Bloomberg:
- Italy's Debt Highest Since Dictator Mussolini: Chart.
Italy’s public debt rose to the highest level since Benito Mussolini
won elections 89 years ago, paving the way for his 20-year dictatorship.
The CHART OF THE DAY shows debt jumped in 2012 to 127 percent of gross domestic product from 120.8 percent a year
earlier. That’s the most since 1924, when Mussolini won 64
percent of the popular vote in elections that opposition members
said were marked by irregularities.
- Grillo’s Party May Consider Senate Walk-Out on Gridlock. Beppe
Grillo’s senators-elect, who
hold a blocking minority in Italy’s upper house of parliament, may
consider staging a confidence-vote walk-out to allow a political rival
to form a government and ease gridlock. Grillo’s Five Star Movement is seeking to influence the program of Italy’s next government and would require policy
concessions in exchange for a walk-out, said two senators-elect
who declined to be identified because no deal has been made.
Five Star won’t vote to support any government, they said.
- Trichet Says Policies Aimed at Weaker Currencies Detrimental. Former European Central Bank
president Jean-Claude Trichet said policies targeted at
weakening a country’s exchange rate can trigger competitive
devaluations without having any benefit. “We know that these kind of policies are not positive for all participants,” Trichet said in an interview in Tokyo today. “If all currencies are going down it doesn’t change anything.”
- Euro Approaches Three-Month Low Versus Dollar on Italy Concern. The euro approached the lowest level
in almost three months against the dollar as Italy moved toward
a new election and before data this week economists said will
show the region’s economy shrank in the fourth quarter of 2012.
- China Property Shares Drag CSI 300 Down Most in 2 Years on Curbs.
China’s stocks plunged, dragging down the CSI 300 (SHSZ300) Index by
the most in two years, after the government ordered more measures to
cool property prices and growth in the nation’s services industries
slowed. The CSI 300, representing the nation’s biggest companies in
the Shanghai and Shenzhen stock exchanges, fell 4.6 percent to 2,545.72
at the close, the most since November 2010, while the Shanghai
Composite Index (SHCOMP) slid 3.7 percent to 2,273.40, the most since
August 2011. China Vanke Co., the nation’s largest
property developer, led a gauge of real-estate companies to the
steepest tumble since June 2008. Anhui Conch Cement Co. and Sany
Heavy Industry Co. dropped by more than 8 percent.
- Crude Drops Below $90 on Signs of Slowing Chinese Growth. West Texas Intermediate crude fell
below $90 a barrel for the first time in 2013 as service
industries in China expanded at the weakest pace in five months, adding to speculation that demand growth is slowing. Prices declined for the seventh time in nine days as the
expansion of the non-manufacturing industry in China, the
world’s largest oil-consuming country after the U.S., was the
slowest since September. Measures released March 1 pointed to
manufacturing growth cooling. Money managers cut bets on rising
oil prices in the week ended Feb. 26, according to data from the
Commodity Futures Trading Commission.
Wall Street Journal:
MarketWatch:
- Fed’s Yellen: Full steam ahead on QE3. While there are some potential costs to the purchases, “at this stage, I
do not see any that would cause me to advocate a curtailment of our
purchase program,” she said.
Yellen is seen as a possible replacement for Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke
if he steps aside when his second term ends in January 2014.
- China’s top real-estate CEO sees housing bubble, hopes leaders can fix it: report.
When asked whether homes in China were too expensive, Wang simply
answered yes. He told CBS that the average resident trying to buy an
apartment in Shanghai would have to pay more than 45 times his or her
annual salary. And when asked if there was currently a bubble in the Chinese property market, he said: “yes of course.”
Fox News:
CNBC:
Zero Hedge:
Business Insider:
CNN:
- World's Biggest Mall a China 'Ghost Town'. New
South China Mall in Guangdong Province opened in 2005. With 5 million
square feet of shopping area, the mall can accommodate 2,350 stores,
making it the largest shopping center in the world in terms of leasable
space -- more than twice the size of Mall of America, the biggest
shopping center in the United States. At the outdoor plaza,
hundreds of palm-trees blend with a replica Arc de Triomphe, a giant
Egyptian sphinx, fountains and long-stretching canals with gondolas.
Only problem is, the mall is virtually deserted.
New York Times:
- China’s Push to Cool Down Housing Raises Questions. Chinese shares fell the most in two years on Monday as the Shanghai stock exchange’s property index tumbled 9.25 percent. Late on Friday, China’s State Council had announced a new set of policies designed to cool down the housing market.
Reuters:
Financial Times:
- Warning signs for US corporate bonds. Could the bond boom be turning? Warning signs are flashing as investors
demand higher yields even on US bonds issued by the world’s largest and
safest corporate borrowers.
Telegraph:
Handelsblatt:
- Some ECB policy makers think it should exit Troika because involvement risks central bank's independence.
Le Figaro:
- French Transaction Tax Will Miss 2013 Target. The tax will bring
in EU600m to EU800m in 2013, compared with the target of EU1.6b. On the
NYSE-Euronext, trading in shares subject to the tax fell 21% between
August and November 2012, compared with a 10% drop for shares that are
exempt.
Style Underperformer:
Sector Underperformers:
- 1) Gold & Silver -3.40% 2) Steel -2.13% 3) Oil Service -2.03%
Stocks Falling on Unusual Volume:
- PANW, SCSS, NSH, NS, HURN, FWLT, SFUN, CAF, TVL, SPLK, PER, VCRA, RIO, APEI, CKEC, LUK, VCLT, QGEN CHN, TECD, TFM, MFRM, MAA, OVTI, YY, MDR, DRC, OVTI, CAF and TECD
Stocks With Unusual Put Option Activity:
- 1) CME 2) JRCC 3) TSO 4) CNX 5) HES
Stocks With Most Negative News Mentions:
- 1) MDR 2) MTZ 3) BRK/A 4) TRB 5) DRC
Charts:
Style Outperformer:
Sector Outperformers:
- 1) Airlines +2.09% 2) Homebuilders +.78% 3) Retail +.65%
Stocks Rising on Unusual Volume:
- SBGI, YPF, FOR, SSYS, THRX, BKS, MBI, SGMO and SWHC
Stocks With Unusual Call Option Activity:
- 1) MTG 2) CWH 3) NS 4) SSYS 5) MCO
Stocks With Most Positive News Mentions:
- 1) STLD 2) SCHW 3) TRB 4) CME 5) T
Charts:
Weekend Headlines
Bloomberg:
- Euro Leaders Demand Austerity as Italy Nears Vote. European leaders demanded that euro
members press on with budget cuts to end the debt crisis as
Italy edged closer to a new election after an anti-austerity
vote last week resulted in political deadlock. Finance ministers from the 17-member single-currency bloc
meet in Brussels today to discuss issues including a bailout for
Cyprus. In Rome, a top aide to Democratic Party leader Pier Luigi Bersani said the country may need to hold another election
this year after passing new electoral laws. “Now in Europe, after the Italian election, it seems to be
a case of either austerity and savings programs or growth, but
that’s a completely false premise,” German Chancellor Angela Merkel said at March 1 event. EU Economic and Monetary Affairs
Commissioner Olli Rehn echoed those comments this weekend,
telling Der Spiegel magazine that there’s no scope for the bloc
to let up on budget discipline.
- Bersani Insists He’ll Form New Government Without Rivals. Democratic
Party leader Pier Luigi Bersani, whose coalition won the most votes in
Italy’s inconclusive elections, insisted he would form a government on
his own without seeking an alliance with his main rivals --
Silvio Berlusconi and comic-turned-politician Beppe Grillo. “We have 460 parliamentarians, double what the right got
and triple what Grillo won,” he said in an interview last night
on state-owned RAI3 television’s “Che Tempo Che Fa” program.
“So we will have the first word.”
- ECB’s Coeure Says Europe Needs to Rebalance Its Social Contract.
European Central Bank Executive
Board member Benoit Coeure said Europe must rebalance its social
contract because the economic crisis “disproportionately affected the
more vulnerable social groups.” Workers who could “lose their
employability” if they remain jobless for too long may threaten economic
growth in the 17-nation euro region, Coeure said in a speech today
at Harvard University’s Kennedy School of Government in Cambridge,
Massachusetts. He did not discuss monetary policy. “There are signs of a growing mismatch between worker attributes and job requirements across a number of euro-area countries,”
Coeure, 43, said today at the Kennedy School’s “Europe 2.0” conference.
“Future growth depends on human capital being cultivated and expanded.”
The area’s unemployment rate climbed to a record 11.9 percent in
January as the bloc
remained mired in recession.
- Grillo Says His Party Won't Vote Confidence in Any Government.
Beppe Grillo, whose party won about 25% of Italy's popular vote, said.
His party would support specific legislation on a case-by-case basis. PD
lawmaker Francesco Boccia said in an e-mail that Grillo's party should
go to parliament to say it doesn't support Bersani's proposal. Grillo
has called for the renegotiation of Italy's debt.
- Devil Is in the Details as Swiss Vote to Curb CEO Pay. The Swiss government must figure out
how to translate some of the world’s toughest rules on executive
pay into national law and risk an exodus of big corporations
after voters overwhelmingly backed new curbs in a referendum.
- Russell Indexes to Reclassify Greece as Emerging Market. Russell Investments, which advises
funds with $2.4 trillion in assets, will reclassify Greece to an
emerging from a developed market, an unprecedented step taken
after a recession reduced the nation’s economy by 20 percent.
- Euro Falls in Longest Stretch Since June on Record Unemployment. Europe’s 17-nation common currency
posted its longest stretch of weekly losses since June as demand
slumped after Italy’s election produced a hung parliament and
euro-area unemployment climbed to a record. The Dollar Index (DXY) rose to the highest level since August as investors weighed the U.S. government’s failure to avoid
automatic budget cuts. The euro fell below $1.30 for the first
time in two months as the region’s inflation rate was below the
European Central Bank’s 2 percent ceiling before a policy
meeting March 7. The Labor Department may report on March 8 that
U.S. employers added 160,000 workers last month, a Bloomberg
survey shows. “It’s a combination of Italy’s election and generally soft
economic data out of the euro zone,” Dan Dorrow, the head of
research at Faros Trading LLC in Stamford, Connecticut, said of
the euro’s decline. “We saw unemployment grinding higher.” The euro fell 1.3 percent this week to $1.3022 in New York
after dropping 3.8 percent in February, snapping a six-month
rally.
- China’s Stocks Slump as Developers Tumble Most Since June 2008. China’s
stocks fell, led by the biggest slump among developers since 2008,
after the Cabinet ordered more measures to cool property prices and
after growth in the nation’s services industries slowed. The Shanghai
Composite Index (SHCOMP) slid 2.9 percent, the most since Feb. 21, to
2,292.14 as of the city's 11:30 a.m. break. The CSI 300 Index
(SHSZ300) lost 3.8 percent to 2,568.21. China Vanke Co. led a gauge of
developers to the biggest tumble since June 2008 after the State Council
urged higher down-payments and interest rates for second-home
mortgages. China Minsheng Banking Corp. (600016) sank 4.8 percent,
pacing declines among lenders. “When there are new rules like these, it
extends far beyond property shares,” Zhang Yanbin, an analyst with
Zheshang Securities Co. in Shanghai, said by phone today. “There have
been talks of property measures in the past few weeks, leading to
declines in the market. The news over the weekend was evidence of a
detailed measure, hence the loss is much bigger.” A purchasing managers’
index released yesterday showed the
nation’s services industries expanded at the slowest pace in
five months.
- PBOC’s Yi Says China Prepared for Currency War, Xinhua Reports. China is “fully prepared” for a currency war should one happen, central bank Deputy Governor Yi Gang said in Beijing yesterday, the official Xinhua News Agency reported. “China is prepared,” Yi was quoted as saying by the
agency, which gave no further details about where he spoke. “In
terms of both monetary policies and other mechanism, China will
take into full account the quantitative easing policies
implemented by central banks of foreign countries.” China’s
foreign-exchange regulator, which is headed by Yi,
warned in a report this week that quantitative easing in developed
nations will lead to capital inflows into emerging markets and that
policy easing can’t solve all of a country’s economic problems.
- Rebar Falls to Six-Week Low Amid Rising Inventories in China.
Steel reinforcement-bar futures fell
for a second day, to the lowest level in more than six weeks as
inventories in China climbed for a ninth week, adding to concern that
the market is oversupplied. Rebar for delivery in October on the
Shanghai Futures Exchange dropped as much as 2.6 percent to 3,916 yuan ($629) a metric ton, the lowest level since Jan. 17 for a most-active
contract, and was at 3,929 at 9:41 a.m. local time. Futures fell
1.8 percent last month, the first drop since November.
Inventory jumped 79 percent this year through March 1,
according to Shanghai Steelhome Information.
- Short Sales Fall 53% With U.S. Bull Market Starting Fifth Year. Investors
reduced bearish stock bets to the lowest level since at least 2007 as
the bull market in American equities begins its fifth year. Short sales
in the Standard & Poor’s Composite 1,500 Index fell to 5.6 percent
of shares available for trading in February, down from a record 12
percent during the credit crisis and the lowest ever in data compiled by
Bespoke Investment Group and Bloomberg starting six years ago. The
last time the number of shares borrowed and sold short approached this
level, the equity gauge lost 3.3 percent in the next three months. Bulls
say the capitulation by market bears shows the rally remains intact and
that more money will flow into stocks after individuals sent $37.9
billion to mutual funds in January, the most since 2004. It also means a
source of demand is diminishing, a traditional signal for caution in an
aging bull market. “When you look at short interest, and it’s low
like right now, it means people are very, very bullish about the
market,” Uri Landesman, president of New York-based hedge fund Platinum
Partners, which manages $1.15 billion, said in a Feb. 28 phone
interview. “When that happens, it’s a bearish sign, because if
all minds change, there’s downside, not upside.”
- Commodity Fund Outflows Reach Weekly Record of $4.23 Billion. Money managers removed a record
$4.23 billion from commodity funds in the week ended Feb. 27,
led by declines in precious-metal holdings, as raw materials
capped the biggest monthly loss since October. Investors pulled an
all-time high of $4.03 billion from gold and precious-metals funds, said
Cameron Brandt, the director of research for EPFR Global, which started
tracking the flows in 2000. The Cambridge, Massachusetts-based
researcher
said last week that total commodity outflows for the period
ended Feb. 20 reached $828 million.
The Standard & Poor’s GSCI Spot Index of 24 raw materials
fell 4 percent last month, the most since October.
- Environmentalists Step Up Opposition to Keystone Pipeline.
Opponents of TransCanada Corp. (TRP)’s Keystone XL pipeline intend to
make themselves heard by President Barack Obama after a March 1 report
helped clear a path for the White House to approve the project. The
pipeline drew a fresh wave of objections from groups including the
Sierra Club, Natural Resources Defense Council and 350.org, when the
U.S. State Department’s draft assessment said it won’t have a
significant impact on global warming. Members of 350.org will
confront Obama and Secretary of State John Kerry at all future public
events, said Daniel Kessler, a spokesman. “If they are doing something
in public, we will be
there,” Kessler said in an e-mail. “Thousands of people are
willing to get arrested to stop this project.”
- Karachi Mourns 42 Killed in Bombing as Attacks on Shiites Spread. Karachi shut schools and businesses
to mourn the 42 people killed in a car bombing that targeted the
city’s Shiite minority and extended a spree of deadly attacks on
the Islamic sect to Pakistan’s biggest city. Women and children were among the dead and more than 135 were wounded in the blast around 7:30 p.m. yesterday in a
Shiite-dominated neighborhood of the port city, Pakistan’s
financial capital.
- Celgene(CELG) Psoriasis Drug Helped Third of Patients in Study. Celgene
Corp. (CELG), the maker of the cancer drug Revlimid, said its
experimental psoriasis medicine helped quell the redness and
inflammation associated with the skin disorder in a study. The drug,
apremilast, helped one-third of patients achieve a 75 reduction of
symptoms, based on a standard Psoriasis Area and Severity Index
measurement. That compared with 5.3 percent of those on placebo with the
same score, called PASI-75, Celgene said in a statement as it presents
the data at the American Academy of Dermatology meeting in Miami Beach,
Florida, today.
Wall Street Journal:
- Student-Loan Securities Stay Hot. Investors' Hunger for Returns Is Driving Demand Even as More Borrowers Fall Behind on Their Payments. Student
loans are souring at a growing rate—and investors can't seem to get
enough. SLM Corp., the largest U.S. student lender, last week sold $1.1
billion of securities backed by private student loans. Demand for the
riskiest
bunch—those that will lose money first if the loans go bad—was 15 times
greater than the supply, people familiar with the deal said.
Marketwatch.com:
- How shipper China Cosco sailed into rough seas. One of the country’s most prominent liner shipping operators, China
COSCO Holdings Co. Ltd., is struggling to avoid being kicked out of the
Shanghai Stock Exchange five years after its debut.
Fox News:
- Kerry: U.S. releasing millions in aid to Egypt. Secretary of State John Kerry said Sunday the United States will give
Egypt $250 million more in aid, following President Mohammed Morsi's
pledges for political and economic reforms.
CNBC:
- Paris Seeks Alternative to 75% Tax. France's Socialist government is considering replacing its stricken 75
percent top income tax rate on earnings above 1 million euros, with a
65-66 percent rate on households earning more than 2 million euros.
Business Insider:
IBD:
Reuters:
- BOJ should not monetise public debt-governor nominee Kuroda. The Bank of Japan should not directly underwrite government bonds or take measures that would be interpreted by markets as public debt monetisation, Haruhiko
Kuroda, the government's nominee for next central bank governor, said on
Monday.
USA Today:
- Tax bills for rich families approach 30-year high. With Washington gridlocked again over whether to raise their taxes,
it turns out wealthy families already are paying some of their biggest
federal tax bills in decades even as the rest of the population
continues to pay at historically low rates. President Obama and
Democratic leaders in Congress say the wealthy must pay their fair share
if the federal government is ever going to fix its finances and reduce
the budget deficit to a manageable level. A new analysis, however,
shows that average tax bills for high-income families rarely have been
higher since the Congressional Budget Office began tracking the data in
1979. It's middle- and low-income families who aren't paying as much as
they used to.
Financial Times:
- Free lunch will come to an untidy end. Investors fear asset bubbles created by Fed policies. Seth
Klarmen, founder of hedge fund Baupost, offered a searing indictment of
the Federal Reserve’s monetary policies in his year-end letter to
investors, currently circulating in the wider hedge fund community. In
the mid-January letter, Mr Klarman describes “the real downside scenario
which involves the end of the free lunch of large deficits, zero
interest rates and relentless quantitative easing”. Along with the
European Central Bank, Fed chairman Ben Bernanke “seems intent on buying
back bonds indefinitely, whether or not their actions deliver an
economic recovery and inspite of any unpleasant
side-effects. It is clear that after four years and counting, their
efforts have not delivered. Only a zealot would continue with a plan
that is not working and massively expand it,” Mr Klarman concludes.
Telegraph:
WirtschaftsWoche:
- Regling
Doubts ESM Will Directly Recapitalize Banks. A decision to recapitalize
banks directly from ESM funds would need to be unanimous, citing
European Stability Mechanism chief Klaus Regling. Such an instrument
would also limit the money the ESM could use for countries in need of
aid, Regling said. Direct recapitalization without a cap would hurt the
ESM's rating, he said.
Focus:
- Beppe Grillo Calls for Renegotiation of Italy's Debt. Italy is
being smothered by debt and not by the euro, Grillo said. Interest
amounting to EU100m a year is killing Italy, he said. Italy should leave
the common currency and take back the Lira if the terms don't change,
Grillo said. Italy's political system will collapse within six months
under the leadership of the old parties, Grillo said.
AutomobilWoche:
- Europe's
Car Suppliers May Cut 75,000 Jobs. One in 10 of the 750,000 jobs in
western Europe's car supplier industry might disappear in 3-4 years,
citing Marcus Berret of Roland Berger, which carried out a study. Jobs will be lost in production, R&D and administration.
Europa:
- Five Spanish
regions including Catalonia need further budget cuts after missing
targets to reduce their deficits in 2012, citing an interview with Budget Minister Cristobal Montoro. Valencia, Murcia, Balears and Andalusia failed to comply as well with budget cuts so need to propose new austerity measures, Montoro says.
ORF:
- Eurogroup's
Wieser Sees No Alternative to Deficit Reduction. The timing of budget
adjustments is the only thing that can be changed, not the direction of
paying down debts, Thomas Wieser, head of the Eurogroup Working Group,
told Austrian radio station ORF. The Italian election has added to
uncertainty, Wieser said. It's not correct to say that the crisis is
back after the election since it never went away, he said in an
interview.
Kyodo:
Shanghai Securities News:
- China Housing Minister Says Confident in Controlling Home Prices. Authorities should strictly implement the property curb measures issued by the State Council yesterday, citing Housing Minister Jiang Weixin. China
told its central bank to raise down-payment requirements and interest
rates for second-home mortgages in cities with "excessively fast" price
gains, according to the State Council. Cities facing "relatively large"
pressure from rising house prices must further tighten home-purchase
limits.
Beijing Times:
- The time is ripe for China to impose an inheritance tax and the threshold should be 5m yuan, citing a research paper issued by Beijing Normal University.
Weekend Recommendations
Barron's:
- Bullish commentary on (COF) and (FOR).
Night Trading
- Asian indices are -1.75% to -.75% on average.
- Asia Ex-Japan Investment Grade CDS Index 109.0 +.5 basis point.
- Asia Pacific Sovereign CDS Index 85.25 +1.25 basis points.
- NASDAQ 100 futures -.54%.
Morning Preview Links
Earnings of Note
Company/Estimate
Economic Releases
Upcoming Splits
Other Potential Market Movers
- The Fed's Yellen speaking, Fed's Powell speaking, China HSBC PMI Services, Bank stress test results, Reserve Bank of Australia rate decision, Eurozone PPI, ISM New York, Deutsche Bank Media/Telecom Conference, Cowen Healthcare Conference, JPMorgan Aviation/Transport/Defense Conference and the (D) analyst meeting could also impact trading today.
BOTTOM LINE: Asian indices are lower, weighed down by real estate and commodity shares in the region. I expect US stocks to open lower and to maintain losses into the afternoon. The Portfolio is 50% 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 global growth fears, rising Mideast tensions, Eurozone
debt angst, profit-taking, technical selling and more shorting. My
intermediate-term trading indicators are giving neutral signals and the
Portfolio is 50% net long heading into the week.