to-face meeting between the two
men in weeks as both sides attempted to speed up negotiations heading
into a crucial period. The coming week could prove pivotal for
Washington to engineer a deal that does more than merely patch up the
problem caused by a pending
package of tax increases and spending cuts. If serious negotiations
don't start, there is likely little time left between now and the end of
the year to seal a more ambitious deal.
- Fiscal Cliff: Live Coverage.
- Chinese Survey Shows a Higher Jobless Rate. The survey of 8,000 households shows the urban unemployment rate hit
8.05% in June, up slightly from 8% in August 2011 and nearly twice as
high as the official 4.1% rate. The survey was run by Gan Li, an
economics professor at South Western University of Finance and Economics
in Chengdu. The unemployment rate for China's army of 160 million migrant workers
has risen sharply to 6% in June 2012, up from 3.4% in August 2011
according to the survey, suggesting 10 million unemployed as a result of
the sharp slowdown in exports and real-estate construction.
- Egyptians Detain Suspected Terrorist Ringleader.
- Banking Industry Squirms Over European Rate Probe.
- Consumer Spending Wobbles. Job Worries, 'Fiscal Cliff' Uncertainty Threaten a Key Engine for U.S. Economy.
- Vice President, Chávez's Choice as Successor, Built Global Alliances.
- Crisis-Era Measure Nears End. Small banks are making a last-ditch attempt to persuade Congress to
extend a crisis-era blanket guarantee on nearly $1.5 trillion in
deposits before it expires at the end of the year. However, they face long odds of success. Even though the Senate is on
track to vote this week to continue the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp.
program, Republican leaders in the House are opposed. That makes
passage of legislation extending the program into 2013 unlikely,
congressional aides said.
- Egypt Faces Turmoil Over Vote. President Morsi Makes Concession but Stands by Saturday Constitutional Referendum, Fueling Tensions. President Mohammed Morsi made some concessions to his political
opponents on Sunday but dismissed their demands to delay a referendum
this week on an Islamist-leaning draft constitution, leading to fresh
protests and setting up a dispute with the judiciary that has a long
historic precedence. The leaders of Mr. Morsi's recently united opponents rejected the
president's announcement that he planned to lift a controversial
constitutional decree that awarded him near-absolute power over the
country's secular-minded judiciary.
Fox News:
- Republicans tee up round 2 of debt-ceiling fight. Republicans gave no ground Sunday to President Obama's demand for
near-unilateral power to increase the debt ceiling, with one influential
senator predicting the party will once again use the debt-ceiling vote
to extract trillions in spending cuts. The senator, Tennessee's Bob Corker, broke with some in his party
Sunday by urging Republicans to drop their opposition to tax hikes on
the wealthiest 2 percent. Corker, though, explained that he only thinks
Republicans should cave to Obama on tax hikes because then they can
focus on winning entitlement cuts as part of the debt-ceiling
negotiations. "Republicans know that they have the debt ceiling that's coming up
right around the corner, and the leverage is going to shift, as soon as
we get beyond this issue," Corker said on "Fox News Sunday." "The leverage is going to shift to our side, where hopefully we'll do the same thing we did last time."
CNBC:
- Why Only a 'German-Built' Euro Will Survive. The euro area leaders have done nothing to strengthen the monetary union
and to prevent another debilitating, and maybe terminal, crisis in the
future. The market turbulence unleashed by the imminent fall of Italy's
"technical" government, and a possible return of Silvio Berlusconi,
shows that the ultimate backstop to whatever remains of this crisis, and
to what may be any future crisis, are still the printing presses of the
European Central Bank (ECB).
Zero Hedge:
Business Insider:
IBD:
New York Times:
- Mortgage Crisis Presents a New Reckoning to Banks. The nation’s largest banks are facing a fresh torrent of lawsuits
asserting that they sold shoddy mortgage securities that imploded during
the financial crisis, potentially adding significantly to the tens of
billions of dollars the banks have already paid to settle other cases. Regulators, prosecutors, investors and insurers have filed dozens of new
claims against Bank of America(BAC), JPMorgan Chase(JPM), Wells Fargo(WFC), Citigroup(C)
and others, related to more than $1 trillion worth of securities backed
by residential mortgages. Estimates of potential costs from these cases vary widely, but some in
the banking industry fear they could reach $300 billion if the
institutions lose all of the litigation. Depending on the final price
tag, the costs could lower profits and slow the economic recovery by
weakening the banks’ ability to lend just as the housing market is
showing signs of life.
CNN:
- Proposal for global regulation of web. An unexpected new proposal for international regulation of the
internet drew warnings over the weekend of a spread of online censorship
and left a global conference on the issue on the edge of collapse. The deep divisions over
treatment of the internet came after a group of Arab states put forward a
plan late on Friday that would require countries around the world to
explicitly regulate internet companies. The proposal, made at a
conference in Dubai to agree a new international telecoms treaty, has
also won the backing of Russia and China, along with a group of other
countries.
- Chinese investors take 80% stake in AIG(AIG) aircraft leasing unit.
Reuters:
- China exports rise much weaker than expected. China's exports
rose in November at a much weaker pace than expected and imports were
flat compared with a year earlier, taking some shine off weekend data
that suggested a revival in the world's second-biggest economy was deepening. Exports rose 2.9 percent from a
year earlier, well below expectations for a 9.0 percent increase and
October's 11.6 percent pace, customs figures showed on Monday. Imports
were unchanged on the year, weaker than forecasts for a 2.0 percent
increase. The data represented the weakest performance for exports and imports since August.
- Bundesbank's Weidmann blasts new Greek debt deal - paper. Bundesbank
chief Jens Weidmann has criticized a new debt deal for Greece agreed to
by the country's international creditors at the end of last month. In
an interview with Germany's Welt am Sonntag newspaper, Weidmann, who
sits of the European Central Bank's (ECB)policymaking Governing Council,
said Greece's funding gap would be financed by new credits and for the
first time by actual transfers from national budgets. Weidmann
criticized the fact that Greece would meet part of its funding needs
through auctions of short-term T-bills, saying this paper would mainly
be bought by local banks, who in turn were largely financed through
central bank means, complicating the ban on direct state financing.
"Unfortunately the central banks are also not spared," he said.
- Britain's business minister sees risk of triple-dip recession. British business minister Vince Cable said Britain could fall back into
recession for a third time since the 2008 financial crisis but expected
the economy to stagger on with minimal growth. In
an interview published on Sunday, Cable, one of the most senior
ministers in the coalition's junior Liberal Democrats, said Britain
could also face a Japanese-style stagnant "lost decade".
- Apple(AAPL), JPMorgan(JPM) among Barron's top 10 picks for 2013.
- Political upheaval seen pushing Italy to centre of euro crisis. Prospects
of a political crisis in Italy sooner than expected - after Prime
Minister Mario Monti said he intends to resign early - are expected to
drive up Rome's borrowing costs and tensions in the euro zone after
months of calm on the bond market. Monti's surprise announcement on
Saturday that he intended to resign after the approval of next year's
budget raised the prospect of an election in February, weeks before the
end of his
term in April, and heightened the uncertainty over who will
succeed him.
Telegraph:
- Reform Government Spending or Go Bankrupt.
- Shadow banking worries limit China’s rebound. China's industrial output rebounded sharply last month and retail sales
gathered speed, boosting hopes that Asia’s powerhouse economy has finally
come back to life. Xianfang Ren from IHS Global Insight said the government is returning to bad
old ways, driving growth with state infrastucture projects. But
there is no
denying that a fresh cycle of growth is underway. Planned investment
for new projects grew 29pc in November. “It is likely to be
a weak expansion cycle. Stimulation won’t work for sectors that have already
been overstimulated – reflected by huge capacity overhang,” she said. Charlene Chu from Fitch said credit growth is running at a brisk 20pc,
including off-book lending. She said the output generated by each extra yuan
of lending has fallen from 0.75 to 0.30 this year, a sign that credit-driven
growth is nearing exhaustion. Zhiwei Ziang from Nomura said the central bank is worried about shadow banking
excesses and is likely to impose curbs early, keeping the economy on a short
leash.“Financial risks in the trust loan sector are mounting and the
regulators will probably have to tighten controls. We would expect growth
momentum to weaken,” he said.
Welt am Sonntag:
- Bundesbank President Jens Weidmann said EU treaties should be amended with regard to the creation of a banking union in Europe to prevent a conflict of interest between monetary policy and banking regulation, he said in an interview. "I don't see how it's possible to transfer supervising powers to the ECB under the legal basis envisaged. In my opinion, a legally clean solution would require a change in the EU treaties," he said. A treaty change is necessary even if it means delaying the start of the banking regulator. Weidmann doesn't see the banking regulator starting work next year. Weidmann repeated his opposition to the ECB OMT program, saying: "We're making decisions that are driving us to the limits of our mandate." Weidmann also said the question of an exit in the case of a country not fulfilling the conditions stipulated is one that still hasn't been resolved.
Handelsblatt:
- Landesbank Berlin Writedowns Expand by EU910m. Banks's total writedowns are 2.2b euros, citing people close to the bank's owners.
Real News:
- Finland's Urpilainen Against OSI on Greek Debt. Forgiveness of Greek debt under Official Sector Involvement wouldn't be acceptable nor would it be good for the EU, citing Finnish Finance Minister Jutta Urpilainen in a preview of an interview to be published tomorrow. Urpilainen says Greece's return to the financial markets will be a natural result if the country sticks to its reform program. Urpilainen said the sale of state assets and re-evaluation of state real-estate can play a critical
rose in Greece's return to the financial markets. Urpilainen said for
Greece to remain in the euro area it depends entirely on the country
itself. Urpilainen said Greece's debt buyback program must succeed.
El Pais:
- Spain needs to reduce its financing costs and only Spanish PM Mariano Rajoy can decide on requesting full bailout for the country, EU's Competition Commissioner Joaquin Almunia says. Series of actions that must be taken, some by European authorities and some by national authorities, to lower costs. The ECB is ready to act but only Spanish PM can make decisions. It is not suitable to tell the ECB how to do its job. It is essential now that small and medium sized companies regain access to credit. Main worry now is how to ensure economies such as Spain grow as they implement tough austerity measures.
Yonhap News:
- Obama's 'strategic patience' fuels N. Korea's weapons program: Joel Wit. The Barack Obama administration's "strategic patience" with North Korea will
only facilitate Pyongyang's "natural process" of developing nuclear weapons and
delivery systems, a prominent U.S. pundit said Sunday. North Korean
officials feel clearly that time is on their side and that sanctions are
ineffective due to China's patronage, according to Joel Wit, a former U.S. State
Department official specializing in North Korean issues.
China Securities Journal:
- China's steel and cement industries have been hit by weak demand and overcapacity. Chinese steel mills at the northern Chinese city of Tangshan operated at a low rate after steel prices fell in November, citing Dong Bin, a local steel trader.
South China Morning Post:
Jerusleum Post:
- PM: Hamas has no intention of compromising. Hamas
has no intention of compromising with Israel, Prime Minister
Binyamin Netanyahu said Sunday at the start of the weekly cabinet
meeting. Echoing comments made by President Shimon Peres earlier in the
day, Netanyahu said Hamas leader Khaled Mashaal's comments in Gaza over
the weekend exposed "our enemies' true face" once again. "They have no intention of compromising with us; they want to destroy the
state. They will fail, of course; in the annals of the history of our
people, we – the Jewish People – have overcome such enemies," he
continued.
Weekend Recommendations
Barron's:
- Made positive comments on (WFC), (TXN), (XTXI), (MW) and (DTV).
- Made negative comments on (PENN).
Night Trading
- Asian indices are -.25% to +.50% on average.
- Asia Ex-Japan Investment Grade CDS Index 113.0 +1.0 basis point.
- Asia Pacific Sovereign CDS Index 86.0 +.5 basis point.
- NASDAQ 100 futures -.02%.
Morning Preview Links
Earnings of Note
Company/Estimate
Economic Releases
Upcoming Splits
Other Potential Market Movers
- The Eurozone Industrial Production data, China Trade Balance, China Money Supply data and the (TXN) Mid-Quarter Update could also impact trading today.
BOTTOM LINE: Asian indices are mostly higher, boosted by real estate and financial shares in the region. I expect US stocks to open modestly higher and to weaken into the afternoon, finishing modestly lower. The Portfolio is 25% net long heading into the week.
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 Eurozone debt
angst, rising US fiscal cliff concerns, more Mideast unrest, technical
selling, profit-taking, more shorting
and increasing
global growth fears. My intermediate-term trading indicators are giving
neutral signals and the Portfolio is 25% net long heading into the
week.
S&P 500 1,418.07 +.13%*
The Weekly Wrap by Briefing.com.
*5-Day Change
Indices
- S&P 500 1,418.07 +.13%
- DJIA 13,155.13 +.99%
- NASDAQ 2,978.04 -1.07%
- Russell 2000 822.27 +.04%
- Value Line Geometric(broad market) 358.86 +.21%
- Russell 1000 Growth 655.53 -.59%
- Russell 1000 Value 709.84 +.86%
- Morgan Stanley Consumer 842.78 +.84%
- Morgan Stanley Cyclical 1,005.41 -.21%
- Morgan Stanley Technology 673.26 +1.57%
- Transports 5,128.06 +.17%
- Utilities 453.64 -.11%
- Bloomberg European Bank/Financial Services 89.23 +1.62%
- MSCI Emerging Markets 42.52 +1.83%
- Lyxor L/S Equity Long Bias 1,063.64 +.89%
- Lyxor L/S Equity Variable Bias 807.36 +.35%
Sentiment/Internals
- NYSE Cumulative A/D Line 158,529 -.08%
- Bloomberg New Highs-Lows Index -35 -221
- Bloomberg Crude Oil % Bulls 31.0 -6.9%
- CFTC Oil Net Speculative Position 193,833 +7.7%
- CFTC Oil Total Open Interest 1,549,067 +1.77%
- Total Put/Call .80 -31.62%
- OEX Put/Call .68 -52.78%
- ISE Sentiment 134.0 +48.9%
- NYSE Arms .51 -42.05%
- Volatility(VIX) 15.90 +.19%
- S&P 500 Implied Correlation 63.3 +1.10%
- G7 Currency Volatility (VXY) 7.56 +.40%
- Smart Money Flow Index 10,907.10 -.87%
- Money Mkt Mutual Fund Assets $2.644 Trillion +1.2%
- AAII % Bulls 42.2 +3.15%
- AAII % Bears 34.6 +.7%
Futures Spot Prices
- CRB Index 295.91 -1.03%
- Crude Oil 85.93 -3.38%
- Reformulated Gasoline 259.74 -5.03%
- Natural Gas 3.55 -.64%
- Heating Oil 291.53 -3.98%
- Gold 1,705.50 -.55%
- Bloomberg Base Metals Index 211.88 -.36%
- Copper 366.30 +1.02%
- US No. 1 Heavy Melt Scrap Steel 349.67 USD/Ton +14.9%
- China Iron Ore Spot 121.0 USD/Ton +4.67%
- Lumber 343.20 +.94%
- UBS-Bloomberg Agriculture 1,626.91 +.55%
Economy
- ECRI Weekly Leading Economic Index Growth Rate n/a
- Philly Fed ADS Real-Time Business Conditions Index -.1652 +13.55%
- S&P 500 Blended Forward 12 Months Mean EPS Estimate 112.02 +.02%
- Citi US Economic Surprise Index 50.80 +7.7 points
- Fed Fund Futures imply 58.0% chance of no change, 42.0% chance of 25 basis point cut on 12/12
- US Dollar Index 80.41 +.22%
- Yield Curve 138.0 +1 basis point
- 10-Year US Treasury Yield 1.62% unch.
- Federal Reserve's Balance Sheet $2.842 Trillion +.29%
- U.S. Sovereign Debt Credit Default Swap 37.50 +2.54%
- Illinois Municipal Debt Credit Default Swap 176.0 -.62%
- Western Europe Sovereign Debt Credit Default Swap Index 109.87 +4.31%
- Emerging Markets Sovereign Debt CDS Index 167.36 -.32%
- Israel Sovereign Debt Credit Default Swap 140.75 +.53%
- Iraq Sovereign Debt Credit Default Swap 450.0 -10.0%
- China Blended Corporate Spread Index 391.0 +5 basis points
- 10-Year TIPS Spread 2.49% +7 basis points
- TED Spread 22.75 -.75 basis point
- 2-Year Swap Spread 11.0 -1.75 basis points
- 3-Month EUR/USD Cross-Currency Basis Swap -25.75 -1.0 basis point
- N. America Investment Grade Credit Default Swap Index 96.77 -2.70%
- European Financial Sector Credit Default Swap Index 153.25 -4.34%
- Emerging Markets Credit Default Swap Index 220.16 -7.28%
- CMBS Super Senior AAA 10-Year Treasury Spread 90.0 unch.
- M1 Money Supply $2.366 Trillion -1.67%
- Commercial Paper Outstanding 1,035.50 +1.0%
- 4-Week Moving Average of Jobless Claims 408,00 +2,700
- Continuing Claims Unemployment Rate 2.5% -10 basis points
- Average 30-Year Mortgage Rate 3.34% +2 basis points
- Weekly Mortgage Applications 877.0 +4.54%
- Bloomberg Consumer Comfort -33.8 -.8 point
- Weekly Retail Sales +2.10% -10 basis points
- Nationwide Gas $3.37/gallon -.03/gallon
- U.S. Heating Demand Next 7 Days 24.0% below normal
- Baltic Dry Index 966 -11.05%
- China (Export) Containerized Freight Index 1,106.28 -1.48%
- Oil Tanker Rate(Arabian Gulf to U.S. Gulf Coast) 30.0 unch.
- Rail Freight Carloads 241,411 +24.09%
Best Performing Style
Worst Performing Style
Leading Sectors
- Coal +6.19%
- Disk Drives +4.91%
- Computer Hardware +4.16%
- Education +4.09%
- Construction +2.73%
Lagging Sectors
- Homebuilders -1.06%
- Biotech -1.21%
- Retail -1.36%
- Oil Tankers -3.63%
- Gold & Silver -4.77%
Weekly High-Volume Stock Gainers (14)
- MMR, EPHC, PXP, CIE, HITK, ATHN, GEO, SEAC, ESIO, LBTYA, NTLS, VRSN, HMST and NFLX
Weekly High-Volume Stock Losers (23)
- MTN, LANC, MW, DG, TPCG, INFA, SYNT, FIVE, RGC, SPLK, GPS, TSRO, FRAN, GWAY, VOLC, DRI, GMED, FIZZ, OXM, VRA, TIBX, FCX and MFRM
Weekly Charts
ETFs
Stocks
*5-Day Change
Today's Market Take:
Broad Market Tone:
- Advance/Decline Line: Modestly Lower
- Sector Performance: Mixed
- Volume: Below Average
- Market Leading Stocks: Underperforming
Equity Investor Angst:
- VIX 16.59 +.79%
- ISE Sentiment Index 146.0 unch.
- Total Put/Call .81 -.10%
- NYSE Arms .52 -37.25%
Credit Investor Angst:
- North American Investment Grade CDS Index 97.14 -.39%
- European Financial Sector CDS Index 153.26 +1.89%
- Western Europe Sovereign Debt CDS Index 109.90 bps +4.14%
- Emerging Market CDS Index 219.94 bps +1.20%
- 2-Year Swap Spread 11.25 -.25 bp
- TED Spread 22.75 +.75 bp
- 3-Month EUR/USD Cross-Currency Basis Swap -25.75 -1.5 bps
Economic Gauges:
- 3-Month T-Bill Yield .08% -1 bp
- Yield Curve 139.0 +5 bps
- China Import Iron Ore Spot $121.0/Metric Tonne +2.20%
- Citi US Economic Surprise Index 50.80 +15.3 points
- 10-Year TIPS Spread 2.49 +3 bps
Overseas Futures:
- Nikkei Futures: Indicating +17 open in Japan
- DAX Futures: Indicating +2 open in Germany
Portfolio:
- Slightly Higher: On gains in medial/retail sector longs and index hedges
- Disclosed Trades: Added to my (IWM)/(QQQ) hedges
- Market Exposure: Moved to 25% Net Long