Evening Headlines
Bloomberg:
- Shanghai Glut Rises With Tallest Tower: Real Estate.
When completed in 2015, the Shanghai Tower will be China’s tallest
building. The 632-meter (2,074-feet) skyscraper will also deepen a glut
of offices in the city, putting pressure on rents. The project, in the Lujiazui financial district, will add
220,000 square meters (2.4 million square feet) of office space,
or more than 10 percent of the new supply forecast for the city
in 2015, according to RET Property Consultancy Ltd. About 2
million square meters of grade-A offices will be added between
2014 and 2015, more than double the supply in the previous two
years, according to broker Savills Plc.
- North Korea Marking Kim’s Death Offers Post-Purge Insight.
North Korean leader Kim Jong Un is set to commemorate the death of his
father Kim Jong Il, an event that may give insight into the country’s
new power lineup after the execution of his uncle and deputy for
treason. The ouster of Jang Song Thaek came two years after Kim Jong
Un inherited power from his father who died of a heart attack in
December 2011. Believed to be about 30, the young leader has
purged a series of senior officials, including Jang and former
general chief staff Ri Yong Ho, since taking over the 24-million
nation and its 1.2-million-strong army. North Korean troops rallied yesterday in Pyongyang,
pledging to “become human bullets and bombs” protecting Kim
Jong Un, the official Korean Central News Agency reported.
- InterDigital(IDCC) Says China Made Threats Over Patent Dispute.
InterDigital Inc. (IDCC) Chief Executive Officer William Merritt said
the Chinese government is threatening his company over its bid to
collect patent royalties from phonemaker Huawei Technologies Co. China’s antitrust agency, the National Development and Reform Commission, said it “couldn’t guarantee the safety of
people” sent on behalf of the CEO or the company’s U.S. lawyers
to a meeting scheduled for later this week, Merritt said in a
telephone interview.
- China Swaps Climb Toward Six-Month High on Rate Liberalization. China’s
one-year interest-rate swaps rose toward a six-month high on bets the
nation’s move to free up borrowing costs will make funding more
expensive. The People’s Bank of China said the price of money will
settle at a relatively high level following rate liberalization because
of large demand, Caijing reported yesterday, citing an interview with
Governor Zhou Xiaochuan on Dec. 6. Raising caps on savers’ returns would
be a key reform after the PBOC ended a floor on borrowing costs in
July, according to Andy Ji, a foreign-exchange strategist at
Commonwealth Bank of Australia.
- China’s Stocks Fall for Sixth Day as Consumer Companies Decline.
China’s stocks fell, sending the benchmark index towards a sixth day of
losses, led by consumer companies reliant on economic growth. Qingdao
Haier Co. and Gree Electric Appliances Inc. paced losses for
consumer-discretionary companies with declines of more than 3 percent.
Property developers China Vanke Co. and Gemdale Corp. retreated at least
1 percent. Tasly Pharmaceutical Group Co., a traditional Chinese
medicine company, climbed 3 percent as drugmakers advanced. The
Shanghai Composite Index (SHCOMP) slipped 0.6 percent to 2,148.06 at the
11:30 a.m. break. The measure, which is heading for its longest losing
streak since June, fell the most in a
month yesterday after a policy conference ended without
announcing economic growth targets and a manufacturing index
from HSBC Holdings Plc and Markit Economics unexpectedly slid.
China’s one-month Shanghai Interbank Offered Rate rose the most
in seven weeks today, surging 68 basis points to 6.2350 percent.
- Asian Stocks Rise as Index Rebounds From Three-Month Low.
Asian stocks rose, with the regional benchmark index rebounding from a
three-month low, as investors await the outcome of a Federal Reserve
meeting after reports showed manufacturing growth accelerated in Europe
and the U.S. Honda Motor Co. (7267), a Japanese carmaker that gets 80
percent of sales abroad, climbed 1.6 percent. Dai-ichi Life Insurance
Co. (8750) rose 2.4 percent in Tokyo after Barclays Plc advised buying
shares of the insurer. Daewoo Engineering & Construction Co.
(047040) slumped 8.7 percent after South Korea’s financial services
regulator began inspecting the Seoul-based engineering firm’s accounting
processes. The MSCI Asia Pacific Index gained 0.5 percent to 137.72 as of 11:13 a.m. in Hong Kong, with nine of the 10 industry groups
on the gauge rising.
- Rebar Swings as Investors Weigh Lower Output, Iron Ore Prices. Steel reinforcement-bar futures in
Shanghai swung between gains and losses as a decline in iron ore
prices countered output cuts from the nation’s steel mills. Rebar for May delivery on the Shanghai Futures Exchange was
little changed at 3,672 yuan ($605) a metric ton at 10:15 a.m.
local time, after gaining 0.4 percent and dropping 0.1 percent.
The contract lost 0.7 percent last week, the first drop in four
weeks.
- Budget Deal Lauded by Lawmakers Belies U.S. Fiscal Rigors. Members of Congress are congratulating themselves on a budget accord
set to win final passage this week. Business leaders aren’t celebrating,
saying the deal leaves too much unfinished business. The budget
plan doesn’t extend unemployment insurance for the chronically jobless. It
doesn’t continue more than 50 tax breaks that will lapse on Dec. 31
including the research and development tax credit used by companies such
as Intel Corp. (INTC). It won’t prevent the next debt limit fight after
borrowing authority is set to lapse in February. And it does little to
fix a broken process that hasn’t produced a formal budget in four years and has led the government to be funded primarily through stopgap spending bills since 2011.
- 'U.S. Banks Face New Stress-Test Hurdle as Fed, Firm Data at Odds. U.S.
banks seeking regulatory
approval to boost payouts to shareholders will face a new hurdle next
year as the Federal Reserve begins making its own projections for
lenders’ balance sheets in annual stress tests. The Fed, using its
own model for how banks will fare in an economic slump, may project
lower capital ratios for the nation’s largest lenders than what firms
calculated, according to a letter issued today by the central bank.
That’s because Fed
estimates will rely on historical data showing industry assets
rose in the last three recessions. In past tests, the examiners
used bank estimates that typically predicted a drop in asset
balances, according to the letter.
Wall Street Journal:
- Judge Deals Blow to NSA Phone Spying. Says Program Is 'Almost Certainly' Unconstitutional. A federal judge ruled Monday that the
National Security Agency's collection of phone records "almost
certainly" violates the Constitution, setting up a larger legal battle
over long-secret counterterrorism programs. U.S.
District Judge
Richard Leon's
sharply worded opinion labeled as "almost Orwellian" the NSA's
bulk phone-surveillance program, one of several shots the judge took at
the spying and its legal justifications.
Fox News:
- Small businesses claim U.S. government stealing their ideas.
"They stole all my stuff and used taxpayer money to do it," John
Hnatio, a Maryland small business owner, says of the U.S. government.
Hnatio claims the government has put his company, FoodquestTQ, nearly
out of business by stealing his firm's software that was designed to be
licensed to the Food and Drug Administration to monitor food safety. The FDA "took our ideas, plagiarized my doctoral dissertation on
which a patent was based, and then they infringed on our patent. The
result was that it decimated our business," he adds.
MarketWatch.com:
CNBC:
- Feds probe JPMorgan(JPM) interference in Madoff case. U.S.
authorities are investigating whether JPMorgan Chase tried to impede
their investigation of the Bernard Madoff Ponzi scheme, CNBC has learned. The bank is in the final stages of negotiating a $2 billion settlement
involving a variety of allegations of misconduct in its role as
Madoff's primary banker, according to sources. But before the settlement
talks took hold in recent weeks, the bank was aggressively fighting
regulators' requests for information.
- Is a 'panic taper' the real risk to markets? Markets have been obsessed with the timing of the dreaded 'taper' for
most of 2013, but according to Wells Capital's Jim Paulsen, the real
focus shouldn't be on timing, but on whether the Fed will conduct a
controlled taper or a 'panic taper.'
Zero Hedge:
NY Times:
- Glaxo(GSK) Says It Will Stop Paying Doctors to Promote Drugs. The British drug maker GlaxoSmithKline will no longer pay doctors to
promote its products and will stop tying compensation of sales
representatives to the number of prescriptions doctors write, its chief
executive said Monday, effectively ending two common industry practices
that critics have long assailed as troublesome conflicts of interest.
The Blaze:
Reuters:
- Australia sees 2013/14 budget deficit ballooning to A$47 bln. Australia's government forecast
its budget deficit would swell to A$47 billion ($42 billion) in
the year to June as a slowdown in mining investment saps tax
revenues and other parts of the economy struggle to pick up the
slack.
The government now expects tepid gross domestic product
growth of 2.5 percent persisting through 2014/15, a downgrade
from forecasts of 3.0 percent just four months ago.
Telegraph:
- Bank of America(BAC) advises China default contracts to hedge debt storm. Chinese bond yields have already risen to the highest in a decade yet markets
remain “complacent” about the implications. Bank of America has advised clients to take out default insurance against
Chinese debt, warning that monetary tightening by China’s central bank risks
setting off a bout of serious credit stress in 2014. Bin Yao, the bank’s credit strategist in Asia, said Chinese bond yields have
already risen to the highest in a decade as the authorities seek to rein in
rampant growth of the M2 money supply and excess credit, yet markets remain
“complacent” about the implications. He recommends buying credit default swaps (CDS) on five-year Chinese debt as
the easiest way to “hedge the China tail risk”. These contracts spiked to
266 after the Lehman crisis and again to 206 during the ‘hard-landing scare’
of late 2011. They have since settled down to stable levels, trading this
week near 66.
Sankei:
- Japan
PM Abe's Cabinet Support Drops 9.3 Percentage Points to 47.4%. Prime
Minister Shinzo Abe's cabinet support rate in December dropped 9.3 ppts
to 47.4% from a month earlier, according to a survey conducted by Sankei
and Fuji News Network Dec. 14-15.
People's Daily:
- Hebei
to Cut Steel Capacity Even If It Hurts GDP. The northern Chinese
province of Hebei will ensure the task of cutting steel overcapacity
even if the province has to "sacrifice" GDP growth, People's Daily
reports on front page, citing Zhou Benshun, the provincial party
secretary, as saying.
Evening Recommendations
Night Trading
- Asian equity indices are -.25% to +.75% on average.
- Asia Ex-Japan Investment Grade CDS Index 128.5 -.5 basis point.
- Asia Pacific Sovereign CDS Index 101.50 -.5 basis point.
Morning Preview Links
Earnings of Note
Company/Estimate
Economic Releases
8:30 am EST
- The Consumer Price Index for November is estimated to rise +.1% versus a -.1% decline in October.
- The CPI Ex Food & Energy for November is estimated to rise +.1% versus a +.1% gain in October.
- The 3Q Current Account Deficit is estimated at -$100.2B versus -$98.9B in 2Q.
10:00 am EST
- The NAHB Housing Market Index for December is estimated to rise to 55.0 versus 54.0 in November.
Upcoming Splits
Other Potential Market Movers
- The
Eurozone Inflation data, China Housing Price data, Germany ZEW Index,
$32B 2Y T-Note auction, weekly retail sales reports, (AGCO) analyst
meeting, (WY) investor meeting and the (HON) 2014 Outlook could also
impact trading today.
BOTTOM LINE: Asian
indices are mostly higher, boosted by automaker and commodity shares
in the region. I expect US stocks to open modestly higher and to
weaken into the afternoon, finishing mixed. The Portfolio is 50% net long heading into the day.
Broad Equity Market Tone:
- Advance/Decline Line: Higher
- Sector Performance: Almost Every Sector Rising
- Market Leading Stocks: Performing In Line
Equity Investor Angst:
- Volatility(VIX) 15.88 +.76%
- Euro/Yen Carry Return Index 147.81 -.10%
- Emerging Markets Currency Volatility(VXY) 9.07 -.11%
- S&P 500 Implied Correlation 53.15 -.37%
- ISE Sentiment Index 199.0 +53.08%
- Total Put/Call .80 -5.88%
Credit Investor Angst:
- North American Investment Grade CDS Index 69.30 -.95%
- European Financial Sector CDS Index 95.63 -1.61%
- Western Europe Sovereign Debt CDS Index 57.65 +2.28%
- Emerging Market CDS Index 275.64 -.56%
- 2-Year Swap Spread 9.5 -.75 basis point
- 3-Month EUR/USD Cross-Currency Basis Swap .75 -.25 basis point
Economic Gauges:
- 3-Month T-Bill Yield .06% unch.
- Yield Curve 255.0 +1.0 basis point
- China Import Iron Ore Spot $134.90/Metric Tonne -.81%
- Citi US Economic Surprise Index 35.40 +3.3 points
- Citi Emerging Markets Economic Surprise Index -15.3 -.3 point
- 10-Year TIPS Spread 2.18 +2 basis points
Overseas Futures:
- Nikkei Futures: Indicating +307 open in Japan
- DAX Futures: Indicating -5 open in Germany
Portfolio:
- Slightly Higher: On gains in my biotech/tech/retail/medical sector longs
- Disclosed Trades: Covered some of my (IWM)/(QQQ) hedges
- Market Exposure: Moved to 50% Net Long
Bloomberg:
- EU Banks Shrink Assets by $1.1 Trillion as Capital Ratios Rise.
European Union banks have shed more than $1.1 trillion of assets since
the end of 2011 in a shift away from risky investments such as
asset-backed debt as regulators push lenders to shore up their balance
sheets. Lenders reduced assets weighted for risk by 817 billion euros
($1.1 trillion) between December 2011 and June 2013, the European
Banking Authority, the bloc’s top banking regulator,
said in a report today. Banks’ core Tier 1 capital ratios, a
measure of how well they can absorb losses, rose to 11.7 percent
from 10 percent over the time period. The quality of EU retail and corporate debt on banks’ books
has worsened since 2011, during a period of government cutbacks
and an economic contraction of 0.4 percent in 2012. Defaulted
assets as a percentage of total holdings rose to 3.8 percent
from 3 percent overall, the EBA said, with private companies
hitting a bad debt ratio of 6.9 percent.
- Draghi Says European Bank Resolution Plan May Be Too Complex. European Central Bank President
Mario Draghi criticized plans by euro-area governments on how to
deal with failing banks, saying current proposals might be too
complicated to work properly. “I am concerned that decision-making may become overly
complex and financing arrangements may not be adequate,” Draghi
said during a hearing at the European Parliament in Brussels
today. “We should not create a Single Resolution Mechanism that
is single in name only.”
- European Stocks Rise Most in Two Months on Manufacturing. European stocks
climbed the most in two months after a gauge of manufacturing in the
euro area rose more than forecast and as investors awaited a Federal
Reserve meeting starting tomorrow to gauge the timing of stimulus cuts.
Aggreko Plc (AGK) rallied the most since March after saying net debt
will decline. Deutsche Telekom AG advanced 3.8 percent after a report
said Sprint Corp. is considering a bid for T-Mobile US Inc. Moncler SpA
surged 47 percent on the first trading day for the Italian luxury
skiwear maker. UBM Plc (UBM) fell 3.7 percent after Kepler Cheuvreux
said its 2014 margin forecast for the events business fell below some
analysts’ estimates. The Stoxx Europe 600 Index advanced 1.3 percent to 313.64 at the close of trading in London.
- Euro Increases as Manufacturing Expands; Dollar Falls Before Fed. The euro rose 0.1 percent to $1.3759 at 2:07 p.m. New York
time. The 17-nation common currency slipped 0.1 percent to
141.69 yen, while the dollar dropped 0.2 percent to 102.98 yen
after rising to 103.92 yen on Dec. 13, the strongest level since
October 2008.
- China Money Rates Climb as PBOC Predicts Higher Borrowing Costs.
China’s
benchmark money-market rate
rose from near a one-month low on concern demand for cash will increase
as year-end approaches and as the central bank forecast market reforms
will lead to higher borrowing costs. The seven-day repo rate, a gauge
of funding availability in the banking system, increased 14 basis
points, or 0.14 percentage point, to 4.45 percent in Shanghai, according to a
weighted average compiled by the National Interbank Funding
Center.
- Attack on Police in Western China Kills 16, Tianshan Reports.
Sixteen people were killed when
rioters attacked police as they were detaining suspects in China’s
restive northwest province of Xinjiang, according to a news portal
controlled by the local government. Two police and 14 rioters were
killed, the article on Tianshannet.com.cn said without citing anyone.
Two suspects were
detained in the attack, which occurred in Shufu county of
Xinjiang’s Kashgar region, according to the article.
- India Inflation Exceeding Estimates Adds Rate-Rise Pressure. India’s wholesale inflation was
faster than economists estimated in November, reaching a 14-month high and adding pressure for a further increase in the
benchmark interest rate this week to quell price pressures. The
wholesale-price index rose 7.52 percent from a year earlier, compared
with 7 percent in October, the Commerce Ministry said in New Delhi
today. The median estimate in a
Bloomberg News survey of 37 analysts was 7 percent.
- Mexico Ending Monopoly Seen Drowning North America in Crude. The flood of North American crude
oil is set to become a deluge as Mexico dismantles a 75-year-old
barrier to foreign investment in its oil fields. Plagued by almost a decade of slumping output that has
degraded Mexico’s take from a $100-a-barrel oil market,
President Enrique Pena Nieto is seeking an end to the state
monopoly over one of the biggest crude resources in the Western
Hemisphere. The doubling in Mexican oil output that Citigroup
Inc. said may result from inviting international explorers to
drill would be equivalent to adding another Nigeria to world
supply, or about 2.5 million barrels a day.
- Freight-Drone Dream Has U.S. States Vying for Test Sites. The idea of drones buzzing the skies, delivering packages and
spreading seeds, has set off a race among 24 U.S. states to win
permission to open testing facilities to see whether unmanned aircraft
can co-exist with passenger jets. States from Massachusetts to
California are seeking to build and run centers where private
researchers will study how to operate drones without crashing into
planes or houses.
CNBC:
ZeroHedge:
Business Insider:
Reuters:
- Italy could be racked by violent unrest, president warns. President Giorgio Napolitano warned on Monday that Italy could be plunged into violent social unrest unless the government swiftly introduced reforms to help struggling citizens, following a week
of protests in cities across the country.
Telegraph:
Style Underperformer:
Sector Underperformers:
- 1) Telecom -.66% 2) Airlines -.06% 3) HMOs -.05%
Stocks Falling on Unusual Volume:
- TROX, EC, TMUS, CCI, SXT, ADUS, MANU, GNMK, WSO, TXI, APOG, ADBE, AHL, TLLP, ALKS, IEP, LULU, MPAA, PRGO, JAZZ, PETX, SHLD, RH, IFF, EBS, TMUS, GNMK and VEEV
Stocks With Unusual Put Option Activity:
- 1) AGN 2) ORCL 3) ADBE 4) XLP 5) WDC
Stocks With Most Negative News Mentions:
- 1) PNC 2) HUM 3) LULU 4) CMG 5) JCP
Charts:
Style Outperformer:
Sector Outperformers:
- 1) Computer Services +1.54% 2) Semis +1.52% 3) Disk Drives +1.21%
Stocks Rising on Unusual Volume:
- LSI, AER, AVGO, YRCW, YPF, CBST, HIMX, AFSI, TASR, FII, HFC and GNTX
Stocks With Unusual Call Option Activity:
- 1) KKR 2) NLY 3) NS 4) YRCW 5) CAG
Stocks With Most Positive News Mentions:
- 1) R 2) ZMH 3) LMT 4) GOOG 5) XOM
Charts:
Weekend Headlines
Bloomberg:
- Japan Tankan Signals Limited Spending as Headwind for Abe.
Large Japanese businesses pared
their projections for capital spending this fiscal year,
signaling headwinds for Abenomics as a sales-tax increase looms
in April. Big companies plan to boost spending by 4.6 percent in the
year ending March 2014, a quarterly Bank of Japan report showed today.
That compared with a 5.1 percent projection three months earlier.
- China Manufacturing Index Unexpectedly Drops. A Chinese manufacturing index
unexpectedly fell to a three-month low as output gains eased and
employment weakened, suggesting the world’s second-largest economy is vulnerable to a slowdown. The
preliminary reading of 50.5 for a Purchasing Managers’ Index (EC11CHPM)
released today by HSBC Holdings Plc and Markit Economics
compares with a final figure of 50.8 in November and the 50.9
median estimate in a Bloomberg News survey of 11 analysts.
- Baidu(BIDU) Forced to Add Warnings as Regulators Focus on China Stocks. U.S.
and Hong Kong stock market regulators are demanding that Chinese
companies provide investors more warnings about the risks of a legal
structure commonly used to list those shares overseas. The scrutiny
follows some little noticed legal developments in China over the past 18
months that show the contracts behind the foreign listings may not hold
up in court. It also casts a spotlight on the risks inherent in
some of the world’s most sought-after investments just as Alibaba Group
Holding Ltd. prepares for what could be the biggest foreign listing of a
Chinese Internet company. The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission
has pressed Beijing-based Baidu Inc. (BIDU), China’s No. 1 search
engine, to make additional disclosures about its corporate structure,
citing the
potential for foreign owners to lose control.
- Asian Stocks Decline Fourth Day Before Fed Policy Meeting.
Asian stocks fell for a fourth day, poised for a three-month low, after
a gauge of Chinese manufacturing fell and as investors awaited a
Federal Reserve meeting starting tomorrow to gauge the timing of
stimulus cuts. Toyota Motor Corp., Asia’s largest carmaker, slid 1.6
percent, leading losses among consumer-discretionary firms as the yen
advanced against the dollar. Senex Energy Ltd. sank 7.8
percent after its A$752 million ($674 million) initial takeover
proposal for AWE Ltd. was rejected by the oil and gas explorer.
AWE shares surged 7.2 percent. Tokyo Electric Power Co. gained
1.4 percent on a report the government plans to double interest-free
loans to the utility.
The MSCI Asia Pacific Index lost 0.6 percent to 137.13 as
of 11:40 a.m. in Hong Kong, heading for its lowest close since
Sept. 9.
- Aussie Falls Before RBA’s Stevens Speaks, Fed Meets This Week. Australia’s
dollar fell ahead of Dec. 18 testimony from its central bank chief and a
decision by the U.S. Federal Reserve on trimming stimulus. The
Aussie dropped last week after Reserve Bank of Australia Governor Glenn
Stevens marked out 85 U.S. cents as a level he’d prefer for the
currency. Minutes of the RBA’s last policy meeting are due tomorrow and
Stevens testifies at a parliamentary economics committee the following
day. New Zealand’s currency gained versus Australia’s as a gauge of
consumer confidence in the smaller nation rose to the highest
level since 2009.
- Copper Drops From 6-Week High on China Data Before Fed Meeting.
Copper fell for the first time in seven days as manufacturing data for
China missed estimates and before a two-day Federal Reserve meeting
starting tomorrow amid speculation that the U.S. central bank will cut
stimulus. Metal for delivery in three months on the London Metal
Exchange declined as much as 0.3 percent to $7,232.25 a metric ton and
traded at $7,234.75 at 10:51 a.m. in Tokyo. The price touched $7,265.25
on Dec. 13, the highest intra-day level since
Nov. 1.
- Rebar Rises First Time in Three Days as Steel Mills Cut Output.
Steel reinforcement-bar futures in Shanghai advanced for the first time
in three days as mills in China, the world’s biggest producer, reduced
output. Rebar for May delivery on the Shanghai Futures Exchange
rose as much as 0.5 percent to 3,694 yuan ($608) a metric ton,
before trading at 3,693 yuan at 10:54 a.m. local time. The
contract lost 0.7 percent last week.
- Speculators Most Bullish Since October Before Drop: Commodities. Speculators got the most bullish on
commodities since October, buying more gold, cotton and
soybeans, before prices fell the most in six weeks on signs of surplus supply. The net-long position across 18 U.S.-traded commodities rose 8.9 percent to 677,505 futures and options in the week
ended Dec. 10, the highest since Oct. 29, U.S. Commodity Futures
Trading Commission data show. Gold wagers rose for the first
time in six weeks. The Standard & Poor’s GSCI Spot Index of 24
raw materials fell 1.3 percent last week, the most since Nov. 1.
- White House Slowed Rules in Election Year, Advisory Body Says. The Obama administration last year
took longer than normal to clear rules ranging from environment
protection to food safety, a shift that an advisory body says
may have been politically motivated. The Office of Information and Regulatory Affairs, which
reviews significant federal rules before they are enacted, took
an average 79 days to complete assessments in 2012 and 140 days
in the first half of 2013, according to a report by the
Administrative Conference of the United States, an independent
federal agency dedicated to improving government operations.
That compares with an average review period of 50 days for the
1994-2011 period, the agency said. “Several of the senior agency employees indicated that
OIRA reviews took longer in 2011 and 2012 because of concerns
about the agencies issuing costly or controversial rules prior
to the November 2012 election,” according to the report, which
cited interviews of 14 people at 11 cabinet departments and
agencies that have experienced review delays.
Wall Street Journal:
- Investors Are Hungry for U.S. Corporate Bonds. Small Interest-Rate Spreads Compared With Treasurys Shows Confidence in Economy. Bond investors are showing the most
confidence in corporate America since the financial crisis, underscoring
expectations that the U.S. economy will keep rolling as the Federal
Reserve prepares to trim monetary stimulus.
Purchasers
of corporate debt are demanding the smallest interest-rate premium to
comparable government bonds since 2007. Demand has also put sales of new
junk-rated corporate bonds in the U.S. on pace to surpass last year's
record. Sales of investment-grade bonds in the U.S. this year are
already at the highest ever, according to data provider Dealogic.
- Saudi Royal Blasts U.S.'s Mideast Policy. A leading Saudi prince demanded a place for his
country at talks with Iran, assailing the Obama administration for
working behind Riyadh's back and panning other recent U.S. steps in the
Middle East. Prince Turki al-Faisal, an
Arab royal and a brother of Foreign Minister Saud al-Faisal, said Saudi
Arabia and other Gulf states were stunned by the secret
American-Iranian diplomacy that led to the breakthrough deal between
Iran and other world powers last month. His comments in an interview with The Wall
Street Journal, rare in their bluntness, came on the sidelines of a
security conference here at which he publicly blistered the U.S. for its
role in Syria and in the region. The
Arab royal said the failure by Washington and the United Nations to take
decisive steps to end the violence in Syria—which has claimed over
130,000 lives—bordered on "criminal negligence."
- Profit Warnings Send a Message. Ratio of Negative Guidance to Positive Is Highest Since 2006. Never accuse Wall Street analysts of being negative Nellies. From
buy recommendations to earnings forecasts, they routinely set the bar
too high when predicting outcomes far in the future. With the passage of
time, though, it usually is lowered enough to keep the good cheer
flowing after the fact, too. Three times as many companies produce
positive earnings "surprises" as negative ones.
- ObamaCare's Troubles Are Only Beginning. Be prepared for eligibility, payment and information protection debacles—and longer waits for care.
The White House is claiming that the Healthcare.gov website is mostly
fixed, that the millions of Americans whose health plans were canceled
thanks to government rules may be able to keep them for another year,
and that in any event these people will get better plans through
ObamaCare exchanges. Whatever the truth of these assertions, those who
expect better days ahead for the Affordable Care Act are in for a rude
awakening. The shocks—economic and political—will get much worse next
year and beyond. Here's why:
Marketwatch.com:
- China bubble fears return. Commentary: Watch for rise in shadow-bank lending. Last month’s Communist Party Plenum promised
that Beijing was ready to introduce market forces. This might already be
having an impact, albeit an unintended one. A combination of a rebound in shadow-bank lending, as well as renewed
hot-money inflows, suggest capital is now responding to China’s market
reforms.
Fox News:
CNBC:
- Why Fed could rock market no matter what it does.
No matter what the Federal Reserve does, traders expect a volatile week
ahead. At its meeting Tuesday and Wednesday, the Fed is expected to
discuss
removing some of the extreme stimulus it has provided because the
economy is improving and its continuous asset purchases may no longer be
helping.
- Ukrainians mass for new rally as EU halts trade deal. Thousands massed on Sunday for a rally against President Viktor
Yanukovich just days before he heads for a meeting at the Kremlin which
the opposition fears will slam the door on integration with the European
mainstream.
ValueWalk:
Business Insider:
Consumer Reports:
Reuters:
- Europe faces moment of truth on banks, with flawed defences. Europe's banks face a moment of
truth next year when health checks will spell out the repairs
they need.
The trouble is that fixing them could require cash-strapped
governments to borrow more, often from the very banks that need
their help. The European Union's efforts to break this "doom loop", in
which frail banks and penurious states recycle the same money to
prop each other up, are falling short.
AP:
- Agriculture the most promising market for drones. Idaho farmer Robert Blair isn't waiting around for federal aviation
officials to work out rules for drones. He and a friend built their own,
outfitting it with cameras and using it to monitor his 1,500 acres.
Under 10 pounds and 5 feet long nose to tail, the aircraft is the
size of a turkey and Blair uses it to get a birds-eye view of his cows
and fields of wheat, peas, barley and alfalfa.
Telegraph:
Journal du Dimanche:
- France
Must Pursue Structural Reforms, ECB's Draghi Says. French
competitiveness remains weak, recovery of public finances can no longer
rely on tax increases, ECB President Mario Draghi says in an interview.
France needs to regain fiscal stability for businesses to start
investing again.
ABC:
-
Spanish
Opposition Leader Rejects Catalonia Vote. Alfredo Perez Rubalcaba,
leader of Spain's main opposition Socialists, said his party will oppose
the Catalan government's decision to hold a referendum on independence
next year. "There is no right to self-determination, which is exactly
what is being proposed with this vote," citing Rubalcaba.
CTV:
Yonhap News:
- South
Korea Monitors Financial Markets Amid North Korea Risks. South Korean
authorities will take steps to stabilize financial markets if sudden
changes in North Korea's situation hurt domestic markets, citing a
financial authority.
Sina:
- China
Official Says Local Govt Property Push Is Worrying. China local
governments' push for property market expansion is worrying, citing Li
Tie, head of National Development and Reform Commission's China Center
for Urban Development. Local governments placing their hopes on "cashing
out" on property may lead to bubbles in third and fourth tier cities,
Li said.
Weekend Recommendations
Barron's:
- Bullish commentary on (EBAY).
- Bearish commentary on (HLT).
Night Trading
- Asian indices are -1.25% to -.25% on average.
- Asia Ex-Japan Investment Grade CDS Index 129.0 -1.0 basis point.
- Asia Pacific Sovereign CDS Index 102.0 +.5 basis point.
- NASDAQ 100 futures -.45%.
Morning Preview Links
Earnings of Note
Company/Estimate
Economic Releases
8:30 am EST
- Empire Manufacturing for December is estimated to rise to 5.0 versus -2.21 in November.
- Final 3Q Non-Farm Productivity is estimated to rise +2.8% versus a +1.9% gain in 2Q.
- Final 3Q Unit Labor Costs are estimated to fall -1.4% versus a -.6% decline in 2Q.
8:58 am EST
- Preliminary Markit US PMI for December is estimated to rise to 55.0 versus a reading of 54.3 in November.
9:00 am EST
- Net Long-Term TIC Flows for October are estimated to rise to $40.0B versus $25.5B in September.
9:15 am EST
- Industrial Production for November is estimated to rise +.6% versus a -.1% decline in October.
- Capacity Utilization for November is estimated to rise to 78.4% versus 78.1% in October.
- Manufacturing Production for November is estimated to rise +.4% versus a +.3% gain in October.
Upcoming Splits
Other Potential Market Movers
- The Eurozone Manufacturing PMI could also impact trading today.
BOTTOM LINE: Asian indices are lower, weighed down by industrial and technology shares in the region. I expect US stocks to open modestly lower and to maintain losses into the afternoon. The Portfolio is 25% net long heading into the week.