Style Outperformer:
Sector Outperformers:
- 1) Education +2.62% 2) Steel +2.46% 3) Computer Hardware +2.25%
Stocks Rising on Unusual Volume:
- GDP, LVLT, ARB, TROX, SHFL, GBX, YOKU, CAJ, LOGM, SM, XXIA, PANW, RAX, CAR and FSL
Stocks With Unusual Call Option Activity:
- 1) HTZ 2) DNR 3) APOL 4) RAX 5) GIS
Stocks With Most Positive News Mentions:
- 1) CCE 2) NUS 3) NAV 4) ARB 5) CUB
Charts:
Evening Headlines
Bloomberg:
- Obama Offer Raises Tax Increase Threshold to $400,000. President
Barack Obama made a new budget offer that would raise taxes by $1.2
trillion and increase tax rates for households earning more than
$400,000 a year, up from $250,000, said a person familiar with the
talks. Obama’s plan would cut $1.22 trillion in federal spending,
including interest savings, said the person, who spoke on condition
of anonymity. It would change the inflation measure used to calculate
Social Security benefit increases. In his offer, Obama would increase the U.S. debt limit for two years.
- U.S. Banks Lack Liquidity to Withstand Crisis, Study Says. U.S.
banks representing more than half the industry’s assets need an
additional $840 billion in cash on hand to cover short-term obligations
if financial markets seize up again, according to a study. The 11
financial firms surveyed, which have about $9.2 trillion in combined
assets, need the funds in cash, Treasury bonds or other liquid assets to
cover 30 days of debt costs and other expenses under international
capital rules, according to a report released today by the New
York-based Clearing House, which represents 18 of the largest lenders.
The so-called liquidity coverage ratio, a buffer of banks’
liquid assets regulators require in case markets freeze,
improved from 59 percent in the fourth quarter of 2010 to 81
percent in the second quarter of this year, the Clearing House
said. Three of 11 companies surveyed have a coverage ratio of
100 percent or more while eight have shortfalls.
- China Home Prices Gain in Majority of Cities as Curbs Stay.
China’s new home prices rose in the majority of cities the government
tracks in November as property curbs slowed construction, reducing the
supply available for
sale. Prices climbed in 53 of the 70 cities from the previous
month, compared with 35 in October, according to data from the
National Bureau of Statistics today. That was the most in 18
months. Prices fell in 10 cities.
- China to Stick to
Property Curbs, Ministry Says. China will stick to its property curb
policies, Liao Yonglin, an official from the Ministry of Land and
Resources, said at a presser today, according to a transcript on the
ministry's website.
- China Foreign-Investment Declines for 12th Time in 13 Months.
Foreign direct investment in China fell for the 12th time in 13 months,
suggesting the nation’s economic-growth rebound has yet to attract a
fresh influx of capital spending from abroad. Investment dropped 5.4
percent in November from a year earlier to $8.29 billion, the Ministry
of Commerce said in Beijing today. FDI inflows in the first 11 months of
the year
fell 3.6 percent to $100 billion.
- Copper Falls as Supplies, Budget Impasse Signal Slowing Demand.
Copper fell to a one-week low in New York as a jump in stockpiles
monitored by the London Metal Exchange and a U.S. budget standoff added
to demand concerns.
Inventories in warehouses tracked by the LME rose for an
eighth session, climbing 9.5 percent to 298,625 metric tons, the
most since Sept. 5, 2008, exchange data showed today.
- Lacker Says Fed Asset Buying Won’t Speed Growth Above 2%.
Federal Reserve Bank of Richmond
President Jeffrey Lacker predicted the economy will grow 2 percent next
year and said the Fed’s stepped up purchases of bonds won’t do much to
spur the recovery. “It’s not clear that monetary policy, by itself,
can bring about any material improvement in economic growth,” Lacker
said today in a speech in Charlotte, North Carolina. “The supply of
bank reserves is already large enough to support the economic
recovery, and the benefits of further asset purchases are
unlikely to be sizeable.”
- General Motors(GM) idles Malibu plant in Kansas for 5 weeks-source. General Motors Co idled
the Kansas plant that makes the Chevrolet Malibu on Dec. 3 and
will not reopen it until Jan. 7 in an attempt to cut into the
hefty supply of the midsize sedan, said a source familiar with
the situation. The plant, in Fairfax, Kansas, was to be down for a
week-and-a-half beginning December 24 for a normal holiday
break. An extra 3-1/2 weeks of no-production days were added to
allow GM to work through the oversupply of the Malibu and the
Buick LaCrosse, which is also made at the plant.
- Samsung Wins Order Denying Apple Request for U.S. Sales Ban. Samsung Electronics Co. won a court order rejecting a permanent U.S.
sales ban on 26 of its devices sought by Apple Inc. following a jury
verdict in August finding infringement of six of the iPhone maker’s
patents.
Wall Street Journal:
- The Fiscal Cliff: Live Stream.
- Clues Hint at School Shooter's State of Mind.
- Struggles Mount for Greeks as Economy Faces Winter. Maria Katri sent her son to live at a charitable home for poor boys after Greece's economy crashed.
Now, as Greece slides deeper into
depression, the widowed mother is so poor that her teenage daughter, who
stills lives at home, is "jealous that her brother is having a better
time than her in the institution," Ms. Katri says. The spread of economic hardship is
fraying Greece's social fabric and straining its political cohesion as
the country enters the harshest winter of its three-year-old debt
crisis. Even the tightknit Greek family—an institution that has helped
the population to absorb a collapse in employment—is under pressure as
household incomes dwindle.
- Probe Sparks Split on Trades. A regulatory investigation into whether stock exchanges have given
unfair advantages to high-speed traders has sparked complaints against
the exchanges, fueling a broader debate about how the market operates
and is regulated. The Investment Company Institute, trade group for mutual funds,
complained in a recent letter to the Securities and Exchange Commission
that U.S. stock exchanges "facilitate strategies" for rapid-fire trading
firms "that can lead to disorderly markets or that can benefit market
participants at the expense of long-term investors."
- ECB Chief Defends Austerity Measures. European Central Bank President Mario Draghi urged governments to
build on "painful progress" they have made on narrowing budget deficits
and overhauling their economies, despite the near-term damage these
policies have inflicted on business activity and unemployment. Mr. Draghi's strident defense of fiscal austerity as a means of
ensuring economic growth in the long run comes against mounting
criticism that these measures are weakening already-fragile countries
such as Spain and Portugal, leading to persistently high unemployment
and sharp contractions in output.
- Apple(AAPL) in Talks With Foursquare About Data-Sharing Deal.
- ObamaCare's Faux Federalism. GOP Governors are smarter than some of their conservative critics. As for conservatives who say running an exchange is a last stand against
single-payer medicine, well, all we can say is good luck with that one.
ObamaCare was designed to make a Washington-dominated and -paid for
system inevitable. Within three or four years the same people who passed
ObamaCare will be talking about "solving" ObamaCare's
government-created problems with more government. The 26 Governors are
merely saying they won't be accomplices.
Fox News:
- The Cost of Spending: Federal government racking up huge tab. The problem is right now you have a situation in which the government in
its overspending ways tries to rationalize it by saying that actually
the problem is we're under-taxing the American public,” he said. “It's
like your irresponsible brother-in-law runs up his credit cards and goes
bust and says the real problem is because you've stopped sending me
checks."
CNBC:
- Even Without Congress, Obama Could Act to Restrict Guns. Unburdened by re-election worries and empowered by law to act without
Congress, U.S. President Barack Obama could take action to improve
background checks on gun buyers, ban certain gun imports and bolster
oversight of dealers.
Zero Hedge:
Business Insider:
Reuters:
- Obama held talks with Biden, Cabinet members on Newtown response. President Barack Obama held talks on Monday with Vice President Joe
Biden and three Cabinet members to look at ways to respond to the
Newtown, Connecticut, school shootings, a White House official said.
- Obama 'cliff' offer is flawed but positive - Boehner aides.
Aides to House of Representatives Speaker John Boehner said on Monday
the latest White House offer on resolving the fiscal cliff impasse is
flawed but moves negotiations in a positive direction. "Any movement
away from the unrealistic offers the president has made previously is a
step in the right direction, but a proposal that includes $1.3 trillion
in revenue for only $930 billion in spending cuts cannot be considered
balanced," said Brendan Buck, a Boehner spokesman. "We hope to
continue discussions with the president so we can reach an agreement
that is truly balanced and begins to solve our spending problem," Buck
said.
- Syria 'genuinely worried' extremists could get chemical weapons. Syria is "genuinely
worried" that some countries might equip extremist groups with
chemical weapons and then claim they were used by the Syrian
government, the country's U.N. envoy said in a letter to U.N.
chief Ban Ki-moon and the Security Council. Syria's U.N. Ambassador Bashar Ja'afari also accused the
U.S. government of supporting "terrorists" in Syria and waging a
campaign that claims Syria could use chemical weapons in the
20-month-old civil war that has killed at least 40,000 people.
- Boeing(BA) resumes $3.6 bln share repurchase program. Boeing Co said Monday it
will raise its dividend 10 percent and resume share repurchases
after suspending them in 2009. The Chicago-based aerospace company set a regular quarterly
dividend of 48.5 cents per share, payable on March 8, meaning
Boeing will not join Wal-Mart Stores Inc and other
companies that decided to issue dividends in December to avoid
the looming possibility of a tax increase in the new year.
- Wal-Mart(WMT) affiliate used bribes to open 19 new stores in Mexico: NY Times. Wal-Mart Stores Inc's
Mexican affiliate routinely used bribes to open stores in
desirable locations, according to a New York Times investigation
published Monday, which cites 19 instances of the retail giant
paying off local officials.
Telegraph:
- Major protests expected in Spanish cities. Hundreds of thousands of people are expected to pack the streets of Spanish
cities in evening protests against the conservative government's anti-crisis
austerity measures.
Evening Recommendations
Night Trading
- Asian equity indices are unch. to +.75% on average.
- Asia Ex-Japan Investment Grade CDS Index 109.0 unch.
- Asia Pacific Sovereign CDS Index 84.0 -.25 basis point.
- NASDAQ 100 futures +.33%.
Morning Preview Links
Earnings of Note
Company/Estimate
Economic Releases
8:30 am EST
- The 3Q Current Account Deficit is estimated at -$103.0B versus -$117.4B in 2Q.
10:00 am EST
- The NAHB Housing Market Index for December is estimated to rise to 47 versus 46 in November.
Upcoming Splits
Other Potential Market Movers
- The Fed's Fisher speaking, 5Y T-Note auction, weekly retail sales reports, China property price data and the (MED) analyst day could also impact trading today.
BOTTOM LINE: Asian indices are mostly higher, boosted by automaker and financial shares in the region. I expect US stocks to open modestly higher and to weaken into the afternoon, finishing mixed. The Portfolio is 50% net long heading into the day.
Today's Market Take:
Broad Market Tone:
- Advance/Decline Line: Higher
- Sector Performance: Most Sectors Rising
- Volume: Slightly Below Average
- Market Leading Stocks: Performing In Line
Equity Investor Angst:
- ISE Sentiment Index 165.0 +22.2%
- Total Put/Call .73 -17.98%
Credit Investor Angst:
- North American Investment Grade CDS Index 92.41 -2.87%
- European Financial Sector CDS Index 147.26 -3.14%
- Western Europe Sovereign Debt CDS Index 110.41 bps unch.
- Emerging Market CDS Index 209.33 bps +.29%
- 2-Year Swap Spread 12.5 -.25 bp
- 3-Month EUR/USD Cross-Currency Basis Swap -23.0 -.5 bp
Economic Gauges:
- 3-Month T-Bill Yield .02% unch.
- China Import Iron Ore Spot $132.20/Metric Tonne +2.24%
- Citi US Economic Surprise Index 47.40 -3.2 points
- 10-Year TIPS Spread 2.48 +2 bps
Overseas Futures:
- Nikkei Futures: Indicating +32 open in Japan
- DAX Futures: Indicating +2 open in Germany
Portfolio:
- Higher: On gains in my retail, tech, medical and biotech sector longs
- Disclosed Trades: Covered some of my (IWM)/(QQQ) hedges
- Market Exposure: Moved to 50% Net Long
Style Underperformer:
Sector Underperformers:
- 1) Coal -2.31% 2) Computer Hardware -.40% 3) Semis -.35%
Stocks Falling on Unusual Volume:
- END, MLNX, SPWR, SLF, NOR, CLF, HTH, CAVM, CAB, AIRM, RGR, AGX, CUB, NTE, HTHT, AG, UA, PPG, LG, EZCH, CLH, HLF, CBD, ARLP, DBL, BMI, AFFY, MVO, GWAY and GORO
Stocks With Unusual Put Option Activity:
- 1) XOP 2) NWSA 3) UNG 4) RCL 5) EWW
Stocks With Most Negative News Mentions:
- 1) TXN 2) FINL 3) SD 4) CAB 5) ACI
Charts:
Style Outperformer:
Sector Outperformers:
- 1) Homebuilders +2.43% 2) Banks +1.83% 3) Insurance +1.15%
Stocks Rising on Unusual Volume:
- YPF, CBOU, SA, CPWR, ARIA, KEP, TROX, VVUS, SINA and PPO
Stocks With Unusual Call Option Activity:
- 1) NRG 2) ARIA 3) NUAN 4) RRC 5) RAX
Stocks With Most Positive News Mentions:
- 1) PFE 2) COF 3) GRMN 4) DIOD 5) ITRI
Charts:
Weekend Headlines
Bloomberg:
- Mario Monti’s Resignation May Slow Year of Euro Agreement. Italian Prime Minister Mario Monti’s
looming resignation this week may threaten progress in fighting
the three-year debt crisis even as European leaders wrap up the
year with newly won breathing room. Monti, under pressure from euro-area and business leaders
to enter the Italian election campaign, plans to quit once
parliament passes his budget this week. Former Prime Minister
Silvio Berlusconi withdrew support from Monti’s government of
non-politicians Dec. 6. The Italian upper house starts debate
today on the budget, which will then pass to the lower house.
- Moscovici Says 2013 Will Be ‘Very Difficult,’ JDD Reports. French
Finance Minister Pierre Moscovici said 2013 will be a “very difficult
year” of weak economic growth, according to an interview published in Le
Journal du Dimanche. The end of this year will be “especially”
difficult, the minister was quoted as saying by the weekly newspaper.
France will still keep its growth and deficit targets and focus on
lowering debt, he said.
- China Signals Tolerance of Slower Growth After Meeting. China said it will seek a higher “quality and efficiency” of
growth next year, signaling new leaders may accept a reduced pace of
expansion in exchange for a more sustainable model. There was no
mention of seeking “relatively fast” growth, a policy in place since
2006, in a report yesterday by the state-run Xinhua News Agency after
the annual central economic work conference in Beijing. Leaders vowed to
target “sustained and healthy development” as they maintain a “prudent”
monetary policy and “proactive” fiscal stance, Xinhua said. Chinese
leaders assuming power in a once-a-decade handover to be completed in
March must decide the pace of market-driven change to boost consumer
demand and rein in the role of exports and investment. Communist Party
chief Xi Jinping, who made the case for restructuring during a visit to
the southern Guangdong province this month, faces an economy likely to
have grown this year at the weakest rate since 1999.
- China Potential Economic Growth Cut by Population, Academy Says.
Potential economic growth rate to drop to an average 7.2% in 2011-2015
and 6.1% in 2016-2020, according to Cai Fang, director of the Institute
of Population and Labor Economics at the China Academy of Social Sciences.
- Singapore’s Exports Unexpectedly Fell on Slump in Electronics. Singapore’s
exports unexpectedly fell for the third time in four months in November
as shipments of electronics slumped and companies sold fewer goods to
U.S. customers. Non-oil domestic exports fell 2.5 percent from a year
earlier, after a 7.9 percent gain in October, the trade promotion agency
said in a statement today. The median of 11 estimates in a Bloomberg
News survey was for a 1.7 percent
increase. “We expect electronics exports to underperform in 2013,”
Chester
Liaw, a Singapore-based economist at Forecast Pte, said
before the report. “We only expect a 2 percent rise in non-oil
domestic exports over 2013, and that’s coming on the back of a
series of low base effects in electronics.” Singapore’s exports are
forecast by the Trade Ministry to rise 2 percent to 3 percent in 2012,
and as much as 4 percent next year. Electronics shipments by companies such as Venture Corp.
fell 16.5 percent in November from a year earlier, after
slipping 0.8 percent the previous month, according to the
report.
- LDP Reclaims Power in Japan in Landslide With Abe Stimulus Plans. Japan’s Liberal Democratic Party
reclaimed power in a landslide victory three years after
surrendering half a century of control. Shinzo Abe’s LDP yesterday captured 294 seats in the 480-
member lower house of parliament, while Prime Minister Yoshihiko Noda’s Democratic Party of Japan lost three-fourths of its
lawmakers, according to public broadcaster NHK’s vote count.
Abe, 58, is set to replace Noda, returning to the office he left
five years ago for health reasons. The yen fell to a 20-month low against the dollar and
stocks rose to an eight-month high on expectations Abe will
expand monetary and fiscal stimulus in a bid to defeat
deflation. Japan’s seventh leader in six years, he inherits a
country in recession, still reeling from the 2011 earthquake and
nuclear crisis, and embroiled in a diplomatic dispute with
China, with an upper house election only seven months away. “Abe’s popularity will disappear very quickly if he does
something wishy-washy or overreacts and leads Japan into a real
crisis with China,” said Aiji Tanaka, a political science
professor at Waseda University in Tokyo.
- Dubai Project Dreams Evoke 2008 Crash at Banks: Mortgages. Dubai, gearing up for a new
development boom, will need to prove to lenders and investors
that this one won’t end like the last. With the same bravura that turned the desert sheikhdom into
a hub for finance, tourism and real estate, the government is
pitching massive projects in the hope of inspiring investment
even as banks and builders remain buried under debt from the
property-market collapse in 2008.
- Hedge Funds Reduce Bullish Bets by Most in a Month: Commodities.
Hedge funds cut bullish commodity bets by the most in a month as the
Federal Reserve warned the U.S. budget impasse may damage the economy,
increasing concern about demand just as prices head for the first loss
since 2008. Speculators and money managers decreased net-long
positions across 18 U.S. futures and options by 11 percent to 802,817
contracts in the week ended Dec. 11, U.S. Commodity Futures
Trading Commission data show. Sugar holdings tumbled 68 percent,
the most in five years, and those for wheat dropped to the
lowest since June. Wagers on higher crude-oil prices tumbled 21
percent, the most since May.
- Google(GOOG) Said to End FTC Probe With Letter Promising Change. Google Inc. is poised to offer
voluntary concessions that will end a 20-month antitrust probe
of the company’s business practices by U.S. regulators without
any enforcement action being taken, two people familiar with the
matter said.
- IPhone 5 Sets China Record With 2 Million Sales in Three Days.
Wall Street Journal:
- Profiles of the Victims.
- Updates on School Shooting.
- GOP Poses Millionaire Tax-Rate Increase.
- The Fiscal Cliff: Live Coverage.
- Debt Loads Climb in Buyout Deals. Private-equity firms are using almost as much debt to fund
acquisitions as they did before the financial crisis, as return-hungry
investors rush to buy bonds and loans backing those takeovers. The rise in borrowed money, or leverage, heralds the possibility of
juicy returns for buyout groups. Ominously, the surge also brings back
memories of the last credit binge around six years ago, which saddled
dozens of companies with huge levels of debt. Some companies laden with
debt by private-equity firms in the mid 2000s foundered during the
recession.
- Hospital Systems Branch Out as Insurers. A growing number of hospital systems are moving to start their own
insurance plans, aiming to broaden their roles and prepare for the
changes coming under the federal health-care overhaul. Piedmont
Healthcare and WellStar Health System, both in the Atlanta area, are set
to announce a jointly owned insurance arm, with the goal of marketing
coverage to employers and Medicare recipients in 2014. They also will
consider selling coverage on a health exchange, one of the online
insurance marketplaces required in each state by the health-overhaul
law.
- Warren Buffett Knows That Tax Rates Matter by Cliff Asness. The bond market shows that people focus on after-tax cash flows when making investments.
Business Insider:
New York Post:
- Bad trip for guru in 2012. Dalio losing bets.
Ray Dalio, who runs the world’s largest hedge-fund firm, the $130
billion Bridgewater Associates, is in danger of losing his hard-won
serenity. Dalio, known for practicing transcendental meditation and
creating a cult-like atmosphere at the Westport, Conn., firm, is just
weeks away from stumbling to a loss for the year. The loss comes
just 12 months after Dalio achieved near-genius status for doing what
few hedge-fund titans have done: chalking up two back-to-back years of
huge double-digit gains in his main macro fund. Now, looking to make a
comeback, Dalio this week predicted that interest rates would rise in
the latter part of 2013, while suggesting any fiscal deal would depress the economy.
Reuters:
- Clinton sustains concussion; Benghazi testimony postponed.
Secretary of
State Hillary Clinton, who canceled an overseas trip last weekend
because of illness, suffered a concussion after fainting due to
dehydration, prompting the postponement of her scheduled congressional
testimony on the attack on a U.S. mission in Libya, officials said on
Saturday. "While suffering from a stomach virus, Secretary Clinton
became dehydrated and fainted, sustaining a concussion," State
Department spokesman Philippe Reines said in a statement. "She has been
recovering at home and will continue to be monitored regularly by her
doctors. At
their recommendation, she will continue to work from home next week,
staying in regular contact with department and other officials. She is
looking forward to being back in the office soon," Reines added.
- China wealth fund warns of bleak eurozone outlook.
China's sovereign wealth fund China Investment Corp said it is "not
optimistic" about the outlook for the debt crisis in the eurozone, but
will consider investing more in the
region if countries create a more friendly environment. Jesse Wang, an executive vice president at CIC,
said Europe needed more time to increase fiscal revenues to lift
itself out of the crisis. "I think the outlook for the European debt crisis is not
optimistic yet," Wang said on Sunday at a forum in Sanya in the
southern tropical Hainan island.
- UN chief alarmed by escalating violence in Syria. U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon expressed alarm on Sunday at the worsening violence in Syria, including the reported mass killing of Alawites and alleged firing of
long-range missiles on Syrian territory, Ban's spokesman said.
- Japan's war on deflation runs into psychology of hard times.
The war against deflation in Japan will start with a battle for the
pocketbooks of recession-hardened consumers like Kumiko Kuramochi. The
Liberal Democratic Party, which stormed to an election victory on
Sunday, hopes to persuade Kuramochi and other Japanese that an
aggressive monetary policy is going to fire up
inflation. The message: buy now before prices start rising
again. The problem though is that a bargain-hunting psychology is
so entrenched after two decades of stop-start economic growth,
15 years of falling wages and nearly 15 years of deflation that
the government will struggle to convince people their incomes
will improve enough for them to buy more expensive goods.
- Disputes over small islands pose big conundrum for U.S. Far away from the United
States and usually far down the list of things Washington
worries about, the obscure islets at the center of bitter spats
between China and its neighbors have become a flashpoint that
could get hotter and embroil America. This week served up fresh
evidence that 2013 likely will bring no pause in tensions rippling the
seas around China. Japan on Thursday scrambled fighter jets after a
Chinese government plane entered what Japan considers its airspace over
disputed islets in the East China Sea, just one of many contested sites.
Telegraph:
- Japan election winner fires early warning to China. Nationalist parties have seized power in Japan, as the country's new prime
minister-in-waiting immediately firing a warning to China over the ownership
of islands that have caused months of diplomatic tension.
Welt am Sonntag:
- Frank-Walter Steinmeier, German opposition SPD's chief in parliament, says Chancellor Angela Merkel won't be able to keep promises that her policies won't lead to a writedown on Greek debt. The German government wants to spare voters "uncomfortable truths" until after the 2013 federal election, Steinmeier said.
Boersen-Zeitung:
- K+S
Hedges Euro-Dollar at About $1.30 Next Year. Europe's largest potash
maker is hedged at $1.28/$1.29 on average for this year, citing CFO
Burkhard Lohr in an interview.
Focus:
- European leaders have done about half the work needed to end the sovereign debt crisis, Focus quoted Klaus Regling, CEO of the ESM rescue fund, as saying in an interview. The ESM probably won't be allowed to recapitalize lenders until the euro-area has functioning bank supervisor, which is scheduled to happen by March 2014, he said. Italian spreads may widen if the country drops its reform program.
El Pais:
- Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy told union leaders German Chancellor
Angel Merkel is opposed to a sovereign bailout for Spain because she is
reluctant to submit the decision to the Bundestag.
Weekend Recommendations
Barron's:
- Bullish commentary on (TROX) and (JNJ).
Citigroup:
- Downgraded (AAPL) to Neutral, target lowered to $575.
Night Trading
- Asian indices are -.75% to +.50% on average.
- Asia Ex-Japan Investment Grade CDS Index 109.0 -2.0 basis points.
- Asia Pacific Sovereign CDS Index 84.25 unch.
- NASDAQ 100 futures +.30%.
Morning Preview Links
Earnings of Note
Company/Estimate
Economic Releases
8:30 am EST
- Empire Manufacturing for December is estimated to rise to -1.0 versus -5.22 in November.
9:00 am EST
- Net Long-term TIC Flows for October is estimated to rise to $25.0B versus $3.3B in September.
Upcoming Splits
Other Potential Market Movers
- The Fed's Lacker speaking, 2Y T-Note auction and the (GE) investor meeting could also impact trading today.
BOTTOM LINE: Asian indices are mostly lower, weighed down by technology and industrial
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.