Tuesday, July 23, 2013

Today's Headlines

Bloomberg: 
  • Chinese Economy Facing Instability as Growth Cools, DRC Says. China’s economy may be facing a period of instability and imbalance as it transitions from high-speed growth (CNGDPYOY), a state researcher said. “Growth inertia should not be underestimated, as new growth engines and patterns have not been formed,” researcher Yu Bin said in a report by China’s Development Research Center released today in London. “Market expectations are unstable, downward pressure has increased, and existing and new structural mismatches exist. The economy has become unstable and uncertain like never before.”
  • India 10-Year Bond Yield Reaches 2013 High on Tightening Concern. India’s 10-year bonds fell, pushing the yield to the highest level this year, on speculation the central bank will tighten monetary policy further to arrest a slide in the rupee. The Reserve Bank of India increased the marginal standing facility and the bank rate to 10.25 percent from 8.25 percent last week, while keeping the key repurchase rate unchanged after cutting it in May. The rupee fell by the most in two weeks yesterday and lost 7.7 percent in 2013. A weaker currency makes imports costlier and threatens to spur gains in consumer prices, which have stayed close to 10 percent for more than a year. “There are fears the central bank may reverse its policy stance as the rupee doesn’t seem to be behaving in the desired manner even after the recent measures,” said Debendra Kumar Dash, a fixed-income trader at Development Credit Bank Ltd. in Mumbai. “The bond markets are pretty jittery.” 
  • European Stocks Retreat After U.S. Manufacturing Report. European stocks declined from a seven-week high as a measure of U.S. manufacturing unexpectedly slumped, outweighing gains by companies from Royal KPN NV to Vivendi SA on plans to sell assets. The Stoxx Europe 600 Index dropped 0.3 percent to 299.44 at the close of trading, erasing an earlier gain of as much as 0.5 percent
  • Congress Must Rein in Bank Commodities Units, Rosner Says. The U.S. Congress should rein in banks’ ability to own and trade raw materials or risk another financial collapse, Joshua Rosner of Graham Fisher & Co. said at a Senate subcommittee hearing today. “Historically Congress has acted when a few large firms exploited their advantage and sought to control too much,” said Rosner, a bank analyst whose New York-based firm advises clients on investments and regulation in the financial industry. If no action is taken, “we’re destined to view 2008 as the first financial crisis and not the worst.”
  • Boehner Signals Clash With White House on U.S. Debt Limit. House Speaker John Boehner signaled a clash with the White House and the Democratic-led Senate over raising the U.S. borrowing authority later this year. “We’re not going to raise the debt ceiling without real cuts in spending,” Boehner, an Ohio Republican, told reporters in Washington today.
Wall Street Journal: 
  • More Americans Living in Others' Homes. The number of Americans living in someone else's home for economic reasons rose in the past year despite an improving labor market, posing a challenge for the housing market and the broader recovery. The number of so-called missing households—representing adults who would be owning or renting their own home if household formation had stayed at normal rates since the recession—has increased 4% over the past year, according to an analysis for The Wall Street Journal.
Fox News:
MarketWatch:
CNBC: 
Zero Hedge:
Business Insider:
  • Richmond Fed Index Shows Mammoth Fall In Retail Sales. From the report: Retail sales contracted this month, leaving the index at −22, twenty-three points below last month's reading. Sales of big-ticket items declined slightly, while shopper traffic dwindled. The index for big-ticket sales slipped to −5, a point lower than the June reading, while the index for shopper traffic tumbled twenty-two points to −16. Inventories declined more slowly than last month, with that index settling at −12 compared to −22. Retailers were doubtful about sales in the next six months; the expectations index dropped to −29 from June's reading of 11. Retailers reduced their number of employees this month. The index fell twelve points lower to end at −14.
New York Times:
  • Prices Fuel Outrage in Brazil, Home of the $30 Cheese Pizza. Shoppers here with a notion of what items cost abroad need to brace themselves when buying a Samsung Galaxy S4 phone: the same model that costs $615 in the United States is nearly double that in Brazil. An even bigger shock awaits parents needing a crib: the cheapest one at Tok & Stok costs over $440, more than six times the price of a similarly made item at Ikea in the United States. For Brazilians seething with resentment over wasteful spending by the country’s political elite, the high prices they must pay for just about everything — a large cheese pizza can cost almost $30 — only fuel their ire.
CNN:
  • Investor pushes TheStreet(TST) for a sale. Private equity firm Spear Point, which holds a 2% stake in the company, wants TheStreet to hire an outside financial adviser to weigh a number of options. Spear Point, based in New Orleans, also said it will make a bid for the company, though it declined to say how much it would be willing to pay.
Reuters:
  • Flat steel sales in Brazil slump 6 pct in June -Inda. Sales of flat steel products at distribution companies in Brazil declined sharply in June from the prior month, according to the National Institute of Steel Distributors, known as Inda. Sales fell 6 percent from May to 347,800 tonnes, and 0.3 percent from the same month a year earlier, Inda added. Unwanted inventory, which reached 1.1 million tonnes in June, is now equivalent to about 3.2 months of monthly sales, Inda added. In the first six months, sales fell 1.7 percent to 2.144 million tonnes, the institute said. 
  • Bullish on aerospace, United Tech(UTX) lifts 2013 forecast. United Technologies Corp, the world's largest maker of elevators and air conditioners, raised the bottom end of its 2013 earnings forecast on Tuesday, citing its growing confidence after a jump in aerospace orders and cost cuts. However, the conglomerate, which also makes Pratt & Whitney jet engines and Black Hawk helicopters, said revenue would be at the lower end of its forecast of $64 billion to $65 billion for this year.
  • Indian central bank takes more steps to tighten liquidity, support rupee. The Reserve Bank of India on Tuesday announced further measures to tighten banking system liquidity and to stabilise the falling rupee. The RBI set the overall limit for borrowing under the daily liquidity adjustment facility (LAF) for each bank at 0.5 percent of deposits, outstanding as of the last Friday of the reporting cycle two weeks prior to the current one. The central bank also said banks need to maintain 99 percent of their daily cash reserve ratio requirements with the RBI, as against 70 percent now.
Real Clear World:
Telegraph:
  • China capitulates. Once again, China has concluded that it is too dangerous to let the Ponzi Scheme collapse. First we had an article in Xinhua saying that growth below 7pc would “not be tolerated”.
    Now we have a clear statement from Premier Li Keqiang that growth must not fall below the government’s “lower limit” of 7.5pc for 2013, and 7pc thereafter. Already we hear talk of more investment on railway projects, social housing, infrastructure, green energy, sewage, broadband and G4, the tried and tested levers of fiscal stimulus. So there we are, the on-again off-again credit boom may soon be on once more, even though each extra yuan of credit now generates less than 0.2 yuan of growth compared to 0.85 before the Great Recession. It all feels like last summer when the authorities responded to the sharp slowdown (hard landing?) by cranking up stimulus. Now it looks as if Beijing has blinked yet again at the first sign of real trouble. It may take a great deal of stimulus to keep growth at Mr Li’s floor level, given China’s broken model, if it can be done at all. That will store up yet more trouble for the future, and sooner of later the future arrives. 
Echoing fears that European policymakers remain in a state of cognitive dissonance – recognizing the need for root-and-branch overhaul of peripheral banks, but backtracking on joint liability plans – Christopher Flowers, the legendary FIG investor who now runs the £2.3 billion ($3.5 billion) private equity group JC Flowers, sounded the alarm over the negative sovereign-bank feedback loop. In a shot across the bows of market bulls, who cite the return of capital flows to weaker eurozone states, Flowers issued a stark warning: "There is a scenario where we have a Lehman-type event: we wake up some Thursday and a big country is in trouble. "And the ECB will have to decide to support banks x, y, z. And then the ECB will, in fact, decide to own bank x, y, z.


While we want you to share, we ask you use the functions on-site rather than copy/paste. See T's & C's for details. http://www.euromoney.com/Article/3211790/CurrentIssue/88924/Restructuring-Flowers-slams-Europe-over-inaction.html?copyrightInfo=true
Naftemporiki:
  • Greeks Paid More 2012 Income Tax As Salaries Fell. Greeks earning salaries and pensions paid 52% more income tax on average in 2012 compared with year earlier, citing Finance Ministry data. Salaries and pensions shrank 18% on average during that period.
NHK:
  • Fukushima Decontamination to Cost 5 Trillion Yen. Radiation decontamination efforts in Fukushima prefecture may cost 5.13 trillion yen, citing estimates by a group of experts at the National Institute of Advanced Industrial Science and Technology. The estimated cost is more than four times the budget the government has allocated.
Kyodo:
  • Support for Japan PM Abe Falls 12 Points to 56% in July. Support for Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe's cabinet drops to 56.2% from 68% in June, according to a poll conducted by Kyodo July 22 and 23.
Xinhua:
  • China Bans New Government Building for 5 Years. China bans Party and government agencies from building new buildings for 5 years, citing a notice jointly issued by the Communist Party Central Committee and the State Council. Projects that have already won approval will be suspended.

Bear Radar

Style Underperformer:
  • Large-Cap Growth -.42%
Sector Underperformers:
  • 1) Tobacco -1.90% 2) Biotech -1.15% 3) Restaurants -.91%
Stocks Falling on Unusual Volume:
  • LO, AMPE, WRB, TRV, MO, WNC, NWBI, IOC, PTNR, BPFH, WIN, WIBC, USU, CTG, PENN, USNA, HNP, SILC, WERN, BRCM, WAT, IDXX, ALGT, NFLX, KNX, SPTN, BNNY, EDU, GLF, CMRE, AXE, VLTR, PNK, RMBS, DPZ and TA
Stocks With Unusual Put Option Activity:
  • 1) LO 2) BRCM 3) JCP 4) HCA 5) TXN
Stocks With Most Negative News Mentions:
  • 1) JDSU 2) LUV 3) ITW 4) TRV 5) BNNY
Charts:

Bull Radar

Style Outperformer:
  • Small-Cap Value -.02%
Sector Outperformers:
  • Coal +2.98% 2) Gold & Silver +1.78% 3) Steel +1.46%
Stocks Rising on Unusual Volume:
  • TI, PACW, BSBR, NBS, ARRY, MTG, FIRE, CSE, LXK, SANM, IRWD, FSL, BTU, WLT, FTNT and PII
Stocks With Unusual Call Option Activity:
  • 1) MTW 2) DFS 3) WLP 4) BRCM 5) AEGR
Stocks With Most Positive News Mentions:
  • 1) TXN 2) HAS 3) PII 4) BTU 5) LMT
Charts:

Tuesday Watch

Evening Headlines 
Bloomberg:
  • BRIC Bust Seen in Emerging Market Discontent With Growth. Stretched budgets and sluggish growth are putting emerging-market governments on a collision course with rising pressures from recently empowered middle classes for more spending and better services. From Jakarta to Brasilia, policy makers face the end to an era of abundant global liquidity that helped fuel the fastest expansion in three decades. In the eight weeks through July 17, investors pulled $40.3 billion from emerging-market bond and equity funds amid signs the Federal Reserve may begin reducing stimulus later this year. In 2012, $111 billion poured into these asset classes, according to EPFR Global in Cambridge, Massachusetts, which tracks money flows. The Fed’s plans didn’t trigger the slump -- after a decade of prosperity, the BRIC economies of Brazil, Russia, India and China (SHSZ300) have been slowing since 2010. Developing nations are punished more during downturns than their European counterparts because they depend on growth to mitigate social tensions, said Angel Gurria, secretary-general of the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development. “The needs are much more elementary and brutal,” said Gurria, a former Mexican finance secretary, in a July 19 interview in Moscow. Families live with “vermin because they don’t have cement on the floor, and when there’s a big wind it blows off the roof. This isn’t the problem the middle class in the Netherlands face.”
  • Asian Stocks Extend Two-Month High on China Growth, Fed Stimulus. Asian stocks rose, extending a two-month high, after Premier Li Keqiang said China’s economy won’t grow any slower than 7 percent and as U.S. housing data damped concerns the Federal Reserve will reduce stimulus measures. Nippon Steel & Sumitomo Metal Corp. (5401) climbed 3 percent in Tokyo after the Nikkei newspaper reported the world’s biggest steelmaker agreed to a 10 percent price increase with Toyota Motor Corp. Yanzhou Coal Mining Co., China’s fourth-largest producer of the fuel, added 3.8 percent in Hong Kong after saying its chairman and vice chairman resigned. ZTE Corp., China’s No. 2 makerof equipment for phone networks, jumped 17 percent after reporting higher first-half earnings. The MSCI Asia Pacific Index climbed 0.9 percent to 137.24 as of 12:18 p.m. in Tokyo, with almost four stocks rising for each that fell.
  • Swaption Drop Signals Treasury Market Prepared for Fed Tapering. Options are signaling that the Federal Reserve can reduce its bond-purchase program without causing a spike in price swings in the Treasury market. Three-month implied volatility on 10-year interest-rate swaps dropped to a one-month low of 89.4 basis points from 122.6 basis points on July 5, which was the highest since November 2011, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. The gauge is a measure of projected yield fluctuations over the next 90 days. Half of the economists surveyed by Bloomberg say the Fed will begin trimming its $85 billion in monthly bond purchases in September.
  • Fed Seen Tapering QE in September by Half of Economists Surveyed. A growing number of economists surveyed by Bloomberg News say the Federal Reserve will begin trimming its $85 billion in monthly bond purchases in September. That was the view of half of those who participated in the July 18-22 survey, up from 44 percent in last month’s poll. Even as expectations of a September taper rose, 10-year Treasury yields continued to fall last week from an almost two-year high after Fed Chairman Ben S. Bernanke said reducing bond-buying wouldn’t constitute policy-tightening. 
  • MillerCoors Sees Metal-Warehouse Delay Costing Buyers $3 Billion. Global aluminum costs were inflated by $3 billion in the past year through unfair rules that allow Goldman Sachs (GS) Group Inc. and other warehouse owners to slow deliveries, said a risk executive at brewer MillerCoors LLC. The practices of warehouse owners authorized to hold aluminum by the London Metal Exchange created artificial limits on available supply, leaving prices “inflated relative to the massive oversupply and record production,” Tim Weiner, a global risk manager at Chicago-based MillerCoors, said in written testimony before his appearance today at a U.S. Senate subcommittee hearing in Washington.
  • Southwest(LUV) Jet’s Gear Collapses, Snarls LaGuardia Traffic. A Southwest Airlines Co. (LUV) jet’s nose gear collapsed on landing at New York’s LaGuardia airport, snarling traffic in the nation’s busiest air-travel market as flights were sent to other airports in the region. Eight of the 150 people on board the Boeing Co. (BA) 737-700 from Nashville, Tennessee, were injured today, Michelle Agnew, a spokeswoman for Dallas-based Southwest, said in a telephone interview. CNN video showed the plane sitting with its front end on the runway and the emergency evacuation slides extended.
Wall Street Journal:
  • Housing Recovery Increasingly Prices Out First-Time Buyers. Financial Factors Keeping Lid on Initial Purchases. First-time home buyers, long a key underpinning of the housing market, are increasingly getting left behind in the real-estate recovery. Such buyers, typically couples in their late 20s or early 30s, have accounted for about 30% of home sales over the past year. They represented 40% of sales, on average, over the past 30 years, and accounted for more than 50% in 2009, when recession-era tax credits fueled the first-time market, according to data from the National Association of Realtors.
  • Economic Casualties: 'Missing Households'. The number of Americans living in someone else's home for economic reasons rose in the past year despite an improving labor market, posing a challenge for the housing market and the broader recovery. The number of so-called missing households—representing adults who would be owning or renting their own home if household formation had stayed at normal rates since the recession—has increased 4% over the past year, according to an analysis for The Wall Street Journal. 
  • As Banks Retreat, Hedge Funds Smell Profit. Private investment funds, facing diminished returns in some other areas, have piled into the business of lending to struggling companies, part of a so-called shadow-lending system that operates under different rules than commercial banks. Hedge funds D.E. Shaw Group and Oaktree Capital Management, for example, recently set up funds to lend to small and midsize businesses, including distressed ones.
  • Portugal's Bond-Market Recovery Veers Off Track. If Portugal Can't Win Back Investors' Confidence, Another Bailout Could be Near. Only a few months ago, investors were betting on Portugal as Europe's next bond-market recovery story. Now, despite the apparent resolution of a political row that sparked this summer's debt selloff, the future looks more complicated.
  • A Global Revenue Grab. The G-20 unveils a plan to limit international tax competition. After five years of failing to spur a robust economic recovery through spending and tax hikes, the world's richest countries have hit upon a new idea that looks a lot like the old: International coordination to raise taxes on business. The Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development on Friday presented its action plan to combat what it calls "base erosion and profit shifting," or BEPS. This is bureaucratese for not paying as much tax as government wishes you did. The plan bemoans the danger of "double non-taxation," whatever that is, and even raises the specter of "global tax chaos" if this bogeyman called BEPS isn't tamed. Don't be fooled, because this is an attempt to limit corporate global tax competition and take more cash out of the private economy.
Fox News:
  • Will IRS scandal lead all the way to Obama? It took a mere two months and eight days for the Obama administration’s spin on the growing scandal of the IRS targeting Tea Party and conservative groups to completely collapse.
  • Detroit bankruptcy raises concerns about other US cites under huge retiree debt. The recent bankruptcy filing in Detroit is raising red flags about other major U.S. cities also dealing with billions in under-funded retiree benefits, prompting the question -- who might be next? Just last week, Chicago’s credit rating was downgraded as a result of its $19 billion in under-funded pension liabilities. Moody's Investors Service called the liabilities “very large and growing" and warned that Chicago, the country’s third-largest city, faces a “tremendous strain’’ in trying to meet future funding requirements and public safety demands.
CNBC:
  • Japan PM Abe's mandate is much smaller than it looks. Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe's landslide election victory at the weekend was anything but a ringing endorsement from voters. The vast majority never voted for his coalition. Abe's mandate is much smaller than his ruling bloc's win in the upper house poll suggests: only about one in four voters gave their support. Three-quarters of the electorate either did not vote at all or backed opposition parties
Zero Hedge:
Business Insider:
Reuters:
  • Spain taps social security reserve fund to pay pensions. Spain tapped its social security reserve fund for the second time in a month on Monday, the Labour Ministry said, to help with extra summer pension payments as unemployment and retirement costs deplete government funds. The government turned to the fund for 3.5 billion euros ($4.6 billion) on July 1 then for a further 1 billion euros on Monday. Spanish pensioners receive two cheques in summer and two over the Christmas holidays.
  • Brazil tries to lift fiscal credibility, markets don't buy it. Brazil announced on Monday it will freeze an additional 10 billion reais ($4.4 billion) in budgeted spending, in an effort that is unlikely to dispel investors' mistrust in the government's commitment to fiscal austerity. The new freeze, which was originally expected to reach up to 20 billion reais, is aimed at helping the central bank battle inflation, which hit a 20-month high in June. Brazil's planning ministry on Monday raised its projection for 2013 inflation to 5.7 percent from 5.2 percent previously -- closer to market expectations.
  • Italy says to press ahead with divisive tax decisions. Italy's fragile coalition government said on Monday it would press on with plans to reform a hated housing levy and resolve differences over sales tax, despite earlier reports it might have to postpone decisions on the divisive issues. Disagreements over tax policy have tested the left-right coalition, which has seen its public support tick down steadily since it was formed in April.
  • Texas Instruments(TXN) upbeat about revenue, chip demand. Texas Instruments Inc gave a third-quarter revenue forecast that was stronger than some analysts expected and said customers seem more confident about placing orders for chips. Orders picked up in the first half of 2013 and Chief Financial Officer Kevin March told Reuters on Monday that business continues to improve, following weak demand last year due to concerns about the global economy. Texas Instruments' book to bill ratio, a measure of orders filled, was 1.03 in the second quarter, unchanged from the prior quarter.
  • Brazil firms boost hedges as currency swings, debt soars. Brazilian companies, seeking to buffer their growing foreign debt from the impact of a surging U.S. dollar, are stepping up demand for hedges known as non-deliverable forward contracts, data by Cetip SA Mercados Organizados showed on Monday.
Berliner Zeitung:
  • IWH Forecasts Eastern German Economy Will Stagnate This Year. IWH Halle institute expects the German economy to grow .7% this year, citing IWH projections. Cos. in eastern Germany less protected from recession in neighboring countries. Unfavorable demographic trend one of the reasons for stagnation in eastern Germany; more than 500,000 people emigrated from the region from 2000-2011. Economic slowdown has cut chances eastern German regions will reduce financial arrears owed to western German states.
Beijing News:
  • China Premier Says GDP Growth Bottom Line is 7%. China Premier Li Keqiang said China's "bottom line" for GDP growth is 7% and the nation can't let growth go below that, citing comments at a recent meeting with economists and businesspeople. China's economy is at a "reasonable" level as a whole, Li said. China's policy makers don't simply loosen fiscal and monetary policies or adopt short-term stimulus when downward economic pressure increases, citing Chen Yulu, a central bank adviser.
Evening Recommendations 
RBC:
  • Rated (LRCX) Outperform, target $61.
Night Trading
  • Asian equity indices are +.50% to +1.75% on average.
  • Asia Ex-Japan Investment Grade CDS Index 126.50 -1.5 basis points.
  • Asia Pacific Sovereign CDS Index 98.25 -3.75 basis points.
  • FTSE-100 futures +.20%.
  • S&P 500 futures +.30%.
  • NASDAQ 100 futures +39%.
Morning Preview Links

Earnings of Note

Company/Estimate
  • (AMTD)/.31
  • (BTU)/-.05
  • (APD)/1.36
  • (CIT)/.91
  • (TRV)/1.60
  • (FRX)/.08
  • (LXK)/.87
  • (UTX)/1.57
  • (LMT)/2.20
  • (R)/1.23
  • (AKS)/-.32
  • (VLO)/.96
  • (WEN)/.06
  • (DD)/1.27
  • (RF)/.21
  • (MO)/.63
  • (DPZ)/.56
  • (UPS)/1.13
  • (FCX)/.45
  • (PCAR)/.74
  • (ITW)/1.09
  • (AVY)/.70
  • (RHI)/.43
  • (BCR)/1.38
  • (ALTR)/.31
  • (LLTC)/.42
  • (AAPL)/7.30
  • (JNPR)/.25
  • (ILMN)/.39
  • (DFS)/1.15
  • (PNRA)/1.77
  • (T)/.68
  • (BRCM)/.69
  • (NSC)/1.49
  • (VMW)/.77
  • (IGT)/.31
  • (EA)/-.59
  • (HMA)/.21 
Economic Releases
9:00 am EST
  • The House Price Index for May is estimated to rise +.8% versus a +.7% gain in April.
10:00 am EST
  • The Richmond Fed Manufacturing Index for July is estimated to rise to 9.0 versus 8.0 in June.
Upcoming Splits
  • None of note
Other Potential Market Movers
  • The Japanese Cabinet Office Monthly Economic report, Eurozone Consumer Confidence report, 2Y T-Note auction, HSBC Manufacturing PMI report, Australian inflation data and the weekly retail sales reports could also impact trading today.
BOTTOM LINE: Asian indices are higher, boosted by commodity and real estate shares in the region. I expect US stocks to open modestly higher and to maintain gains into the afternoon. The Portfolio is 50% net long heading into the day.

Monday, July 22, 2013

Stocks Slightly Higher into Final Hour on Central Bank Hopes, Less Eurozone/Asian Debt Angst, Healthcare/Metals & Mining Sector Strength

Broad Equity Market Tone:
  • Advance/Decline Line: Modestly Higher
  • Sector Performance: Mixed
  • Volume: Below Average
  • Market Leading Stocks: Underperforming
Equity Investor Angst:
  • Volatility(VIX) 12.51 -.24%
  • Euro/Yen Carry Return Index 136.93 -.66%
  • Emerging Markets Currency Volatility(VXY) 9.08 -3.51%
  • S&P 500 Implied Correlation 50.11 -2.43%
  • ISE Sentiment Index 123.0 -7.53%
  • Total Put/Call .95 +20.25%
  • NYSE Arms .76 -5.97% 
Credit Investor Angst:
  • North American Investment Grade CDS Index 72.59 -.01%
  • European Financial Sector CDS Index 140.98 -5.90%
  • Western Europe Sovereign Debt CDS Index 93.0 unch.
  • Emerging Market CDS Index 271.92 -2.41%
  • 2-Year Swap Spread 18.0 +.25 bp
  • TED Spread 26.0 +1.5 bps
  • 3-Month EUR/USD Cross-Currency Basis Swap -9.25 -.25 bp
Economic Gauges:
  • 3-Month T-Bill Yield .01% -1 bp
  • Yield Curve 218.0 unch.
  • China Import Iron Ore Spot $131.50/Metric Tonne -.15%
  • Citi US Economic Surprise Index -9.10 +.4 point
  • Citi Emerging Markets Economic Surprise Index -29.30 +1.7 points
  • 10-Year TIPS Spread 2.20 unch.
Overseas Futures:
  • Nikkei Futures: Indicating +68 open in Japan
  • DAX Futures: Indicating -3 open in Germany
Portfolio: 
  • Slightly Higher: On gains in my medical/biotech/retail sector longs 
  • Disclosed Trades: None
  • Market Exposure: 50% Net Long

Today's Headlines

Bloomberg:
  • China One-Year Swap Rate Rises on Capital Outflow Concerns. China’s one-year interest-rate swap rose to a three-week high on concern capital will head overseas as a slowdown in the world’s second-largest economy erodes the creditworthiness of local companies. Yuan positions at Chinese financial institutions accumulated from sales of foreign exchange, an indication of capital inflows, rose 67 billion yuan ($10.9 billion) in May, the least in six months, the People’s Bank of China reported June 14. The nation’s rating firms cut the most bond issuer rankings on record in June, according to Guotai Junan Securities Co., the nation’s third-biggest brokerage. “Concern about capital outflows is rising because of fear of default and increasing non-performing-loan ratios,” said Wee-Khoon Chong, a strategist at Societe Generale SA in Hong Kong
  • India 10-Year Bonds Fall After Worst Weekly Decline Since 2009. India’s 10-year bonds fell after posting their biggest weekly loss since 2009 as the nation’s central bank raised two interest rates to steady the currency. “The central bank is clearly aiming to raise short-term rates,” said Arvind Chari, a senior fund manager at Quantum Asset Management Co. in Mumbai. “The market’s expectations of a rate cut have been pushed back significantly.” The yield on the 7.16 percent bonds due May 2023 rose two basis points to 7.96 percent as of 10:30 a.m. in Mumbai, according to the central bank’s trading system. The rate surged 41 basis points last week, the most for a benchmark 10-year government note since December 2009, data compiled by Bloomberg show.
  • EU Bank Sovereign Debt and Capital Holdings to Be Published. The European Union’s top banking regulator will reveal data on the sovereign debt and types of capital held by the bloc’s biggest lenders as it forgoes a stress test for a second year. The European Banking Authority, set up in 2011 to harmonize banking rules, may publish the data as early as October and include additional information on banks’ cross-border investments across the EU.
  • European Stocks Rise for Fourth Day as UBS, Philips Gain. European stocks rose for a fourth day, extending a seven-week high, as companies from UBS AG to Royal Philips (PHIA) Electronics NV reported increased profit. UBS, Switzerland’s largest bank, rallied to a two-year high. Philips, the Dutch maker of light bulbs and electric toothbrushes, gained for an eighth day. Portugal’s PSI-20 Index (PSI20) advanced 2.3 percent as President Anibal Cavaco Silva affirmed that he doesn’t want to call early elections. Mobistar (MOBB) SA slumped the most on record after the Belgian mobile-phone company cut profit forecasts and suspended its dividend. The Stoxx Europe 600 Index rose 0.2 percent to 300.3 at the close of trading, having swung between gains and losses at least 20 times.
  • Gold Futures Advance Most in a Year on U.S. Stimulus Outlook. Gold gained the most in more than a year on speculation that the Federal Reserve will maintain U.S. economic stimulus, boosting the appeal of the precious metal as a store of value. Silver also surged. Gold futures for December delivery rose 3.3 percent to settle at $1,337.30 an ounce at 1:43 p.m. on the Comex in New York, the biggest gain since June 29, 2012. Earlier, the metal reached $1,340.50, the highest for a most-active contract since June 20.
  • Egypt Islamist Calls for U.S. Embassy Siege Amid Unrest. A Muslim Brotherhood leader called on Egyptians to lay siege to the U.S Embassy in Cairo to protest what he said was American support for the ouster of Islamist President Mohamed Mursi. U.S. diplomats should leave Egypt, Essam El-Erian told Brotherhood supporters today in Cairo’s Nasr City suburb, where they’ve been staging a sit-in since Mursi’s July 3 removal by the army. He said he hoped they wouldn’t be harmed. The U.S., which gives more than $1 billion a year to the Egyptian military, hasn’t labeled its intervention as a coup, though it has called for a quick transition to democracy.
Wall Street Journal:
  • Euro-Zone's Debt Load Swells. Government Debt as Proportion of Economy Rises to 92.2%. The figures are a signal that the euro zone's strategy of spending cuts and tax increases aimed at curbing debts isn't yet having the desired effect, in part because of falls in economic output across the bloc. A recession lasting 18 straight months, which critics say has been the result in large part of austerity measures, has caused tax revenues to wither and benefits payments to rise, forcing governments to borrow more. Figures Monday from the EU's official statistics agency, Eurostat, showed that the government debt of euro-zone countries grew to represent 92.2% of their combined gross domestic product at the end of March, from 90.6% at the end of December and 89.9% at the end of September. That represents a significant step up in the bloc's accumulation of debt. The figures showed continued rises in the government debt levels of euro-zone countries at the heart of the fiscal crisis. Irish government debt rose to 125.1% of GDP, some 7.7 percentage points higher than three months earlier, the figures showed. Spain's debt rose 4.0 percentage points to 88.2% of GDP and Portugal's rose 3.5 percentage points to 127.2%. Greek government debt rose 3.7 percentage points to 160.5% of GDP. Only two of the 17 euro-zone countries, Germany and Estonia, reported falling levels of debt as a proportion of their economy.
Fox News:
MarketWatch: 
CNBC: 
  • Doctors are skeptical and confused about Obamacare, survey finds. The doctor is . . . skeptical about the Affordable Care Act. And clueless, too. A new survey shows that an overwhelming percentage of physicians don't believe that their states' new health insurance exchanges will meet the Oct. 1 deadline for those key Obamacare marketplaces to begin enrolling the uninsured. Just 11 percent of doctors believe those exchanges will be open for business that day. But those doctors, by a wide margin, also said they are "not at all familiar" with how a number of important aspects of those exchanges and plans offered on them will work—aspects that will directly affect their bottom lines. More than 65 percent of them gave that answer to all but one of the questions asking their familiarity with plan benefits levels, contracted rates with insurers, patient coverage terms and the claims process.
  • Pump prices jump 12 cents, AAA sees further rise. American motorists are bracing for further increases in gas pump prices this summer after average national prices rose 12 cents in the past week alone. AAA says drivers are experiencing "sticker shock" as increased summer demand, unrest in Egypt and production disruptions in the U.S. and other countries push up the price of crude oil and gasoline. The national average price for regular unleaded gasoline was $3.67 a gallon on Friday. 
  • Investors are moving out of housing, here's why. They swarmed the distressed housing market, buying thousands of foreclosed properties and pushing prices higher faster than anyone expected. Now investors are pulling back, dissuaded by the higher prices they themselves brought about.
Zero Hedge:
Business Insider:
c/net: 
Finextra:
Reuters: 
  • EBay(EBAY) expands same-day delivery in local battle with Amazon(AMZN). EBay Inc unveiled a big expansion of its eBay Now same-day delivery service on Monday as the company battles with rival Amazon.com Inc for dominance of the emerging online local commerce market. EBay Now, which delivers products from stores including Target, Walgreen and Best Buy in as little as an hour, was launched last year in San Francisco and San Jose, California and Manhattan, New York.
89.3 KPCC:
Telegraph:
El Mundo:
  • Spain Opinion Poll Shows PP Support Plunging. Support for Spain's ruling People's Party plunges, citing opinion poll. Electoral support for PP fell to 30.7%, 13.9 pps below support level gained to win Nov. 2011 general elections, citing poll by Sigma Dos; PP had 35.4% support in May. Support for Socialists reached 27.8% in July vs 28.8% in 2011 elections; Izquierda Unida party has 14.3% support. 60.2% of those polled had a bad or very bad opinion of Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy, citing poll.
Echoing fears that European policymakers remain in a state of cognitive dissonance – recognizing the need for root-and-branch overhaul of peripheral banks, but backtracking on joint liability plans – Christopher Flowers, the legendary FIG investor who now runs the £2.3 billion ($3.5 billion) private equity group JC Flowers, sounded the alarm over the negative sovereign-bank feedback loop. In a shot across the bows of market bulls, who cite the return of capital flows to weaker eurozone states, Flowers issued a stark warning: "There is a scenario where we have a Lehman-type event: we wake up some Thursday and a big country is in trouble. "And the ECB will have to decide to support banks x, y, z. And then the ECB will, in fact, decide to own bank x, y, z.


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Efimerida ton Syndakton:
  • Opposition Syriza Party Leads New Democracy, Greek Poll Shows. Syriza with 23.5% support, up rom 22.5% the month before. New Democracy at 21.5%, down from 23% in June. Nationalist Golden Dawn party in third place with 14.5%.
Epoch Times: