Style Outperformer:
Sector Outperformers:
- 1) Tobacco +.39% 2) Utilities +.19% 3) Biotech +.17%
Stocks Rising on Unusual Volume:
- NTSP, JOY, LZB, SINA, TXRH, CLH, MDRX and JCP
Stocks With Unusual Call Option Activity:
- 1) HL 2) FST 3) ODP 4) CDE 5) VRTX
Stocks With Most Positive News Mentions:
- 1) ADSK 2) DELL 3) MAR 4) CAT 5) MGM
Charts:
Evening Headlines
Bloomberg:
- Spanish Banks to Face Continued Funding Challenges, Moody’s Says. Spanish banks will still face
funding and liquidity pressures in coming months even though
some were able tap bond markets earlier this year, Moody’s Investors Service said.
“We still consider that liquidity and funding will continue to constrain
banks’ credit profiles over the coming months,” Pepa Mori, a Moody’s
senior analyst and author of a report on Spanish banks published today,
said in a statement. “While recognizing the decline in the system’s
overall financing requirements, Spanish banks continue to display
wholesale funding reliance at a time when accessibility to long-
term wholesale markets, while improving, has not normalized.”
- Greeks Hold First General Strike as Samaras Implements Austerity. Greek
labor unions are holding their
first general strike this year as Prime Minister Antonis Samaras’s
coalition government implements a new round of austerity measures amid
record unemployment. Schools, ferries, trains and government services
will be shut today with protests planned in central Athens by the
country’s public and private-sector trade unions. Greek civil
aviation workers will hold an eight-hour walkout that is set to cause
delays and cancellations at the country’s airports. “We are fighting for
measures to halt unemployment, for jobs for all, to protect our
democratic and workers’s rights,” the Greek General Confederation of
Labor, the country’s largest private-sector union, said in an e-mailed
statement.
- China’s Foreign Direct Investment Declines for Eighth Month. China’s
foreign direct investment
fell for an eighth month in January, a sign that the recovery in the
world’s second-largest economy has yet to revive confidence among
overseas companies. Inbound investment dropped 7.3 percent from a year
earlier
to $9.27 billion, the Ministry of Commerce said in a statement
today in Beijing.
- China Army May Be Behind Web Attacks, Security Firm Says. China’s army may be behind a
computer-hacking group that has attacked at least 141 companies
worldwide since 2006, according to a report by a U.S. security
firm. The attacks, mainly directed at U.S. companies, were
carried out by a group that is “likely government sponsored”
and is similar “in its mission, capabilities, and resources” to a unit
of the People’s Liberation Army, Mandiant Corp. said in a report today.
- China’s Financial Companies Drop for Fifth Day. Chinese financial stocks headed for their steepest five-day drop in more than two years. “Chinese stocks are in a period of correction,” said Wu
Kan, a Shanghai-based fund manager at Dazhong Insurance Co.,
which oversees $285 million. “Drugmakers are a beneficiary in
such times because they’re seen as a defensive stock, while news
about tightening measures for property would hurt earnings for
banks as housing loans may fall.” The CSI 300 Financials Index sank 1.5 percent, heading for
its biggest five-day retreat since November 2010.
- Australian Retail, Office Prices Fall as Rents Decline, NAB Says. Australian retail and office
property prices fell in the three months to Dec. 31 as rents
declined, a private survey showed. Retail property capital values dropped 1.4 percent in the
last quarter of 2012, while industrial property values slipped
1.2 percent and offices weakened 0.6 percent, according to a
National Australia Bank Ltd. survey released today. Rents eased
in all markets in the period, led by a 2.1 percent decline in
retail, NAB said.
- Detroit May Get State Manager as Fiscal Emergency Shown. A
fiscal emergency grips Detroit,
according to a report that opens a path to a state takeover of General
Motors Co.’s home town, citing deficits that have stymied city officials
after a $326.6 million gap last year. “It doesn’t have to be adversarial,” state Treasurer Andy Dillon said yesterday at a news briefing about the report,
produced by a six-member review team that included Dillon.
“Detroit is fixable and brighter days are ahead.”
- Herbalife(HLF) Fourth-Quarter Profit Tops Analysts’ Estimates.
Herbalife Ltd., the nutrition company at the center of a battle between
hedge-fund managers Bill Ackman and Carl Icahn, posted fourth-quarter
profit that
topped analysts’ estimates and raised its earnings forecast for
this year as sales rose in Asia.
- BofA(BAC) Raises Moynihan’s Compensation 71% to $12 Million in 2012. Bank
of America Corp. boosted Chief Executive Officer Brian T. Moynihan’s
2012 compensation by more than 70 percent to about $12 million and
agreed to increase his base salary for this year. Moynihan
received $11.1 million in stock grants for 2012, almost doubling the
amount he got the previous year, according to a regulatory filing
yesterday. For 2013, the bank increased his base salary to $1.5 million,
compared with $950,000 for each of the previous three years, according
to a person briefed on the matter.
Wall Street Journal:
- Rhetoric Turns Harsh as Budget Cuts Loom. With less than two weeks to go before the latest fiscal face-off,
rhetoric heated up Tuesday as the political parties exchanged fire over
whom to blame if looming spending cuts take effect. With Congress in recess this week, Republican and Democratic leaders
sent lawmakers home armed with fact sheets about the $85 billion in
across-the-board federal spending cuts due to start March 1, and talking
points on how to blame the other side. Meantime, the White House and
lawmakers are making no progress toward forging a compromise to avoid
the reductions, which are known in Washington as the sequester.
- Business Loans Flood the Market. Banks Put Their Liquidity to Work, but Added Competition Puts Pressure on Rates and Elevates Risk.
Carl DelPrete, chief executive of suburban New York
supermarket chain Uncle Giuseppe's Inc., couldn't be happier with the
current lending environment. To fund a recent expansion, he got bids
from three banks and calls the terms on the $14 million loan "the best
we're ever going to see in our lifetime." The episode reflects a renewed
willingness by some banks to lend cheaply and on flexible terms. But with banks not far removed from persistent criticism that they
were slow to make business loans that would kick-start an economic
recovery, a new concern is emerging: Is the pendulum swinging too far
the other way?
- Hearings Possible on 'Whale' Loss. A Senate panel probing J.P. Morgan Chase & Co.'s "London whale"
trading losses is wrapping up its report and considering calling
witnesses, including the bank's chief, James Dimon, for public hearings,
according to people familiar with the investigation. The Senate
hearings, which follow months of private interviews with top bank
officials, would likely focus on how much top J.P. Morgan officials knew
about mounting losses sustained by its massive bets on complex
derivative instruments. Public hearings into the trades could prove embarrassing for J.P. Morgan and Mr. Dimon.
- Drone Makers Take Aim at U.S. Market. American firms that make drones are aiming their sights on the U.S.
market as the next frontier for the controversial technology. With a declining defense budget expected to limit spending on the
vehicles, used primarily to monitor and target combatants on foreign
battlefields, manufacturers are seeking opportunities on the domestic
front, where universities, police departments and border patrol
agencies—as well as commercial enterprises— could use unmanned aircraft,
known as drones.
- U.S., China Ties Tested in Cyberspace. Ties between China and the U.S., strained by military rivalries and
maritime disputes, may face an even greater test from the newest front
in global conflict: cyberspace.
U.S. military and homeland security
officials quietly have long blamed the Chinese military for the most
egregious assaults on U.S. computer networks. Continued hacking and data
theft, however, are being met by an increasing willingness by
Washington to publicly point the finger at Beijing. Experts say the subtle but significant shift in how the U.S. approaches
the face-off carries significant implications for the next steps of
U.S.-Chinese diplomacy as the Obama administration sets about engaging a
revamped government in Beijing with its second-term national-security
lineup.
- Weak Growth Strikes a Blow to French Deficit Goals.
The French government on Tuesday said it won't be able to lower its
budget deficit to 3% of annual output this year because of weak growth,
dropping a key economic pledge by President François Hollande and
raising the pressure on the euro zone's second-largest economy to show
it can restore its public finances. Mr. Hollande's government had staked its credibility on the
commitment to lower the deficit to 3% of gross domestic product in 2013,
and introduced tax increases to bolster public coffers when economic
growth was insufficient to ensure the target was met.
- John Boehner: The President Is Raging Against a Budget Crisis He Created. Obama invented the 'sequester' in the summer of 2011 to avoid facing up to America's spending problem. A week from now, a dramatic new federal policy is set to go into effect
that threatens U.S. national security, thousands of jobs and more. In a
bit of irony, President Obama stood Tuesday with first responders who
could lose their jobs if the policy goes into effect. Most Americans are
just hearing about this Washington creation for the first time: the
sequester. What they might not realize from Mr. Obama's statements is
that it is a product of the president's own failed leadership.
MarketWatch.com:
- China waiting for a crisis: Andy Xie. Government must cut spending or wake up to a messy reckoning. Bank loans and money supply rose sharply in
January. The timing of the Spring Festival may have distorted the data.
Still, there are signs that many local governments with new leaders want
to try an old trick, pushing fixed-asset investment (FAI) to create
gross domestic product and fiscal revenue. This would turn bank loans
into GDP and fiscal revenue. Local governments are already heavily in debt. Pushing FAI would keep
them liquid through new loans. It is essentially a pyramid scheme and
can go on as long as the banks are willing and able to lend. But
constraints have appeared.
CNBC:
- BHP(BHP) Names New CEO as Profit Slumps. Global miner
BHP Billiton appointed the head of its non-ferrous business as its new
chief executive on Wednesday to replace Marius Kloppers, as it reported
an expected 43 percent drop in half-year profit. Andrew Mackenzie,
56, who joined BHP from rival Rio Tinto in 2008, will move into the top
job in May, taking the reins at a time when the company is battling to
protect margins by cutting costs amid
weaker commodity prices. The announcement came as BHP reported its
profit before one-off items tumbled to $5.68 billion for July-December
2012 from $10 billion a year earlier and took $3 billion in writedowns
on its aluminium and nickel businesses.
Zero Hedge:
Business Insider:
NY Times:
- Slide at Dell(DELL) Continues as Earnings and Sales Fall.
Dell reported another quarter of declining sales and profits on
Tuesday, deepening a downturn that has disenchanted its shareholders and
culminated in the slumping personal computer maker’s recent decision to
go private in a $24.4 billion deal.
Seeking Alpha:
Reuters:
- Joe Biden's tip for self-defense: Get a shotgun. Biden, who is spearheading a push for
President Barack Obama's gun control proposals, dispensed this
off-the-cuff tip for protecting life and property during an online
question-and-answer session on Facebook on Tuesday. The
vice president has not one but two shotguns that he says he keeps in a
locked cabinet at his house in his home state of Delaware, and he has
given his wife, Jill, explicit instructions on how to deal with any
would-be intruder.
- Nabors(NBR) revenue hit by spending cuts, demand recovery slows. Nabors Industries Ltd, the owner
of the world's largest onshore-drilling-rig fleet, reported a 44
percent jump in profit, but revenue fell as its major customers
curtailed spending amid the worst slowdown in gas-directed
drilling in more than a decade.
- Michael Kors(KORS) to sell big part of stake as shares soar. Fashion designer Michael Kors
is planning to sell a big chunk of his stake in his namesake
fashion house at a time when the company's shares are at an
all-time high. Kors will sell 3 million of his Michael Kors Holdings Inc
shares as part of a secondary offering of 25 million
shares the company announced in a regulatory filing on Tuesday.
Kors' ownership in the company will fall to about 4.8 million
shares, or 2.4 percent down from 3.9 percent after the sale.
- Sina(SINA) reports Q4 ad sales at lower end of forecasts. Sina Corp's quarterly advertising revenue grew 7 percent but came in towards the lower end of its own forecasts, as advertisers spent cautiously toward
the end of 2012 and new "Weibo" advertising products drew muted
sales.
Financial Times:
- China’s foreign oil output surges. China
is on track to produce enough crude oil outside its borders to rival
Opec members such as Kuwait and the United Arab Emirates, after its
state-owned oil companies spent a record $35bn buying foreign rivals
last year.
Telegraph:
The Times:
Shanghai Securities News:
- The
Beijing municipal government will hold meeting Thursday with developers
to discuss the property market and possible tightening policies, citing
a person from the local housing commission. Tightening may include
raising stamp duties and other taxes on transactions, according to the
report.
Evening Recommendations
Night Trading
- Asian equity indices are -.25% to +.75% on average.
- Asia Ex-Japan Investment Grade CDS Index 108.5 -2.0 basis points.
- Asia Pacific Sovereign CDS Index 83.0 -1.5 basis points.
- NASDAQ 100 futures +.19%.
Morning Preview Links
Earnings of Note
Company/Estimate
Economic Releases
8:30 am EST
- Housing Starts for January are estimated to fall to 920K versus 954K in December.
- Building Permits for January are estimated to rise to 920K versus 903K in December.
- The Producer Price Index for January is estimated to rise +.3% versus a -.3% decline in December.
- The PPI Ex Food & Energy for January is estimated to rise +.2% versus a +.1% gain in December.
2:00 pm EST
- Fed Minutes from Jan 29-30 FOMC meeting.
Upcoming Splits
Other Potential Market Movers
- The Germany inflation data, BoE minutes, weekly retail sales reports, weekly MBA mortgage applications report, Barclays Industrial Conference and the (TGI) investor day could also impact trading today.
BOTTOM LINE: Asian indices are mostly higher, boosted by technology and industrial 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: Higher
- Sector Performance: Mixed
- Market Leading Stocks: Underperforming
Equity Investor Angst:
- ISE Sentiment Index 111.0 -13.28%
- Total Put/Call 1.03 +17.05%
Credit Investor Angst:
- North American Investment Grade CDS Index 85.68 -1.19%
- European Financial Sector CDS Index 142.72 -1.1%
- Western Europe Sovereign Debt CDS Index 99.77 -.45%
- Emerging Market CDS Index 230.50 -.72%
- 2-Year Swap Spread 15.0 -.25 bp
- 3-Month EUR/USD Cross-Currency Basis Swap -17.5 -.25 bp
Economic Gauges:
- 3-Month T-Bill Yield .10% unch.
- China Import Iron Ore Spot $158.0/Metric Tonne+.51%
- Citi US Economic Surprise Index -2.50 -.5 point
- 10-Year TIPS Spread 2.57 +2 bps
Overseas Futures:
- Nikkei Futures: Indicating +68 open in Japan
- DAX Futures: Indicating -3 open in Germany
Portfolio:
- Slightly Higher: On gains in my tech/retail sector longs
- Disclosed Trades: Covered some of my (IWM)/(QQQ) hedges
- Market Exposure: Moved to 50% Net Long
Bloomberg:
- Monti Fights for Relevance as Italy Voters Eye Entertainers. Italian
Prime Minister Mario Monti, an economics professor who has never won an
election, says he’s aware of his handicap in a campaign dominated by
entertainers. “It would be easy to do better than me as far as empathy
goes,” Monti said Feb. 6 in an interview televised on La7.
- Ford(F) Leads Drop as European Auto Sales Decline to Record. European
Union car sales fell to the lowest level for a January, with Ford Motor
Co. and PSA Peugeot Citroen posting the biggest drops, as economic
contractions in the southern part of the region widened to Germany and
France. Registrations dropped 8.7 percent to 885,159 vehicles last month
from 969,219 cars a year earlier, the Brussels-based European Automobile Manufacturers’ Association, or ACEA, said today in a statement. The figure was the lowest start to the year since the group began tracking sales in 1990, it said.
- India Slowdown ‘Deepening and Widening,’ Credit Suisse Says. Earnings forecasts for the biggest
Indian companies are declining again as profits grow at the
slowest pace since the financial crisis, according to Credit
Suisse Group AG. Consensus earnings-per-share estimates for the 50
companies on the CNX Nifty Index are dropping, after rising in January,
Credit Suisse analysts Neelkanth Mishra and Ravi Shankar wrote in a
report dated yesterday. Forecasts for earnings growth may drop to 7-8
percent for the fiscal year ending March 31 as wages and borrowing costs
rise faster than revenue, they wrote. Projections for 2014 profits may
drop as much as 10 percent, the
report said.
- Brazilian Retail Sales Unexpectedly Contracted in December. Brazil’s retail sales unexpectedly
contracted in December, the first monthly drop since May,
prompting traders to pare bets that the central bank will raise
rates in the first half of this year. The volume of sales declined 0.5 percent, after increasing
0.3 percent in November, the national statistics agency said
today in Rio de Janeiro. The median estimate from 31 economists
surveyed by Bloomberg was for sales to gain 0.8 percent, and the
lowest forecast was for a 0.2 percent rise.
- Obama Golf With Woods in Florida Risks Muddling Economic Message. President
Barack Obama’s three-day Florida golf getaway featuring a round with
Tiger Woods opened him to criticism of tone-deafness for playing when
he’s at a budget impasse with Congress that threatens automatic spending
cuts in less than two weeks. After spending the President’s Day
holiday weekend playing Floridian, a private golf course and club in
Palm City, Florida, Obama returned to
Washington last night. He faces a March 1 deadline to reach a deal with
Congress to avert the $1.2 trillion in automatic cuts, which threaten to
crimp the U.S. economic recovery. Joining Woods as Obama’s playing
partners were businessmen and backer Jim Crane, who owns the course as
well as the Houston Astros baseball team, Anthony Chase, former deputy
chairman of the Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas, and Milton Carroll,
chairman of Centerpoint Energy Inc. U.S. Trade Representative Ron Kirk,
Obama’s Chicago friend Eric Whitaker and presidential aide Marvin
Nicholson also joined Obama on the course, according to White House spokesman Josh Earnest. Such
a fantasy golf weekend is out of reach for most Americans and presents a
contrast to Obama’s inaugural and State of the Union speeches, which
focused on economic inequality in the U.S., according to Paul Light, a
professor of public service and governance at New York University. “It’s
off-tone” Light said “It makes him seem like more of a Washington
insider than the strong advocate of the middle class that he wants
to be.”
- Copper Falls Most in Four Months on U.S., China Housing. Copper futures in New York fell the
most in four months as a drop in U.S. homebuilder confidence and
speculation that China will move to cool property purchases
damped demand prospects for the metal used in pipes and wiring. “Any
sign that China may be limiting its real-estate market is certainly
concerning from a demand perspective,” David Meger, the director of
metal trading at Vision Financial Markets in Chicago, said in a
telephone interview. “The
builder-confidence report is one more slight negative for the
market.”
Copper futures for May delivery dropped 2.3 percent to
$3.668 a pound at 11:44 a.m. on the Comex in New York.
- Ore-Ship Rates Fall Most in Two Months as Chinese Demand Slumps. Charter rates for Capesize ships,
the biggest carriers of iron ore, fell the most in two months as
demand declined for the steel-making raw material from China,
the world’s biggest buyer of the commodity. Daily hire costs for Capesizes declined 7.7 percent to
$5,875, figures from the London-based Baltic Exchange showed
today. That’s the biggest collapse since Dec. 19, according to
the exchange. Capesizes are the largest vessels tracked by the
Baltic Dry Index, a broader measure of costs to transport
minerals and grains by sea, which lost 1.2 percent to 738, the
lowest level since Jan. 8. Chinese port inventories fell to 66.9 million tons on Feb.
1, the lowest since January 2010, according to researcher
Beijing Antaike Information Development Co.
- Gasoline Pump Prices Soaring on Refinery Repairs, Oil Rally. U.S. consumers facing the highest
gasoline pump prices ever for February may see further increases
as global crude oil futures climb and breakdowns and seasonal
maintenance at refineries reduce fuel supplies. Gasoline futures
have surged 11 percent this year, making the fuel the top performing
commodity in the Standard & Poor’s GSCI index. Prices at the pump are up 14 percent this year and have risen 33 straight days, according to AAA data. Brent crude
in London, the pricing basis for gasoline imports and for oil
used by coastal refiners, advanced to a nine-month high Feb. 8.
- Saudi Oil Output Falls to 19-Month Low as Exports Decline. Saudi Arabia’s crude oil output fell
in December to a 19-month low as shipments from OPEC's biggest
producer dropped for a third month and domestic consumption
decreased, the Joint Organisations Data Initiative said. The kingdom
exported 7.06 million barrels of crude a day in December, the least
since September 2011, JODI reported, citing statistics the government
submitted to the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries. Exports
were 1.3 percent
lower than the previous month. Production dropped 4.8 percent in
the month to 9.03 million barrels a day.
- Wal-Mart(WMT) E-Mails Seen Showing Tax Drag Mounting on Retailers. The payroll tax increases and delayed tax returns that Wal-Mart Stores Inc. (WMT) executives blamed in internal e-mails for weak February sales may be poised to hurt other retailers as well. Wal-Mart had the worst monthly sales start in seven years, according to internal
e-mails obtained by Bloomberg News and reported Feb. 15. Jerry Murray,
Wal-Mart’s vice president of finance and logistics, in a Feb. 12 e-mail
called the retailer’s February month-to-date sales “a total disaster.” “It’s
not Wal-Mart specific,” David Strasser, an analyst for Janney
Montgomery Scott LLC in New York, said in a telephone interview
yesterday.
- Carbon Plunges as EU Delays Vote on Fast-Track Market Fix. Carbon prices plunged after the
European Parliament’s environment committee postponed a decision
on whether to seek fast-track approval of a proposal to tackle a
record surplus of emission allowances. The panel backed in a non-binding vote a compromise plan to
reduce the supply of European Union carbon permits, though it
delayed for about a week a separate decision on authorizing its
chairman to start talks with member states on the proposal. EU
carbon futures for December fell as much as 20 percent.
- Gold Drops for Fourth Session as Investors Await Fed Minutes. Gold declined for a fourth session
as investors weighed whether the Federal Reserve will signal
tomorrow in the minutes of its Jan. 29-30 meeting when it plans
to end the third round of stimulus measures.
- ARM(ARMH) Turns Up Pressure on Intel(INTC) as Even Cutlery Gets Smart. ARM Holdings Plc, which has sprinted
ahead of Intel Corp. in the market for mobile chips, poses a
threat to its rival in another burgeoning business:
semiconductors for machines ranging from cars to cutlery.
- Martin Zweig, Author Who Predicted ’87 Stock Crash, Dies.
- Humana(HUM) Falls in Early Trading on Medicare Advantage Rates. Humana Inc., the second-biggest
private Medicare insurer, declined as much as 11 percent after
saying the U.S. government’s preliminary Medicare Advantage
payment rates were less than the company expected. Humana fell 9.3 percent to $70.77 at 9:43 a.m. New York
time after hitting $69.78 for its biggest intraday drop since
November.
- Boeing(BA) Strike Threat Looms After Dreamliner-Grounding Tumult. Boeing Co., already struggling with the grounding of
its 787 Dreamliner, is facing a possible strike by union engineers,
threatening even more upheaval as it tries to fix the plane and resume
deliveries to customers.
Voting ends tonight for 23,000 engineers and
technical workers considering whether to authorize a walkout in their
dispute over retirement benefits.
Wall Street Journal:
MarketWatch:
- Armstrong World(AWI) fourth-quarter profit down 1.2%.
Armstrong World Industries Inc.'s AWI -2.53% fourth-quarter earnings
edged down 1.2% as the flooring and building products maker's revenue
slipped and tax expenses rose, though margins
improved. For 2013, the company forecast earnings of $2.30 to $2.60 a
share on
revenue of $2.7 billion to $2.8 billion. Analysts polled by Thomson
Reuters expected $2.89 and $2.72 billion, respectively. For the first
quarter, Armstrong predicted revenue of $600 million to
$650 million, compared with Wall Street forecasts of $642 million.
Armstrong has struggled amid a slow recovery in the construction market.
The company, which produces ceilings, floors and cabinets, remained
profitable over the past year as cost savings and pricing strategies
helped overcome volume declines.
Fox News:
- Obama pins blame on Republicans for looming cuts, as fiscal hawk warns of 'failed presidency'. President Obama pinned the blame on Republicans Tuesday for looming
spending cuts that may be triggered by what was originally a White House
proposal -- while a former leader of the president's deficit commission
said it's Obama who's on the path to a "failed presidency" if he can't
tackle the debt. The president spoke Tuesday at the White House, urging Congress to
come up with a short-term fix to cancel sweeping cuts to defense and
other programs set to hit March 1.
CNBC:
Zero Hedge:
Business Insider:
Reuters:
Telegraph:
Shanghai Daily:
- 2nd-Home Buyers May Pay More. CHINA
may impose tighter housing policies by raising the borrowing costs for
second-home buyers, sources told Shanghai Daily yesterday. The
government is expected to unveil more policies to rein in property
speculation before or after the National People's Congress annual
session in March. One of the measures being studied is to increase
the borrowing costs for homebuyers, a bank source told Shanghai Daily.
Yang Hongxu, vice director at E-house China R&D Institute, a
major property services provider and research organization in the
country, said on Weibo yesterday that second-home buyers may need to
put down 70 percent of the property price as initial payment, with
interest rates 30 percent above the benchmark rates. Second-home buyers
now have to make an initial payment of 60 percent of the property price,
which was raised from 40 percent in 2011. The interest rates they pay
are marked up by 10 percent over the benchmark ones.
Style Underperformer:
Sector Underperformers:
- 1) Gaming -2.01% 2) HMOs -1.83% 3) Homebuilders -1.53%
Stocks Falling on Unusual Volume:
- HUM, GPI, YNDX, DAKT, PERY, EC, ADNC, AIXG, SAND, ULTA, AWI, NOW, BCOR, IPGP, SNFCA, MPEL, NGD, LVS, CPA, BP, CIB, MNST, EQIX, VOD, SBGI, EHTH, MWV, ALJ, IMOS, RAX, UNH, CI, MORN, GPC, QLIK, RP, ELLI, ALSN, ALXN and PCYC
Stocks With Unusual Put Option Activity:
- 1) FE 2) MON 3) UNH 4) AKS 5) HNZ
Stocks With Most Negative News Mentions:
- 1) OII 2) IPI 3) HUM 4) OCN 5) APA
Charts:
Style Outperformer:
Sector Outperformers:
- 1) Retail +1.08% 2) Airlines +1.06% 3) Drugs +.69%
Stocks Rising on Unusual Volume:
- SPWR, FSLR, OMX, MX, SPLS, WWW, SEE, BRKR, CTL, QCOR, ROC and CY
Stocks With Unusual Call Option Activity:
- 1) PPHM 2) ODP 3) GNC 4) SRPT 5) HUM
Stocks With Most Positive News Mentions:
- 1) GILD 2) HAL 3) MDT 4) GPC 5) ITW
Charts: