Bloomberg:
- Euro-Area Economy Shrinks Most Since Depths of Recession.
The euro-area recession deepened more than economists forecast with the
worst performance in almost four years as the region’s three biggest
economies suffered slumping output. Gross domestic product fell 0.6
percent in the fourth quarter from the previous three months, the
European Union’s statistics office in Luxembourg said today. That’s
the most since the first quarter of 2009 in the aftermath of the
collapse of Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc. and exceeded the 0.4 percent
median forecast of economists in a Bloomberg survey. The data
capped a morning of releases showing that the economies of Germany,
France and Italy all shrank more than forecast in the fourth quarter.
- Italian Economy Shrinks Most in Almost Four Years Before Vote.Italy’s
economy contracted the most in almost four years in the quarter through
December as the country’s fourth recession since 2001 deepened. Gross
domestic product shrank 0.9 percent from the previous three months, a
sixth quarterly contraction and almost five times the 0.2 percent pace
of the third quarter, the National
Statistics Institute Istat in Rome said in a preliminary report
today. The decline was more than the 0.6 percent median forecast
in a Bloomberg News survey of 24 economists. From a year
earlier, output shrank 2.7 percent. Italy’s central bank has called on whichever government
emerges from this month’s elections to consolidate public
finances to boost competitiveness and economic growth, after
revising its GDP forecast for the euro region’s third-biggest
economy. The economy shrank 2.2 percent in 2012, Istat said today.
The Bank of Italy forecast the economy will contract 1 percent
this year and won’t emerge from the recession until the second
half of 2013, citing weak domestic demand. The central bank’s
new forecast is five times the 0.2 percent contraction it
estimated in July.
- S&P 500 Bearish Bets at
Two-Year Low: Options. Puts protecting against a 10% decline in the
S&P 500 cost 7.88 points more than calls betting on a 10% gain,
according to three-month options data compiled by Bloomberg. The price
relationship known as skew fell to 7.49 on Feb. 1, the lowest since
November 2010.
- Euro Drops to Three-Week Low as Recession Deepens; Yen Advances. The euro slid to a three-week low
against the dollar after a report showed Europe’s recession
deepened more than forecast last quarter, sapping demand for the
region’s assets and spurring bets on lower interest rates. The 17-nation currency dropped for a third day versus the
yen as separate data showed gross domestic product shrank in
both Germany and France. “The GDP data out of the euro zone was quite poor, putting
the idea of a potential rate cut by the European Central Bank
back on the table,” Brian Daingerfield, a currency strategist at Royal Bank of Scotland Group Plc in Stamford, Connecticut,
said in a telephone interview. “The market priced in further
potential for easier monetary policy coming out of the ECB,
which led to a weaker euro.” The euro slumped 0.9 percent to $1.3327 at 11:43 a.m. New
York time and reached $1.3315, the lowest level since Jan. 24.
- Gold Demand Rose 3.8% in Fourth Quarter, Narrowing Annual Drop. Gold
demand rose 3.8 percent in the
fourth quarter as Indian purchases jumped, narrowing the first drop in
annual usage in three years, the World Gold Council said. India remained
last year’s biggest buyer, ahead of China.
- The Real Risk-Takers Are at the Federal Reserve. In a nutshell: The Fed buys risk-free Treasury securities, depressing the yields. The public is goaded into buying riskier
assets, such as stocks and corporate bonds, sending those prices
higher. Businesses financing themselves with equity have more
money to invest. Consumers feel wealthier and spend more. Whenever I hear the bit about risk-taking, I wonder what
the dividing line is between encouraging higher asset prices and
creating froth in asset markets. How does the Fed know when
asset prices have gotten out of whack?
- Chicago Shamed by Murder as Aurora Has Homicide-Free Year. Aurora saw its factories shrivel and its street gangs
thrive until the past five years, when its police methodically
smothered the criminals by partnering with neighborhood groups
as well as state and federal law enforcement. The agencies drew
from the playbook used to get the Chicago crime icon Al Capone -
- attacking the enterprise, not just the violence it spawns. Aurora’s violent-crime rate has plunged, even as the city’s
population soared 38 percent in the last decade to almost
200,000, roughly the size of Salt Lake City. Aurora’s annual
homicide total in the past five years averaged fewer than 3,
down from 26 in 2002, according to police. The last year for
which the city recorded no killings was 1946.
- BlackBerry(BBRY) Co-Founder Balsillie Sells Stake in Company.Jim Balsillie, who served as co-
chief executive officer of Research In Motion Ltd. until January
of last year, has cut his 5.1 percent ownership stake to zero,
raising concern that he has lost confidence in the company.
- Postal Union Millions to Democrats Roils Saturday Cuts.
All but five of Congress’s 255 Democrats and independents received
campaign donations from postal worker union groups in the past six
years, raising the political risk of Postmaster General Patrick
Donahoe’s move to end Saturday mail delivery. Political action
committees for the seven postal unions contributed $9.6 million from
2007 to 2012 to current members of Congress, 91 percent of it to
Democrats and two independents who caucus with them, according to data
compiled by Bloomberg from the Federal Election Commission and the
Center for Responsive Politics, a Washington-based research group.
- Berkshire(BRK/A) Joins 3G Capital to Buy Heinz(HNZ) in $23 Billion Deal. Warren
Buffett’s Berkshire Hathaway Inc. and Jorge Paulo Lemann’s 3G Capital
agreed to buy HJ Heinz Co. for about $23 billion as the billionaires
increased
their bets on consumer products. The buyers will pay $72.50 a share,
compared with yesterday’s closing
price of $60.48, according to a statement today. Berkshire will spend
about $12 billion to $13 billion on the deal for the maker of condiments
and Ore-Ida potato snacks. The transaction is valued at about $28
billion including the assumption of debt, according to the statement.
- Hong Kong Bourse to Start After-Hours Futures Trading.
Hong Kong Exchanges & Clearing Ltd., the world’s largest
exchange company by market value, said it received regulatory approval
to start after-hours futures trading and will begin the service on April
8. Hang Seng Index and H-shares Index futures will be available for
trading from 5 p.m. to 11 p.m. from the date, in addition to regular
hours, the bourse said in a statement today. Gold futures will also be
considered for inclusion at a later
stage, it said.
Wall Street Journal:
- Boehner: House Won’t Act First to Avoid Sequester. House Speaker John Boehner
(R., Ohio) challenged the
Senate to pass a bill to avoid the across-the-board spending cuts known
as the sequester, saying the House won’t act to do so first. At a
weekly press conference, Mr. Boehner declined to comment on a
Senate Democratic bill that is expected to be unveiled later Thursday
that would partially defer the $85 billion in scheduled spending cuts by
raising revenues through ending some tax deductions. He said that until
the Senate passes such a bill, there was no reason for him to comment
on it. The Republican leader said the House had passed legislation last year
to shift the burden of the cuts away from defense and other key federal
programs. But that bill died at the end of the last Congress, House GOP
leaders don’t plan to reintroduce it this year.
- Hagel Nomination Again in Jeopardy. Chuck Hagel's confirmation as the next secretary of defense was again
in jeopardy Thursday as Republicans declared he wouldn't have the 60
votes necessary for his nomination to proceed. Republican leaders
told Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid (D., Nev.) they were withholding
GOP votes until they received more information, a Democratic leadership
aide said.
MarketWatch:
- Sen. Warren: Too-big-to-fail is too-big-for-trial. Fed’s Tarullo: changes to Volcker rule ahead. In her first hearing as a U.S. senator Thursday, Elizabeth Warren
criticized federal regulators for settling civil cases with Wall Street
banks instead of taking them to trial.
CNBC:
Zero Hedge:
Business Insider:
Forbes:
Reuters:
The Guardian:
Style Underperformer:
Sector Underperformers:
- 1) Telecom -3.03% 2) Airlines -2.35% 3) Education -2.12%
Stocks Falling on Unusual Volume:
- CTL, WIN, TOT, BCS, BBVA, LBTYA, TV, ECA, NFX, UNFI, BPL, EEP, TAP, AFFY, ULTA, WTW, WFM, STMP, FORR, HSP, CTU, GNRC, LCC, ITRI, PRLB, IPI, ALXN, BIN, TNGO, TRIP, MLU, SSS, MDLZ, PNK, NUS, EIX, UPL, NDAQ, UNG, HSC, AFFY, TROX and STRA
Stocks With Unusual Put Option Activity:
- 1) CTL 2) WFM 3) TRIP 4) Z 5) HYG
Stocks With Most Negative News Mentions:
- 1) EXPE 2) ETR 3) CPN 4) CLH 5) NFX
Charts:
Style Outperformer:
Sector Outperformers:
- 1) Oil Service +1.93% 2) Gold & Silver +.85% 3) Foods +.45%
Stocks Rising on Unusual Volume:
- STZ, HNZ, SWC, BAS, BUD, HAL, CPB, JCOM, PGI, ANGI, Z, SKX, VCLK, CJES, GNC, EZCH, CAR, NTSP, EQIX, BBY, ARUN and LUFK
Stocks With Unusual Call Option Activity:
- 1) ESI 2) GIS 3) TWX 4) MDY 5) GNC
Stocks With Most Positive News Mentions:
- 1) TWX 2) GIS 3) IM 4) PEP 5) CAH
Charts:
Evening Headlines
Bloomberg:
- EU Seeks Broad Transaction Tax to Curb Rules ‘Patchwork’. The European Union will propose a
far-reaching tax on financial transactions which could be
collected worldwide as soon as Jan. 1 next year by the 11
nations that have so far signed up to participate. The plan by the EU in Brussels, to be outlined today,
invokes “residence” and “issuance” ties to firms in
participating countries, in a bid to prevent traders from
escaping the levy by trading outside the tax’s zone, according
to documents obtained by Bloomberg News. The plan says that to
escape the proposed tax entirely, firms in other nations would
have to entirely cease financial-services business with the 11
EU nations involved.
- Italy Tax Pledges Spook Investors as
Economy Wilts: Euro Credit. Italian voters, being wooed by promises of
lower taxes that are spooking investors, will get a reality check today
with data probably showing the country slipping deeper into its fourth
recession since 2001.
- BOJ Rejects Keeping Virtually Zero Rates Until Price Goal Near. The Bank of Japan rejected a
proposal for keeping interest rates virtually at zero until a
price target is in sight and refrained from adding to stimulus,
ahead of leadership changes next month. The central bank kept its
asset purchase fund unchanged at
76 trillion yen ($813 billion), according to a BOJ statement
released in Tokyo today. That was in line with analysts’ forecasts.
Policy makers rejected board member Ryuzo Miyao’s call for the pledge on
rates.
- Sakakibara Says Japan Punishes Neighbors as Yen Falls Toward 98. Japan
is punishing its trading partners by guiding the yen toward levels that
haven’t been seen in almost four years, said Eisuke Sakakibara, a
former Ministry of Finance official. Japan’s currency has entered a
range of between 88 to 98 per dollar, according to Sakakibara, known as
“Mr. Yen” for his efforts to influence exchange rates in the late 1990s. An official from a Group of Seven nation said Japan will be in the
spotlight at the Group of 20 gathering this weekend amid concern
the yen’s slide has been excessive. “Guiding the yen lower is a policy that punishes
neighboring nations,” Sakakibara, 71, said in an interview in
Tokyo yesterday. Impressions overseas that Japan is trying to
orchestrate further declines in the yen mean that “it will be
criticized by the G-7, as well as the G-20,” he said.
- Perry Goes to California for Jobs After Brown 'Fart' Remark.
First, California Governor Jerry Brown mocked a Texas ad campaign to
lure jobs from his state as a “burp, barely a fart.” Then Texas Governor
Rick Perry escalated the battle with a four-day recruiting trip to
Brown’s state, capped by a news conference today to boast of his
efforts. “It’s not about bashing California, it’s about promoting
Texas,” said Perry, 62, a Republican, on a conference call with
reporters. “The ad campaign is doing what it was intended to
do: get people talking about the differences of California and
Texas.”
- State Farm Invests in Iran-Linked Firms, California Says. State Farm Mutual Automobile
Insurance Co. and units of Cigna Corp. are among insurers investing in firms that do business with Iran,
California Insurance Commissioner Dave Jones said. An ING Groep NV unit
also has Iran-linked holdings, according to a statement today from
Jones. Insurers that operate in California have $198 million invested in
firms that do business with Iran’s military, energy and nuclear
sectors, down
from about $6 billion in 2009 when California began pushing them
to divest, Jones said.
Wall Street Journal:
- U.S. Funds Score Big by Betting Against Yen. Some of the biggest U.S. hedge-fund investors have made billions
betting against the yen, exploiting Japan's determination to weaken its
currency and boost its economy.
Wagering against the yen has emerged as the hottest trade on Wall Street over the past three months.
George Soros, who made a fortune shorting the British pound in the
1990s, has scored gains of almost $1 billion on the trade since
November, according to people with knowledge of the firm's positions.
Others reaping big trading profits by riding the yen down include David
Einhorn's Greenlight Capital, Daniel Loeb's Third Point LLC and Kyle
Bass's Hayman Capital Management LP, investors say.
- U.S. Slams EU's Tax-on-Trades Plan. European
Commission Says Proposed Levy Could Raise €35 Billion Annually for the
11 Participating Countries. The U.S. Treasury said it opposes plans by
11 European Union
countries to impose a small tax on trades in shares, bonds and
derivatives. The European Commission, the EU's executive arm, will propose a new
financial-transaction tax it says could raise as much as €35 billion
($47 billion) a year for the 11 participating states, which include
Germany, France, Italy and Spain, according to documents to be published
Thursday and seen by The Wall Street Journal.
- Four Key Questions for Health-Care Law. Thanks
to the Supreme Court and Barack Obama's re-election, the Affordable
Care Act—"Obamacare" to foes and a few of its friends—isn't going away.
The issue now is how it will work.
- The Rookie. If there's a crisis on Jack Lew's Treasury watch, buy gold.
- Henninger: The State of Obama. The State of the Union speech was about just one thing: the Obama project.
Here's what has to be understood. It's all about him. A State of the
Union speech normally is about relating a president's public policies to
conditions in the country. An Obama State of the Union speech is about
one thing: the Obama project.
Fox News:
MarketWatch.com:
CNBC:
- Big Investors Lead Bets Against Junk Bonds. Some of the world's most sophisticated credit investors have been
ramping up their bets against junk bonds even as retail investors have
been pouring money into the asset class. The list of junk-bond
bears includes GSO, the credit arm of Blackstone; Apollo Global
Management; Centerbridge Partners; Oaktree Capital; and a host of credit
and so-called "macro" hedge funds, according to executives familiar
with the firms' investment activities.
Zero Hedge:
Business Insider:
NY Times:
- Seeking Growth, Nurses’ Union Links to Teachers’ Union. One
of the nation’s largest nurses’ unions — the National Federation of
Nurses — plans to announce on Thursday that it will affiliate with the
far larger American Federation of Teachers. Barbara Crane, the president
of the nurses’ federation, said her group’s national board voted to
join forces with the teachers’ union to give the nurses more political
clout and money to try to unionize more nurses.
Reuters:
- MetLife(MET) profit falls on derivative losses; operating profit beats. MetLife Inc reported a 90 percent
fall in quarterly profit on derivative losses linked to its
credit spreads but the largest U.S. life insurer's operating
profit beat estimates. MetLife, heavily exposed to persistently low interest rates,
has long had a substantial derivatives program designed to
smooth out that risk. But higher interest rates, foreign currency changes and
impact of the company's credit spreads resulted in derivative
net losses of $924 million, after tax, in the quarter. The
company recorded derivative net gains of $351 million a year
earlier.
- Whole Foods(WFM) store sales soften, shares fall. Whole Foods Market Inc, the largest U.S. natural and organic grocery chain, said on Wednesday that sales at established stores so far this quarter softened from the
prior period and its shares fell 6.1 percent after the close.
- Cisco(CSCO) results beat Street; CEO sees challenge in Europe. Cisco
Systems Inc's quarterly results topped Wall Street views on Wednesday
amid early signs tech spending was on the mend, but CEO John Chambers
warned the picture was mixed and parts of Europe remained challenging. The
company's shares were down
1.7 pct in after hours trading after Cisco reported that revenue growth
in Europe - which accounts for a quarter of its business - was down 5
percent.
- Engineers union files complaint, accuses Boeing(BA) of intimidation. A union representing engineers and technical workers at Boeing Co filed a complaint with the National Labor Relations Board accusing the airplane maker's
security personnel of stopping union members from distributing
leaflets on a labor contract ballot at the Everett factory.
- Pressure builds for Keystone decision after Obama speech. Environmentalists
and industry groups ramped up efforts on Wednesday to influence the
White House's decision on the Keystone XL pipeline project, a day after
President Barack Obama said he would take action to curb climate-warming
emissions.
- Obama Medicare rebate plan could hurt drug companies. President Barack Obama's decision to spotlight drug rebates as a way to save money on Medicare is likely to be opposed by the pharmaceutical industry, which could
potentially lose billions of dollars in profits.
Financial Times:
- US authorities widen SAC Capital probe. US authorities are expanding their investigation into potential insider trading involving SAC Capital
, the $14bn hedge fund, to include more stocks than previously identified, people familiar with the matter said. The probe by the Federal Bureau of Investigation and the US
attorney’s office in Manhattan has widened to include at least four and
as many as six more stocks, these people said.
Telegraph:
Evening Recommendations
Night Trading
- Asian equity indices are -.25% to +.50% on average.
- Asia Ex-Japan Investment Grade CDS Index 111.0 -.5 basis point.
- Asia Pacific Sovereign CDS Index 85.50 -1.0 basis point.
- NASDAQ 100 futures -.05%.
Morning Preview Links
Earnings of Note
Company/Estimate
Economic Releases
8:30 am EST
- Initial Jobless Claims are estimated to fall to 360K versus 366K the prior week.
- Continuing Claims are estimated to fall to 3205K versus 3224K prior.
Upcoming Splits
Other Potential Market Movers
- The Fed's Bullard speaking, G-20 Meeting, China FDI, BoJ decision, 30Y T-Note auction, weekly EIA natural gas inventory report, Bloomberg Feb. US Economic Survey, weekly Bloomberg Consumer Comfort Index, (JDSU) analyst day, (TEN) analyst meeting and the (OI) investor day could also impact trading today.
BOTTOM LINE: Asian indices are mostly higher, boosted by industrial and commodity 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.
Broad Market Tone:
- Advance/Decline Line: Slightly Lower
- Sector Performance: Mixed
- Market Leading Stocks: Performing In Line
Equity Investor Angst:
- ISE Sentiment Index 128.0 +37.63%
- Total Put/Call .89 -1.11%
Credit Investor Angst:
- North American Investment Grade CDS Index 87.30 -1.08%
- European Financial Sector CDS Index 140.77 -5.7%
- Western Europe Sovereign Debt CDS Index 99.71 -3.28%
- Emerging Market CDS Index 232.95 -.21%
- 2-Year Swap Spread 15.25 -.5 bp
- 3-Month EUR/USD Cross-Currency Basis Swap -16.75 +.25 bp
Economic Gauges:
- 3-Month T-Bill Yield .09% +1 bp
- China Import Iron Ore Spot $155.10/Metric Tonne n/a
- Citi US Economic Surprise Index -7.0 +2.0 points
- 10-Year TIPS Spread 2.57 +1 bp
Overseas Futures:
- Nikkei Futures: Indicating +75 open in Japan
- DAX Futures: Indicating -5 open in Germany
Portfolio:
- Slightly Higher: On gains in my biotech/tech sector longs
- Disclosed Trades: None
- Market Exposure: 50% Net Long
Bloomberg:
- King Says U.K. Faces Inflation Bout Plus Weak Growth.
Bank of England Governor Mervyn King said Britain faces a further bout
of inflation and a muted economic recovery, and pledged officials will
look through the volatility in prices to keep nurturing growth where
they can. “Inflation is likely to rise further in the near term and
may remain above the 2 percent target for the next two years,” King said
as he presented the central bank’s Inflation Report in
London today. “The MPC’s remit is to deliver price stability in
the medium term in a way that avoids undesirable volatility in
output in the short run. The prospect of a further prolonged
period of above-target inflation must therefore be considered
alongside the weakness of the real economy.”
- Fracking Threatens OPEC as U.S. Output at 20-Year High.
A surge in U.S. oil production has
pushed the country’s output to the highest level since 1992,
threatening the dominance of the Organization of Petroleum
Exporting Countries. The U.S. pumped 7.06 million barrels a day in the
week ended Feb. 8, up 1 percent from the previous week and extending
last year’s 19 percent gain, the Energy Information Administration said today. OPEC production fell to the lowest level in a year in January, the Paris-based International Energy Agency said today in its monthly report. Improvements
in horizontal drilling and hydraulic fracturing, or fracking, have
spurred drilling in states such as Texas, North Dakota and Oklahoma.
Saudi Arabia, OPEC’s largest producer, reduced output in December
because customers asked for less, Ibrahim al-Muhanna, an adviser to
Saudi Arabian Oil Minister Ali al-Naimi, said Jan. 14. “Increasing
amounts of North American oil production puts pressure on OPEC to find
other markets for their oil,” Andy Lipow, president of Lipow Oil
Associates LLC in Houston, said by phone today. “It changes the
political dynamics between the U.S. and OPEC.” U.S. crude imports have fallen 5.9 percent so far this
year, extending a 21 percent decline last year, according to
data from the EIA, the statistical arm of the Energy Department.
The U.S. met 84 percent of its energy needs in the first 10
months of last year, on pace to reach the highest annual rate of
self-sufficiency since 1991.
Wall Street Journal:
- Euro's Rise Threatens Corporate Recovery.
The euro's high exchange rate is dimming a rare bright spot for European companies: exports. With the euro up 12% against the dollar since July and up 35% to a
three-year high against the yen, European companies are squirming. A
stronger currency makes a country's exports more expensive abroad—and
thus less competitive—and reduces profit when it is brought back home.
CNBC:
- Zell: US Border Not a Problem, 'Jobs Aren't Here'. (video) America should not worry too much about protecting its porous borders
from illegal immigrants because "the jobs aren't here" so they're not
coming anymore, entrepreneur Sam Zell told CNBC on Wednesday. Zell noted that the president's call to increase the federal minimum
wage from $7.25 an hour to $9 would cost jobs. "There's no history that
says raising the minimum wage does anything other than eliminate jobs,"
he said.
- Drop Coverage or Cut Hours? Big Companies Grapple With Obamacare. For large retail and restaurant chains the big unknown in the year
ahead is how much more they'll pay for health coverage. Employers with
50 or more workers who put in 30 hours a week will be required to
provide health care coverage or pay a fine, under the Affordable Care
Act, also called the ACA or Obamacare. But the details haven't been
settled. "We can't really calculate what it's going to be like," said
John Mackey, Co-Founder and Co-CEO of Whole Foods, an outspoken critic
of the Obama health reform law.
- State of the Union Reaction: Gun Sales Still Strong. The
day after President Barack Obama's emotional plea in his State of the
Union message for a "vote" on new gun control measures, it is business
as
usual at the Blue Ridge Arsenal in Chantilly, Va. The post-Sandy Hook
boom in gun sales and even ammunition continues.
Reuters: