Evening Headlines
Bloomberg:
- Dijsselbloem Says Euro Troubled Lenders Must Fend for Themselves. Dutch
Finance Minister Jeroen Dijsselbloem, who committed taxpayer funds to
take over SNS Reaal NV (SR) last month, said troubled lenders in the
euro area must now fend for themselves as part of future regional
rescues. Dijsselbloem, who leads the group of 17 euro finance ministers,
said imposing losses on depositors and bondholders
can be part of the bailout toolkit after such measures were
taken to avoid default in Cyprus. “We are looking for a way to place risks where they are
taken,” Dijsselbloem said on Dutch television program “Pauw &
Witteman” late yesterday. “Banks should strengthen their
balances -- they have to ensure they can be unwound when they
get in trouble. Next, it should be possible to make shareholders
and bond holders contribute to a rescue. That’s how we move
along. And then eventually you may get to a government
contribution. That order was reversed in the last years.” Dijsselbloem said earlier yesterday that if ailing banks
can’t raise funds, “then we’ll talk to the shareholders and the
bondholders, we’ll ask them to contribute in recapitalizing the
bank, and if necessary the uninsured deposit holders.” Those
comments, to Reuters and the Financial Times, were confirmed
yesterday by Dijsselbloem’s spokeswoman, Simone Boitelle.
- Bersani Meets Berlusconi Deputy to Staunch Years of Conflict. Pier Luigi Bersani will meet Silvio Berlusconi’s deputies today, seeking to ease years of conflict
in his bid to assume the Italian premiership. Bersani, 61, has two days to overcome a shortfall of
support in parliament and may need help from Berlusconi, a
billionaire and three-time prime minister, to get there. The
appointment, set for 4:15 p.m. in Rome, is between Bersani and a
delegation led by Angelino Alfano, head of Berlusconi’s People of
Liberty party. Bersani and Berlusconi have room for common ground since
both want to maintain influence after losing voters to the
upstart Five Star Movement of ex-comic Beppe Grillo. Still,
years of bad blood make a partnership hard to come by.
Berlusconi relishes mocking Bersani for his previous adherence
to communism, while the ex-premier has been criticized for his
criminal trials. “Even if it starts, it will not last long,” Nicola
Marinelli, who oversees $180 million at Glendevon King Asset Management
in London, said of the chances for an alliance. “They’ve been fighting
for so long and the people behind them
really hate each other.”
- Monte Paschi Bailout Won’t Spur Recovery as Loan Losses Surge. Banca
Monte dei Paschi di Siena’s 4.07 billion-euro ($5.2 billion) state
rescue won’t resolve the troubles of Italy’s third-largest bank, which
is poised to report a second straight loss on soaring bad-loan
provisions. The world’s oldest bank may post a 2012 net loss of 2.33
billion euros ($3.03 billion) when it publishes results on Thursday,
based on the mean estimate of 10 analysts surveyed by Bloomberg. The
Siena-based lender had a 4.69 billion-euro loss in 2011, and will
probably be unprofitable in 2013 as well, analysts’ estimates show. Italy’s
economy remains mired in its longest recession in two decades and a
month-old political impasse threatens to increase sovereign-debt yields
and bank funding costs. The bank’s outlook is further complicated by
probes into the actions of former managers after derivatives were used
to hide losses. While the bailout will replenish capital, “concerns on low profitability, poor credit quality and high exposure to the
country’s sovereign debt remain,” said Wolfram Mrowetz, the
chairman of Alisei Sim, a Milan-based brokerage. “There are too
many structural issues still to address.”
- Kuroda Wants to Achieve BOJ’s 2% Price Target in Two Years. Haruhiko
Kuroda said he wants 2 percent inflation in two years and pledged to
buy more government bonds, underscoring the new Bank of Japan (8301)
chief’s efforts to accelerate an end to falling prices. “Achieving the 2 percent inflation target in two years is something that I have in my mind,” Kuroda said today in Parliament. He said the BOJ may scrap a rule limiting the scale of asset buying and consider purchasing more bonds with longer
maturities.
- Ford(F) CEO Mulally Says He’s Concerned About Japanese Yen. Ford
Motor Co. (F) Chief Executive Officer Alan Mulally said he’s concerned
about the depreciation of the yen that’s bolstering the competitiveness
of Japanese carmakers. “The most important thing that most countries
around the world believe in is letting the markets determine the
currency,” Mulally said today from Bangkok in reference to the
Japanese currency, during an interview on Bloomberg TV’s First Up with
Susan Li. “That’s just so important to all of us in the
international trading system.”
- China’s Stocks Fall Most in a Week as Brokerages, Miners Drop.
Chinese stocks fell for a second day, as declines by brokerages and
material producers dragged the Shanghai Composite Index (SHCOMP) down
the most in a week. Haitong Securities Co. sank 3.8 percent, the
second-biggest decline in the CSI 300 Index. (SHSZ300) Jiangxi Copper
Co. (600362) dropped 1.8 percent before reporting profit. Dongfeng
Automobile Co. and Cosco Shipping Co. fell at least 0.7 percent after
2012 net income fell from a year earlier. The Shanghai Composite Index lost 1.6 percent to 2,288.49 as of 10:19 a.m. local time. The CSI 300 Index retreated 1.9 percent to 2,563.73.
- China Money Rate Snaps 3-Day Drop on Possible Property Measures. China’s money-market rate rose,
snapping a three-day decline, on speculation the central bank
will take measures to rein in home-price increases. Many lenders
have started to control the scale of loans for
real estate development, the China Securities Journal reported
today, without saying where it got the information. The China
Banking Regulatory Commission is drafting guidelines on property
lending including mortgages, the newspaper cited an unidentified
person close to the regulator. “In China, a media report on banks
preparing to tighten mortgage-lending practices are likely to weigh on
sentiment,” Dariusz Kowalczyk, a strategist at Credit Agricole CIB in
Hong Kong, wrote in a research report today. “We expect the People’s
Bank of China to drain liquidity.” The seven-day repurchase rate,
which measures funding availability in the interbank market, climbed
eight basis points to 3 percent at 9:18 a.m. in Shanghai, according to a weighted
average compiled by the National Interbank Funding Center.
- BRICS Nations Plan New Bank to Bypass World Bank, IMF. The biggest emerging markets are uniting to tackle
under-development and currency volatility with plans to set up
institutions that encroach on the roles of the World Bank and
International Monetary Fund. The leaders of the so-called BRICS
nations -- Brazil, Russia, India, China and South Africa -- are set to
approve the establishment of a new development bank during an annual
summit that starts today in the eastern South African city of Durban,
officials from all five nations say. They will also discuss pooling
foreign-currency reserves to ward off balance of payments or currency
crises.
- RBNZ Wants Banks to Hold More Capital Against Risky Home Loans. New Zealand’s central bank plans to
require banks to hold more capital to strengthen their balance
sheets against the risk from high loan-to-value ratio lending. “The aim of the current review is to ensure that banks’
baseline capital requirements for housing loans properly reflect
risk in the housing sector,” Deputy Governor Grant Spencer said
in an e-mailed statement. “The bank is proposing higher capital
requirements for high LVR loans.” Raising the capital adequacy requirements could prompt
banks to seek more capital, which may push up interest rates and
slow New Zealand’s housing market, in which prices last month
rose at the fastest pace since early 2008.
- Rebar Falls in Shanghai as Chinese Banks Begin Property Curbs.
Steel reinforcement-bar futures
fell for the second time in three days in China as banks began
implementing measures to prevent a housing bubble, which may cut demand
for the material used in construction. The contract for October delivery fell as much as 1.1 percent to 3,868 yuan ($623) a metric ton on the Shanghai
Futures Exchange and was at 3,879 yuan at 10:07 a.m. local time.
- Rubber Declines as Yen’s Rebound Cuts Appeal Amid Cyprus Concern.
Rubber fell as Japan’s currency gained, cutting the appeal of
yen-denominated contracts, amid concern Cyprus’s bank-restructuring plan
will be a template for other European nations, imperiling bondholders
and depositors. The contract for delivery in August lost as much as 1.4
percent to 275.6 yen a kilogram ($2,920 a metric ton) and was at 277.7
yen on the Tokyo Commodity Exchange at 10:17 a.m. Futures extended this year’s retreat to 8.3 percent. “The market retreated as concerns grew that the Cyprus
bailout agreement would impact on other European nations,”
Hideshi Matsunaga, an analyst at broker ACE Koeki Co. in Tokyo,
said today by phone.
- Copper Futures Fall in New York as China Adds to Growth Concerns. Copper fell the most in four
sessions in New York, on speculation that metals demand will
slow as China’s government will take steps to tame inflation and
global growth weakens. China’s swap market is signaling interest-rate increases
for the first time since 2011, after inflation accelerated to a
10-month high and the government measures failed to slow the
rise in housing prices. “China’s growth story remains intact, but there are
serious concerns about the short-term outlook given the property
bubble and the ratcheting up of the government response,”
Edward Meir, an analyst at INTL FCStone in New York, said in a
report. “The global outlook remains patchy at best.” Supplies that are outstripping demand are also weighing on
prices, Meir said. Stockpiles of copper in warehouses monitored by the London
Metal Exchange expanded 0.5 percent to 565,350 metric tons, the
highest since October 2003, LME data today showed. Inventories
have jumped 77 percent this year.
- Oil Supplies Jump to
Nine-Month High in Survey: Energy Markets. U.S. oil inventories probably
rose to a nine-month high last week as domestic production stayed near
the most in 21 years and imports rebounded, a Bloomberg survey showed.
Stockpiles grew by 1.4 million barrels, or .4%, to 384.1 million in the
seven days ended March 22, the highest level since June 22, according to
the median of seven analyst estimates before an EIA report tomorrow.
- Intel(INTC) Said to Make Progress in Talks With Networks for TV Rights. Intel Corp. is making progress
in talks with Time Warner Inc., NBC Universal and Viacom Inc. to obtain
TV show and films for a first-of-its kind online multichannel pay-TV
service, according to people with knowledge of the situation. Intel, the world’s largest chipmaker, is negotiating financial
terms with the companies, according to the people, who sought anonymity
because the talks are private. The media companies have signed off on
the broad outlines of the proposed service, said the people, with some
aspects still to be settled. Other network owners aren’t as far along,
they said.
Wall Street Journal:
- Bailout Strains European Ties. Cyprus Deal Preserves Euro but Sows Mistrust Between Continent's Haves, Have-Nots. A deal reached Monday in Brussels may have saved Cyprus from becoming
the first country to crash out of the euro, but it came at the cost of
widening the political mistrust between the strong economies of Europe's
north and the weaklings of the south. Several officials familiar with talks in Nicosia and Brussels over
the €10 billion ($13 billion) rescue for the island described more than a
week of chaotic negotiations. European officials cited Cypriot
foot-dragging, reversals and dropped communications, a situation one
European Union official called "terrifying." Cypriot officials described
their European opposites as demanding and inflexible. The fresh bitterness over the Cyprus mess—which appears deeper than at
similar points during Greece's extended financial turmoil—could hamper
future attempts to fix the bloc's flaws. Germany, the euro zone's
biggest economy, prevailed as it typically has in the negotiations, but
at the price of growing resentment over what some Europeans saw as its
bullying of a tiny nation.
- U.S. Cracks Down on 'Forced' Insurance. A U.S. housing regulator is cracking down on a little-known practice
that has hit millions of struggling borrowers with high-price
homeowners' insurance policies arranged by banks that benefit from the
costly coverage. The Federal Housing Finance Agency, which regulates
mortgage giants Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, plans to file a notice
Tuesday to ban lucrative fees and commissions paid by insurers to banks
on so-called force-placed insurance. Such "forced" policies are imposed
on homeowners whose standard property
coverage lapses, typically because the borrower stops making payments.
Critics say the fee system has given banks a financial incentive to
arrange more expensive homeowners' policies than necessary.
- Chinese College Graduates Play It Safe and Lose Out. Although Mr. Xie's parents are entrepreneurs who have built companies
that make glasses, shoes and now water pumps, he has no interest in
working at a private startup. Chinese students "have been told since we
were children to focus on stability instead of risk," the 24-year-old
engineering student says.
- Mortimer Zuckerman: The Great Recession Has Been Followed by the Grand Illusion. Don't be fooled by the latest jobs numbers. The unemployment situation in the U.S. is still dire. The Great Recession is an apt name for America's current stagnation,
but the present phase might also be called the Grand Illusion—because
the happy talk and statistics that go with it, especially regarding
jobs, give a rosier picture than the facts justify. The country isn't really advancing. By comparison with earlier
recessions, it is going backward. Despite the most stimulative fiscal
policy in American history and a trillion-dollar expansion to the money
supply, the economy over the last three years has been declining. After
2.4% annual growth rates in gross domestic product in 2010 and 2011, the
economy slowed to 1.5% growth in 2012. Cumulative growth for the past
12 quarters was just 6.3%, the slowest of all 11 recessions since World
War II.
And last year's anemic growth looks likely to continue.
Fox News:
- What to Cut: As Congress treats crises with new programs, government grows. "The government is far larger than it ever has been. The debt is
growing at record rates," Thomas Schatz, president of Citizens Against
Government Waste, said. Adjusted for inflation, federal spending has gone up from an average
of $882 billion every year in the 1980s to $1.48 trillion a year in the
'90s to $2.44 trillion a year in the first decade of the 21st century.
It's estimated that the government will have spent as much in the first
four years of the new decade as it did in all of the 1990s.
CNBC:
- Farmland Prices: Is the Bubble About to Burst? Record-high prices for corn, soybeans, wheat and other commodities
have left growers flush with cash to purchase more land. And what the
farmers don't pay for out of their own pockets, historically low
interest rates provide them with easy and cheap access to money to close
the deal. The favorable mix of both cash and credit has provided
fuel to drive up land values across the Midwest, stoking fears of a
bubble ready to burst.
- Cyprus Orders All Banks to Remain Closed Until Thursday. Cyprus has extended the closure of its banks for two more days — until
Thursday — a sudden postponement that comes after the country's leaders
spent days struggling to come up with a plan to raise the money needed
to secure an international bailout.
Zero Hedge:
Business Insider:
eFinancialCareers:
- Healthy Executive Pay Made Citi(C) Profitable, Say Citi Executives. With a shareholder vote on 2012 executive pay for Citigroup’s top brass
approaching, the bank is putting on the forward press, rationalizing the
gaudy pay packages that investors have condemned over the last few
years. The plan, which began paying out this year, will disperse nearly $580
million to top execs like Corbat. The money goes on top of previously
announced annual salaries and bonuses, and is designed to retain “key”
employees.
Reuters:
- CBS(CBS) apologizes to U.S. veterans for 'Amazing Race' episode. U.S. TV network CBS has
apologized after its Emmy-winning reality series "The Amazing
Race" angered veterans with an episode featuring Vietnamese
communist propaganda. The show's host, Phil Keoghan, apologized before the start
of Sunday's show for the March 17 episode in which participants
in Hanoi were required to memorize a pro-communist song and use
a downed U.S. B-52 bomber aircraft in the city as a prop.
Financial Times:
- Darling fears subprime ‘housing bubble’. Alistair
Darling, former Labour chancellor, has warned that the package of
mortgage guarantees announced last week could create “a housing bubble”
and risked repeating mistakes of the US subprime crisis. Speaking in
a Commons debate on the Budget, Mr Darling claimed that George Osborne
had largely “given up on doing anything” and that his housing package
could – if anything – create more
problems. He claimed a chronic housing shortage meant that extra state
support for mortgages could pump up prices.
- Cyprus bailout leaves investors queasy. Fears
that the Cyprus rescue, which includes a “haircut” for large
depositors, would set a precedent for similar action in other troubled
eurozone countries had been one of investors’ main concerns. Little
wonder, then, that markets retreated when Jeroen Dijsselbloem, head of
the eurogroup of finance ministers, said the Cypriot rescue marked a
watershed in how the region deals with failing banks. Investors are
worried, too, that capital controls in Cyprus will taint the banking
system in other struggling eurozone countries. “Capital controls are a
major step backwards for Europe,” says Andrew Milligan, head of global
strategy at Standard Life Investments. “It is
very difficult for markets to understand the processes and procedures
when a country needs assistance, which adds to the level of uncertainty
and risk – even if it is manageable for now.” Bob Savage at currency
hedge fund FX Concepts says: “If deposits over
€100,000 are not guaranteed in any eurozone nation, and if you’re in
Spain or Italy, this is not a great outcome.”
- Role of Cyprus in a German Europe.
The eurozone crisis is far from being over and it is not clear what new
EU structures will emerge at the end of it – or whether they would
dilute or strengthen German power. That leaves Germany holding the ring: writing the cheques, enforcing
the rules and increasingly making them up, as well. That is a dangerous
situation for Europe – and ultimately for Germany itself.
Telegraph:
- Eurozone’s bully boys will come to regret penalising tiny Cyprus. Europe’s monetary union was meant to be about solidarity among the many and
prosperity for all. It was not excessive Russian deposits which finished off the
Cypriot banking system but last year’s eurozone-imposed haircut of Greek
sovereign debt. As big holders of Greek bonds, Cypriot banks have suffered
losses approaching €5bn. Thus does each successive botched crisis lead
directly to the next one. Narrow political self-interest has been put above
that of the common good. No monetary union can expect long to survive this sort of self-inflicted
political battering. If Europe can make such a horlicks out of tiny Cyprus,
just think what might happen when the crisis once again laps at the doors of
larger economies such as Italy, Spain and Portugal.
ZDF:
- Schaeuble Says 'Germans Are Not the Bad Guys'. The German government's policies are "sensible and responsible", Finance Minister Wolfgang Schaeuble said in an interview. Cyprus is in a difficult situation from which there is no easy way out. People in Cyprus will have a hard time ahead.
Yonhap News Agency:
- U.S. seeks more missile defense drills with S. Korea, Japan. The United States is pushing to hold trilateral missile defense exercises with
South Korea and Japan on a regular basis, an informed source said
Monday. The move is part of the Pentagon's efforts to hone regional
capabilities to counter North Korea's evolving missile threats. "The
U.S. considers boosting trilateral cooperation with the regional allies as an
option," the source said, requesting anonymity.
Xinhua:
- China found more than 1,000 dead ducks in the Nanhe River in the southern province of Sichuan, citing Liang Weidong, a local government publicity office official.
China Securities Journal:
- May
banks in China have started to control the scale of loans for real
estate development to coordinate with new property curbs. China Banking
Regulatory Commission is drafting guidelines on property loans including
development loans and mortgages, citing a person close to the
regulator. The regulator also asked rural financial institutions to
lower the proportion of property development loans from the previous
year.
Evening Recommendations
Night Trading
- Asian equity indices are -1.0% to +.25% on average.
- Asia Ex-Japan Investment Grade CDS Index 120.0 +2.0 basis points.
- Asia Pacific Sovereign CDS Index 91.25 -1.25 basis points.
- NASDAQ 100 futures +.15%.
Morning Preview Links
Earnings of Note
Company/Estimate
Economic Releases
8:30 am EST
- Durables Goods Orders for February are estimated to rise +3.9% versus a -5.2% decline in January.
- Durables Ex Transports for February are estimated to rise +.6% versus a +1.9 gain in January.
- Cap Goods Orders Non-defense Ex Air for February are estimated to fall -1.1% versus a +6.3% gain in January.
9:00 am EST
- The S&P/Case Shiller 20 City Home Price Index MoM% SA for January is estimated to rise +.8% versus a +.88% gain in December.
10:00 am EST
- The Richmond Fed Manufacturing Index for March is estimated at 6.0 versus 6.0 in February.
- Consumer Confidence for March is estimated to fall to 67.5 versus 69.6 in February.
- New Home Sales for February are estimated to fall to 420K versus 437K in January.
Upcoming Splits
Other Potential Market Movers
- The 2Y T-Note auction, weekly retail sales reports and the (BGC) investor day could also impact trading today.
BOTTOM LINE: Asian indices are mostly lower, weighed down by commodity and financial shares in the region. I expect US stocks to open modestly higher and to weaken into the afternoon, finishing modestly lower. The Portfolio is 25% net long heading into the day.
Today's Market Take:
Broad Market Tone:
- Advance/Decline Line: Lower
- Sector Performance: Almost Every Sector Declining
- Market Leading Stocks: Underperforming
Equity Investor Angst:
- ISE Sentiment Index 99.0 +5.32%
- Total Put/Call .89 -4.38%
Credit Investor Angst:
- North American Investment Grade CDS Index 91.11 +.80%
- European Financial Sector CDS Index 189.24 +7.3%
- Western Europe Sovereign Debt CDS Index 100.67 -.27%
- Emerging Market CDS Index 256.12 +.09%
- 2-Year Swap Spread 17.75 unch.
- 3-Month EUR/USD Cross-Currency Basis Swap -20.75 -.25 bp
Economic Gauges:
- 3-Month T-Bill Yield .06% -1 bp
- China Import Iron Ore Spot $136.0/Metric Tonne +.52%
- Citi US Economic Surprise Index 30.20 +1.1 points
- 10-Year TIPS Spread 2.54 unch.
Overseas Futures:
- Nikkei Futures: Indicating -120 open in Japan
- DAX Futures: Indicating +7 open in Germany
Portfolio:
- Slightly Lower: On losses in my tech, biotech sector longs and emerging markets shorts
- Disclosed Trades: Added to my (IWM)/(QQQ) hedges
- Market Exposure: Moved to 25% Net Long
Bloomberg:
- Saving Cyprus Means Nobody Safe as Europe Breaks More Taboos. The devil lies in the detail of Cyprus’s salvation. The
island nation’s rescue sets precedents for the euro zone that may stick
in the memory of depositors and bondholders alike as investors debate
who will next fall victim to the debt crisis. Under the terms of the
agreement struck early this morning in Brussels, senior Cypriot bank
bond holders will take losses and uninsured depositors will be largely
wiped out. The message that stakeholders of all stripes can be coerced
into helping a cash-strapped nation may make investors more skittish
they’ll be targeted should Slovenia, Italy, Spain or even Greece again
be next in line to need help. The risk is that bank runs and bond
market selloffs become more likely the moment a country applies for a
new rescue, said economists and academics from Nicosia to New York.
“We now have a new type of rule and everyone within the euro zone has to
sit down and see what that implies for their own finances,” Nobel
laureate Christopher Pissarides, an adviser to the Cypriot government,
told “The Pulse” on Bloomberg Television. The Stoxx Europe 600 Index
(SXXP) erased an earlier gain of as much as 1 percent after Jeroen
Dijsselbloem, who chaired last night’s meeting of euro region finance
ministers, indicated the model used for recapitalizing Cypriot banks
could be replicated elsewhere.
- Cyprus Bailout Fueling Bank Funding Concern on Bond Losses.
The European Union’s decision to recapitalize Cypriot banks by
inflicting losses on depositors and senior bondholders is triggering
investor concern that bank funding across the region will be hurt.
Cyprus qualified for its 10 billion-euro ($13 billion) bailout by
agreeing to close Cyprus Popular Bank Pcl, also known as Laiki Bank, the
island’s second largest lender, the EU said in a statement. Uninsured
depositors and senior bondholders will be “bailed in,” staying in a
so-called bad bank. “This has implications for any weaker banks that
get into trouble,” said Chris Bowie, the London-based head of credit
portfolio management at Ignis Asset Management Ltd., which oversees
about $110 billion. “We’d expect to see some
deposit flight and a shift in funding towards a combination of covered
bonds, real equity and quasi-equity.”
- Cyprus Shows Trust in ECB Is Misplaced.
Ever since European Central Bank
President Mario Draghi said last July that the bank will do whatever it
takes to preserve the euro, complacency has pervaded Europe’s
single-currency area. Markets have weathered potential crises in
Italy and Spain with surprising calm, secure in the knowledge that the
ECB will save the day if needed. This was always a false assumption, as
events in Cyprus have made clear. There are significant limitations to the
support the ECB is willing or able to offer, even to such a tiny
island economy whose needs are easily affordable.
- Mundell Says ECB Tolerating Euro Gains Worsened Debt Crisis. The European Central Bank worsened
the crisis in the region’s most indebted nations by tolerating
the euro’s appreciation against the dollar, according to Nobel-
prize winning economist Robert Mundell. Europe’s policy makers “missed a big opportunity” to do a
deal with the Federal Reserve that would have enabled them to
stop the currency from strengthening as the U.S. central bank
bought debt to boost the economy, Mundell said in a Bloomberg
Television interview with Sara Eisen. The euro’s advance was a
“devastating thing to happen” for the region’s weaker
economies and Europe should consider its own form of asset
purchases, which tend to weaken the exchange rate, he said.
- Euro Weakens to 4-Month Low on Cypriot Fallout; Yen Rises. The euro fell to a four-month low
versus the dollar after a European leader said the Cyprus
bailout may be a precedent, spurring doubts about the safety of
other bond holdings and deposits. The 17-nation currency fell against all 16 of its most- traded peers as Dutch Finance Minister Jeroen Dijsselbloem said Europe is “going down the bail-in track.”
- Debt Flagged by Fed Bought by Funds Copying 2007: Credit Markets. Money managers from Ares Management
LLC to Onex Corp. (OCX) are borrowing at the fastest pace in six years
to buy the type of speculative-grade loans that federal bank
regulators warned last week is becoming riskier. Ares, which oversees $59 billion, and Onex’s credit unit
are among firms that have raised $22.9 billion of
collateralized-loan obligations this quarter, approaching the
all-time high of $26.4 billion in the three months ended June
30, 2007, according to Royal Bank of Scotland Group Plc.
Leveraged-loan mutual funds have received their two biggest
weekly inflows since January. At the same time the Federal Reserve’s zero interest-rate
policy is encouraging investors to seek ever-riskier debt assets
to generate returns, some members of the central bank are also
saying the market may be overheating.
Wall Street Journal:
MarketWatch:
Fox News:
- Eurogroup's Dijsselbloem: forcing losses on bank owners, large depositors new rescue template. A top European official says the move in Cyprus to inflict losses on
banks' shareholders, bondholders and even owners of large deposits
should become the bloc's default approach for dealing with ailing
lenders. Jeroen Dijsselbloem, who chairs the
Eurogroup gatherings of the 17 eurozone finance ministers, said in an
interview Monday banks' owners and investors must be held responsible
"before looking at public money or any other instrument coming from the
public side."
Zero Hedge:
Business Insider:
Washington Post:
- Why the new Cyprus deal sows the seeds of the next European crisis. If you are a depositor in a European bank, you now have every incentive
in the world to move your money somewhere safer, or even to keep it in
cash, the minute you detect any hint that your nation could end up in
the same place Cyprus did. The next time there is a banking panic in
Europe, it will move much faster, and be much harder to control, than
those of the recent past, as depositors try to get ahead of future
losses and capital controls. And that’s a scary proposition indeed.
Reuters:
Financial Times:
- Dudley gives first hints of slowing QE3. One
of the Federal Reserve’s biggest backers of easy monetary policy said
he supported the slow down of the central bank’s asset purchases once
the US economy had enough momentum.
Telegraph:
- Cyprus: they make a desert and call it peace. By punishing those who put their faith in the solidity of the euro as a
single currency, the eurozone has crossed a line and in the process
poisoned Europe beyond redemption. Not since the second world war has
anti-Germany feeling been so acute. Where’s the solidarity in a bailout
which imposes such “solutions” on its member states?
- Cyprus bail-out leaves 'bitter taste' for residents. Cypriots are outraged by the consequences of the last ditch bail-out deal
hammered out between their government and its EU-IMF troika of lenders early
Monday morning.
Repubblica:
- OECD's Padoan Says Underrating Cyprus Biggest Risk. OECD Chief
Economist Pier Carlo Padoan comments in interview. Padoan says European
solution to Cyprus crisis must be adequate, unlike first Greek rescue.
Padoan says bank-sovereign debt ties too tight in many euro-area
countries.
Style Underperformer:
Sector Underperformers:
- 1) Airlines -2.10% 2) Software -1.53% 3) Steel -1.34%
Stocks Falling on Unusual Volume:
- BCS, RNF, DB, VHS, UTHR, VHC, SNY, RHT, MGLN, USG, PTR, ASH, VRTU, , EE, TIBX, CHKP, ARIA, SLCA, ORCL, EBAY, AGU, SIAL, CYNO, EXP and BUD
Stocks With Unusual Put Option Activity:
- 1) EMR 2) WHR 3) AEO 4) OXY 5) EBAY
Stocks With Most Negative News Mentions:
- 1) WFM 2) CHKP 3) FINL 4) RHT 5) EXP
Charts:
Style Outperformer:
Sector Outperformers:
- 1) Hospitals +.74% 2) Gaming +.66% 3) Tobacco +.24%
Stocks Rising on Unusual Volume:
Stocks With Unusual Call Option Activity:
- 1) APOL 2) SYY 3) DG 4) HTZ 5) MDLZ
Stocks With Most Positive News Mentions:
- 1) RBCN 2) VECO 3) MHP 4) CMG 5) GG
Charts:
Weekend Headlines
Bloomberg:
- Cyprus Said to Reach Tentative Deal to Avert Default. (video) Cyprus agreed to the outlines of an international bailout, paving the
way for 10 billion euros ($13 billion) of emergency loans and
eliminating the threat of default. The accord between Cyprus and the “troika” representing international
lenders was reached in overnight talks in Brussels and ratified by
finance ministers from the 17-nation euro area. “It’s in best interest of the Cyprus people and the European Union,” Cyprus President Nicos Anastasiades told reporters.
- Bank of Italy Says Recovery Threatened by Political Uncertainty. Moderate recovery in country expected for end of year threatened by unpredictability in domestic politics, Bank of Italy Deputy Director General Fabio Panetta said today.
- Spain’s Swelling Debt Seen Impeding Rajoy Deficit Battle. Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy’s
progress in curbing a deficit worsened by the cost of servicing
Spain’s swelling debt load will be revealed this week with the
release of data on the country’s finances. The Budget Ministry will
tomorrow publish figures for February showing the central government’s
budget shortfall, which accounted for more than half of the nation’s
deficit in 2012. Data in the following days on mortgage loans, inflation
and retail sales will also highlight the plight of the taxpayers
financing those outlays. “The increase in government debt is causing
the interest rate burden to take a bigger toll on tax revenues,” said
Ricardo Santos, an economist at BNP Paribas in London. “Spain needs to
do more in terms of structural tightening, not only
this year, but also in 2014 and this will imply a significant
drag on growth.”
- Most Chinese Stocks Fall as ZTE Slumps.
Most Chinese stocks fell as declines by phone stocks overshadowed
higher-than-estimated profit from China Construction Bank Corp. (601939)
ZTE Corp. (000063) led telecommunications stocks lower for a second
day on concern a rally in the stock was overdone.
- South Korea Escalates Concern With Japan Policies on Yen.
South Korea’s newly appointed finance minister, Hyun Oh Seok, revived
his nation’s concerns over weakness in the yen and said that the Group
of 20 nations should revisit the issue. “Japan’s expansionary policies
are having various ripple
effects on many countries,” Hyun, 62, told reporters on March
23 in Bundang, on his second day as finance chief. “The yen is
depreciating while the won is gaining and this is flashing a red
light for Korea’s exports.”
- Risk Unrewarded as Emerging Stocks Lose in Worst Start Since ’08.
The link between risk and reward in
stocks is breaking down as emerging markets post the worst first quarter
since 2008 and lag behind shares of developed economies by the most in
15 years. The MSCI Emerging Markets Index (MXEF)’s 3.8 percent drop
this year trimmed its rebound from an October 2011 low to 22 percent.
That compares with a 33 percent advance for the MSCI World (MXWO) Index
and marks the first time since 1998 that developing-country shares have
underperformed during a global rally. When adjusted for price swings, emerging market returns are 37 percent smaller
than in advanced nations, data compiled by Bloomberg show.
- Hedge Funds Most Bearish Ever on Copper, Favor Gold: Commodities.
Hedge funds are making the biggest bet against copper on record as
global inventories expand to a nine-year high, while concern that
Europe’s debt crisis will spread spurred the biggest gain in gold bets
since 2008. Speculators raised net-short positions in U.S. copper futures and options by 53 percent to 25,719 contracts in the
week ended March 19, according to Commodity Futures Trading
Commission data that begins in 2006. A jump in bullish bets on
corn, gold and natural gas boosted overall holdings across 18
raw materials for a second consecutive week.
- Corn, Soybeans Decline as Feed Use Slows, Farmers Boost Sowing. Corn
and soybeans dropped for a
second session on speculation that domestic feed use may slow
just as U.S. farmers prepare to boost plantings. Corn for delivery in
May lost as much as 0.5 percent to $7.23 a bushel on the Chicago Board
of Trade, after decreasing 0.9 percent on March 22. Futures were at
$7.2525 by 9:56 a.m.
Singapore time. Soybeans for delivery in the same month fell 0.2
percent to $14.38 a bushel on a volume that was 46 percent below
the 100-day average for that time of day.
- Chemical Weapons Probably Used in Syria, Rogers Says. U.S. Representative Mike Rogers
said it is “probable” that the regime of Syria’s Bashar al- Assad has used chemical weapons in that country’s civil war.
“When you look at the whole body of information” that “over the last
two years there is mounting evidence that it is probable that the Assad
regime has used at least a small
quantity of chemical weapons,” Rogers, a Michigan Republican
and chairman of the House Intelligence Committee, said today on
CBS’s “Face the Nation” program.
- Debt Flagged by Fed Bought by Funds Copying 2007: Credit Markets.
Money managers from Ares Management LLC to Onex Corp. are borrowing at
the fastest pace in six years to buy the type of speculative-grade loans
that federal bank regulators warned last week is becoming riskier. Ares, which oversees $59 billion, and Onex's credit unit are among
firms that have raised $22.9 billion of collaterialized-loan
obligations this quarter, approaching the all-time high of $26.4 billion
in the three months ended June 30, 2007, according to Royal Bank of
Scotland Group Plc. Leveraged-loan mutual funds have received their two
biggest weekly inflows since January. At the same time the Federal
Reserve' zero interest-rate policy is encouraging investors to seek
ever-riskier debt assets to generate returns, some members of the
central bank are also saying the market my be overheating.
Wall Street Journal:
- Cyprus's Bank Crisis Feeds Recession Risk. Cyprus's race to avert a collapse of its banking system has put another
issue on the back burner for now: The country faces a recession so deep
that it may soon need even more money to survive inside the euro.
- Spain Brings the Pain to Bank Investors. Government to Impose Heavy Losses on Shareholders and Bondholders, Hire Advisers to Help Manage Lenders' Assets. The Spanish government will impose heavy losses on investors at
nationalized banks and hire external advisers to help it manage these
banks' assets, its latest efforts to overhaul a financial sector
battered by the collapse of a decadelong housing boom.
- Mortgage Securitizers Didn’t Know Housing Was Going Bust. A popular explanation for why the housing bubble happened says that
unbalanced incentives within the financial system were to blame.
Financial-sector workers reaped huge bonuses for gambling on home prices
continuing to climb, but knew that they bore little personal risk if things went
awry.
- Government Payrolls Are Facing New Pressures. Governments bled hundreds of thousands of jobs after the U.S.
economic recovery started. Now they're preparing to pass the knife
around again as the federal budget comes under pressure.
The cuts in the public-sector
workforce—at the federal, state and local levels—marked the deepest
retrenchment in government employment of civilians since just after
World War II. About 21.8 million civilians were directly employed by a
government in the U.S. in February, accounting for roughly one out of
every six nonfarm payroll jobs, according to the Labor Department.
- Trading Clamps Spur Lobby Effort. High-speed trading firms and exchanges are being forced into the
lobbying game by taxes on trades in Europe, proposals for similar levies
in the U.S. and beefed-up regulatory scrutiny. While still far less conspicuous than big banks and their legions of
arm-twisters, executives and lobbyists for trading firms and exchanges
have stepped up their behind-the-scenes efforts to avert specific rules
and legislation, say staff members in Congress and agencies.
Marketwatch.com:
- The last chance of survival in China: Andy Xie. China facing array of problems, including a looming banking crisis. The 20% capital gains tax is the latest
half-measure in the government’s attempt to stabilize, rather than
burst, the property bubble. If the measure deflates the bubble, new
measures may appear to revive speculation, as occurred in 2008 and 2012.
Managing rather than rooting out speculation is a dangerous game. The
prolonged bubble will eventually bring a bill large enough to sink the
banking system.
Fox News:
- Israeli military in Golan Heights responds to fire from Syria. Israel's army said it fired a guided
missile into Syria on Sunday, destroying a military post after gunfire
flew across the border and struck an Israeli vehicle. The shooting along the frontier in the Israeli-occupied Golan Heights
was one of the most serious incidents between the countries since
Syria's civil war erupted two years ago.
CNBC:
- JPMorgan(JPM) 'Whale' Traders Probe Advances.
(video) The U.S. Department of Justice is in the advanced stages of an
investigation into whether former traders in JPMorgan Chase's chief
investment office in London engaged in criminal misconduct in the
marking of credit positions last year, according to someone familiar
with the matter. The Justice
Department probe centers on whether a handful of individual traders
deliberately mis marked certain complex credit positions in an effort to
mask the growing losses in a key CIO portfolio during the spring of
2012, according to this person.
- No Matter Outcome, Cyprus Crisis Is Blow to Business. It is not just about rich Russians and Cypriot retirees. Also vitally at stake in this island country's banking crisis is
Cyprus's credibility as a place for international companies to continue
doing business.
Business Insider:
IBD:
Reuters:
- Delaying savings will only make problem worse - ECB's Praet. Savings required to bring
euro zone budgets under control cannot be put off for long, European
Central Bank Executive Board member Peter Praet said in an interview in
two Belgian newspapers. "You can have a little delay. But you
will not solve the problem that way. Quite the contrary, a delay will
only make your debt mountain bigger. And it needs to stay manageable,"
Praet said. "I hear far too much policymakers saying: wait a little,
give me more time. That can affect the credibility of a country. The
debts will not miraculously disappear," he said. Praet said he expected
the euro zone to have contracted in the first quarter of 2013. The
recession overall was not deep, although the difference between
countries was sharp. Praet also said he was pre-occupied with two
chief concerns. Consumers were concerned that their income over the long
term would fall and were cutting spending, which was making the problem
worse. His second concern was that banks were receiving cheap
money, such as from the European Central Bank, but were not
passing this on as credit to companies.
- Dell's(DELL) board evaluates rival bids: source. A
special committee of Dell Inc's board is evaluating separate takeover
proposals from Blackstone Group and billionaire investor Carl Icahn to
decide whether either or both are likely to trump an existing $24.4
billion take-private deal, a source familiar with the discussions said
on Sunday. Icahn and Blackstone put in
preliminary bids late last week, potentially upsetting the plans of the
No. 3 PC maker's founder, Michael Dell, and private equity firm Silver
Lake to take Dell private.
- Last-minute Cyprus deal to close bank, force losses. Cyprus clinched a last-ditch
deal with international lenders to shut down its second largest
bank and inflict heavy losses on uninsured depositors, including
wealthy Russians, in return for a 10 billion euro ($13 billion)
bailout. The agreement came hours before a deadline to avert a
collapse of the banking system in fraught negotiations between
President Nicos Anastasiades and heads of the European Union,
the European Central Bank and the International Monetary Fund.
- Europe may not solve debt woes in 10 years-China FinMin.
China's new finance minister said on Sunday it was unclear whether the
Euro zone would solve its debt problems over the next decade and
suggested further turmoil would complicate efforts to reduce Beijing's
fiscal deficits. Lou Jiwei said external difficulties might oblige
China to run deficits for longer than anticipated as government
expenditure was rising quickly and revenue growing only at a
single-digit pace. "I am really very worried about Europe. I am worried about
whether it can get out of trouble in the next 10 years," Lou
said in an address to an economic forum. "Our fiscal expenditure is growing very quickly while I
estimate fiscal revenue will only post single-digit growth rates
in future ... we are facing substantive domestic pressures."
- IMF draft cuts 2013 U.S. growth forecast - report. The International Monetary Fund
(IMF) is planning to cut its U.S. growth forecast for this year
due to higher taxes and spending cuts, Italian news agency ANSA
said, citing a draft of the IMF's next World Economic Outlook
report. The U.S. economy, the world's biggest, will expand 1.7 percent this year, down from the 2.0 percent predicted in
January, ANSA reported late on Saturday. The next round of IMF
forecasts is scheduled to be published in mid-April.
Financial Times:
- Cyprus Ex-Central Bankers Sees 'European Project' Failing. "The European project is crashing to earth," Athanasios Orphanides, head of Cyprus central bank 2007-2012, said in an interview. "We have seen a cavalier attitude towards the expropriation of property and the bullying of a people," Orphanides said. "This is a fundamental change in the dynamics of Europe towards disintegration, and I don't see how this can be reversed," he said. "Shattering of trust" caused by Cyrpus hasn't been fully seen, will increase funding costs in "perisphery" nations, Orphanides said.
Telegraph:
Der Spiegel:
- Depart store chain Karstadt sales for February at EU133m were 12% below target and 15% below level from a year earlier, citing internal documents.
Eleftherotipia:
- Four in 10 Greeks say Europe's problems best solved by a break-up of EU, up from 26% in January, according to a Metron Analysis poll. 38% says Europe needs further integration, down from 46% in a January poll. 45% say they are now against the euro. 72% say Greece's economic situation is worse than a year ago. 96% say Germany more motivated by national interest than European solidarity. If Greek elections were held now, main opposition Syriza party would get 25.8%, PM Antonis Samaras's New Democracy party 25.2%. The nationalist Golden Dawn party would be third with 11.7%.
La Vanguardia:
- Economic Minister Luis de Guindos discusses proposal with EU to increase 2013 budget deficit to as much as 5.8% of GDP instead of agreed 4.5%. Spain seeks to extend deadline for deficit target of 3% by 2 yrs to 2016, citing people familiar with the situation. Proposed deficit target of 5.8% this yr would mean EU12b fewer spending cuts.
Xinhua:
- China's
GDP growth will moderate to a rate of 6% to 7%, after growing at above
10% for mush of the past 30 years, citing Liu Shijin, deputy director of the Development Research Center of the State Council.
China Securities Journal:
- China Banking Regulatory Commission asked big banks recently to pay special attention to risks in the real estate, steel, construction machinery, wind power equipment and solar equipment industries, citing a person familiar with the situation. Loans to property sector, industries with overcapacity and company clusters may be a high as 40 trillion yuan, the person said.
China National Radio:
- A property tax on the ownership of three or more homes is a policy tool "most worthy of consideration," citing Hu Cunzhi, vice minister at the Ministry of Land and Resources.
Weekend Recommendations
Barron's:
- Bullish commentary on (DRI), (KSS), (CKH), (GOOG), (INTC), (EMC), (GILD), (FRX) and (SRPT).
- Bearish commentary on (BHP), (RIO), (VALE) and (CLF).
Night Trading
- Asian indices are unch. to +1.25% on average.
- Asia Ex-Japan Investment Grade CDS Index 118.0 -2.0 basis points.
- Asia Pacific Sovereign CDS Index 92.5 +1.75 basis points.
- NASDAQ 100 futures +.52%.
Morning Preview Links
Earnings of Note
Company/Estimate
Economic Releases
10:30 am EST
- Dallas Fed Manufacturing Activity for March is estimated to rise to 3.7 versus 2.2 in February.
Upcoming Splits
Other Potential Market Movers
- The Fed's Dudley speaking, German Consumer Confidence/Retail Sales/Import&Export data, Chicago Fed Nat activity Index and the Morgan Stanley Tech/Media/Telecom Conference could also impact trading today.
BOTTOM LINE: Asian indices are mostly higher, boosted by industrial and technology shares in the region. I expect US stocks to open modestly higher and to weaken into the afternoon, finishing mixsed. The Portfolio is 50% net long heading into the week.