Sunday, November 16, 2014

Monday Watch

Weekend Headlines 
Bloomberg: 
  • Putin Leaves G-20 Summit Early as Ukraine Dominates Talks. President Vladimir Putin left the Group of 20 summit in Australia early so he can sleep on the long flight home, as fellow leaders berated Russia over the conflict in Ukraine and warned of possible further sanctions. Putin, who was told by European leaders to stop arming rebels, said before jetting off from Brisbane he needed 4 to 5 hours of sleep so he could get to work early tomorrow morning. “We have to fly from here to Vladivostok 9 hours and then from Vladivostok to Moscow, another 9 hours,” Putin told reporters in Brisbane. “There are no other considerations.”
  • Putin Rebukes Ukraine for Cutting Links With East Regions. Russian President Vladimir Putin responded to his isolation at a global summit over his role in fomenting fighting in Ukraine by chastising authorities in Kiev. Putin said his counterpart in Ukraine, Petro Poroshenko, made a “big mistake” by moving to sever banking services and pull out state companies from two breakaway regions. He spoke after Group of 20 leaders berated Russia over the conflict at a summit in Brisbane, Australia. “Why are the authorities in Kiev now cutting off these regions with their own hands?” Putin told reporters. “I do not understand this. Or rather, I understand that they want to save money, but this is not the right occasion and the right time to do this.”
  • China Bad Loans Jump Most Since 2005 as Economy Cools. China’s bad loans jumped by the most since 2005 in the third quarter, fueling concern that a cooling economy will be further weakened as banks limit lending to avoid credit risks. Nonperforming loans rose 72.5 billion yuan ($11.8 billion) from the previous quarter to 766.9 billion yuan, the China Banking Regulatory Commission said in a statement on Nov. 15. Soured credit accounted for 1.16 percent of lending, up from 1.08 percent three months earlier. China is heading for the weakest economic expansion since 1990, and Communist Party leaders have discussed lowering the nation’s growth target for 2015, according to a person with knowledge of their talks. Bankers’ low appetite for risk and their rising concerns about asset quality are leading to a “sluggish” expansion in credit, according to UBS AG. 
  • Distressed-Loan Buyers Watch Indebted Chinese Developers. Buyers of distressed loans are watching China’s property market closely as debt soars and growth falters. Nomura Holdings Inc. and Bank of America Corp. say they’ll pay more attention to Chinese developers in 2015, having profited from trades in India, Australia, Korea and Indonesia. “There’s been a lot of nervousness around the real estate sector in China,” Andrew Tan, Nomura’s head of secondary trading for loans and special situations in Asia ex-Japan, said by phone Nov. 12. “We’ve seen some selloff in terms of some of the bigger names in the loan space which, typically, you don’t see being offered in the market. They are at high yield, stressed levels.” The number of publicly traded developers with liabilities exceeding equity in China has jumped to 136 out of 334, or more than 40 percent, from 57 in 2007, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. China’s leaders are discussing lowering next year’s economic growth target amid falling home prices and rising inventory. 
  • Hong Kong Stocks Fall Most in Month as Link Makes Debut. Hong Kong’s shares fell for the first time in six days as mainland investors left more than 90 percent of a stock-buying quota unfilled on the first day of the city’s exchange link with Shanghai. Hong Kong Exchanges & Clearing Ltd. slumped 1.9 percent, paring gains to 40 percent since Premier Li Keqiang unveiled plans for the connect in April. Tencent Holdings Ltd., recommended by banks including Deutsche Bank AG as a link play, fell 1.7 percent. Agricultural Bank of China Ltd. and Haitong Securities Co. slid more than 1 percent to pace declines for mainland shares trading in Hong Kong. Hong Kong’s Hang Seng Index retreated 0.9 percent to 23,879.39 at 10:38 a.m., heading for the steepest loss in a month. The Hang Seng China Enterprises Index (HSCEI) dropped 1.5 percent.
  • Asian Stocks Drop as Japan Enters Recession; Bonds Rally. Japanese shares tumbled with U.S. index futures and sovereign bonds rallied after the world’s third-largest economy unexpectedly entered recession. Chinese shares fluctuated and the yuan gained as a link between Hong Kong and Shanghai began, while New Zealand’s dollar advanced. Japan’s Topix index dropped 2.1 percent by 11:31 a.m. in Tokyo as gross domestic product shrank 1.6 percent last quarter from a year before, missing projections for a 2.2 percent gain.
  • Hedge Funds Cut Gold Bets in Fastest Exit This Year: Commodities. Hedge funds extended their fastest exit from gold this year, cutting bullish gold wagers for a third week. The net-long position in New York futures and options fell 14 percent, U.S. government data show. Holdings tumbled 49 percent over three weeks, the most since December. Assets in exchange-traded products backed by the metal dropped to the lowest since 2009, as the World Gold Council said third-quarter global demand was the weakest in almost five years.
  • Pain Trade Ending for Bonds in Poll Saying This Time Bears Right. After the legions of market savants missed out on hundreds of billions of dollars in gains this year anticipating a tumble in bonds, you’d think they would have found another target. You’d be wrong. Given the chance to speculate on declines in only one asset class, 45 percent of investors, traders and analysts in a quarterly Bloomberg Global Poll conducted last week picked debt securities of some type as their top choice, more than three times the percentage who selected gold. Among the options, most chose government debt and junk bonds over assets that also included stocks, commodities, currencies and real estate.
  • Obama Would Probably Veto Keystone Bill, Senators Say. President Barack Obama probably would veto a bill authorizing TransCanada Corp. (TRP)’s Keystone XL pipeline if the measure gains enough votes to pass the Senate, Democratic lawmakers said. A measure approving construction of the pipeline appears to be at least one vote short of the 60 it would need to pass a procedural vote in the Senate, Majority Whip Dick Durbin of Illinois, the chamber’s second-ranking Democrat, said today on CNN’s “State of the Union” program. 
  • Fannie-Freddie Regulator’s 3% Down Loans Draw Jeers. Mel Watt, director of the Federal Housing Finance Agency, has set off a political tempest. The cause: 3-percent down mortgages. Watt, who oversees Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, unveiled his plan in late October to allow the companies to back mortgages with down payments as low as 3 percent. Republican lawmakers and some industry executives are lambasting the change as an irresponsible opening of the credit floodgates. Watt’s proposal is “an invitation by government for industry to return to slipshod and dangerous practices that caused the mortgage meltdown in the first place and wrecked our economy,” Hensarling said in a statement last week. The initiative “must be rejected.” 
Wall Street Journal: 
  • Another ObamaCare Deception. As Jonathan Gruber knows, the health-care law is a tax machine. The ‘Cadillac’ levy will hit the middle class.
Fox News:
  • Democrat-led Senate set to finally vote this week on Keystone, in odd turn of political events. The Democrat-controlled Senate is expected to take a long-awaited vote Tuesday on approving the Keystone XL oil pipeline -- in an unexpected and politically-charged turn of events for legislation that has languished in the upper chamber for roughly six years. Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid will allow the vote in part to give Louisiana Democratic Sen. Mary Landrieu an opportunity to vote “yea” and perhaps help her win her runoff election next month with Republican challenger Rep. Bill Cassidy. However, Landrieu’s political future and the fate of the bill remain highly uncertain.
CNBC:
  • Cost of health coverage under Obamacare act set to increase. The Obama administration on Friday unveiled data showing that many Americans with health insurance bought under the Affordable Care Act could face substantial price increases next year -- in some cases as much as 20 percent -- unless they switch plans. The data became available just hours before the health insurance marketplace was to open to buyers seeking insurance for 2015.
Zero Hedge:
Business Insider:
  • Netanyahu's Warning For The US: Don't Get Tricked By Iran. In addition to warning against military coordination, Netanyahu stressed Iran should not be allowed to keep or grow its uranium enrichment program through the P5+1 nuclear negotiations, which have a deadline of Nov. 24. To bolster his arguments, Netanyahu argued Iranian Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei has "participated in rallies and chants of 'death to America' and 'death to Israel.'" "This is not a friend, neither in the battle against ISIS nor in the effort — the great effort that should be made to deprive it of the capacity to make nuclear weapons," said Netanyahu. "Don't fall for Iran's ruse. They are not your friend."
New York Times:
  • More Federal Agencies Are Using Undercover Operations. The federal government has significantly expanded undercover operations in recent years, with officers from at least 40 agencies posing as business people, welfare recipients, political protesters and even doctors or ministers to ferret out wrongdoing, records and interviews show.
Reuters:
  • Thousands of Georgians protest against Russia, own government. Tens of thousands of Georgians protested on Saturday against Russia, accusing Moscow of trying to annex the country's breakaway regions and denouncing their own government for not doing more to defend national interests. Critics of the government say it is too reluctant to criticize their powerful neighbor, particularly over the crisis in Ukraine, which stirs uncomfortable memories of their own, disastrous war against Russia in 2008.
Telegraph:
Financial Review:
  • Bank capital at risk from house bust. Stress tests completed by the Australian Prudential Regulation Authority found that all of the capital protecting the major banks’ $1.25 trillion mortgage books would be wiped out by a “severe downturn” in the housing market.
Night Trading
  • Asian indices are -1.0% to unch. on average.
  • Asia Ex-Japan Investment Grade CDS Index 107.0 +1.5 basis points.
  • Asia Pacific Sovereign CDS Index 63.75 unch.
  • FTSE-100 futures n/a.
  • S&P 500 futures -.47%.
  • NASDAQ 100 futures -.38%.
Morning Preview Links

Earnings of Note

Company/Estimate
  • (TSN)/.77
  • (URBN).41
  • (A)/.89
  • (JEC)/.86
Economic Releases
8:30 am EST
  • Empire Manufacturing for November is estimated to rise to 12.0 versus 6.17 in October.
9:15 am EST
  • Industrial Production for October is estimated to rise +.2% versus a +1.0% gain in September.
  • Capacity Utilization for October is estimated at 79.3% versus 79.3% in September.
  • Manufacturing Production for October is estimated to rise +.3% versus a +.5% gain in September.
Upcoming Splits
  • None of note
Other Potential Market Movers
  • The Fed's Evans speaking, China Property Price report and the JPMorgan Tech/Media/Telecom Conference could also impact trading today.
BOTTOM LINE: Asian indices are mostly 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.

Weekly Outlook

Week Ahead by Bloomberg. 
Wall St. Week Ahead by Reuters.
Stocks to Watch Monday by MarketWatch.
Weekly Economic Calendar by Briefing.com.

BOTTOM LINE: I expect US stocks to finish the week modestly lower on
global growth worries, escalating Russia/Ukraine tensions, rising European/Emerging Markets debt angst, technical selling, more shorting and profit-taking. My intermediate-term trading indicators are giving neutral signals and the Portfolio is 25% net long heading into the week.

Friday, November 14, 2014

Market Week in Review

  • S&P 500 2,039.82 +.39%*
 photo ryl_zps9bf96dd0.png


The Weekly Wrap by Briefing.com.


*5-Day Change

Weekly Scoreboard*

Indices
  • S&P 500 2,039.82 +.39%
  • DJIA 17,634.74 +.35%
  • NASDAQ 4,688.53 +1.21%
  • Russell 2000 1,173.81 +.04%
  • S&P 500 High Beta 34.29 +.65%
  • Wilshire 5000 21,199.45 +.41%
  • Russell 1000 Growth 955.39 +.74%
  • Russell 1000 Value 1,015.14 +.03%
  • S&P 500 Consumer Staples 491.62 +.11%
  • Solactive US Cyclical 139.86 +.54%
  • Morgan Stanley Technology 994.60 +1.55%
  • Transports 9,061.53 +1.26%
  • Utilities 586.04 -2.83%
  • Bloomberg European Bank/Financial Services 102.85 -.65%
  • MSCI Emerging Markets 41.21 +.20%
  • HFRX Equity Hedge 1,173.66 -.04%
  • HFRX Equity Market Neutral 982.47 -.22%
Sentiment/Internals
  • NYSE Cumulative A/D Line 228,670 unch.
  • Bloomberg New Highs-Lows Index 3 +43
  • Bloomberg Crude Oil % Bulls 31.82 -32.38%
  • CFTC Oil Net Speculative Position 276,832 +3.09%
  • CFTC Oil Total Open Interest 1,509,371 +.71%
  • Total Put/Call .90 -5.26%
  • OEX Put/Call 2.21 +28.49%
  • ISE Sentiment 157.0 +40.18%
  • NYSE Arms .82 -6.82%
  • Volatility(VIX) 13.31 -2.63%
  • S&P 500 Implied Correlation 40.36 -3.05%
  • G7 Currency Volatility (VXY) 8.68 +4.33%
  • Emerging Markets Currency Volatility (EM-VXY) 8.14 -4.46%
  • Smart Money Flow Index 17,468.50 +.93%
  • ICI Money Mkt Mutual Fund Assets $2.644 Trillion +.34%
  • ICI US Equity Weekly Net New Cash Flow -$1.728 Billion
  • AAII % Bulls 57.9 +9.94%
  • AAII % Bears 19.3 +28.3%
Futures Spot Prices
  • CRB Index 266.79 -.87%
  • Crude Oil 75.82 -3.33%
  • Reformulated Gasoline 204.25 -4.17%
  • Natural Gas 4.02 -8.20%
  • Heating Oil 241.61 -3.16%
  • Gold 1,185.60 +.59%
  • Bloomberg Base Metals Index 192.18 -.73%
  • Copper 304.65 +.41%
  • US No. 1 Heavy Melt Scrap Steel 339.0 USD/Ton -.68%
  • China Iron Ore Spot 75.47 USD/Ton -.49%
  • Lumber 319.90 -.90%
  • UBS-Bloomberg Agriculture 1,247.61 +1.25%
Economy
  • ECRI Weekly Leading Economic Index Growth Rate -2.8% -70 basis points
  • Philly Fed ADS Real-Time Business Conditions Index .1276 -9.31%
  • S&P 500 Blended Forward 12 Months Mean EPS Estimate 127.51 -.01%
  • Citi US Economic Surprise Index 15.40 +.4 point
  • Citi Eurozone Economic Surprise Index -26.40 +6.0 points
  • Citi Emerging Markets Economic Surprise Index -5.10 +8.2 points
  • Fed Fund Futures imply 42.0% chance of no change, 58.0% chance of 25 basis point cut on 12/17
  • US Dollar Index 87.53 -.05%
  • Euro/Yen Carry Return Index 152.11 +2.06%
  • Yield Curve 181.0 +1.0 basis point
  • 10-Year US Treasury Yield 2.32% +2.0 basis points
  • Federal Reserve's Balance Sheet $4.448 Trillion +.05%
  • U.S. Sovereign Debt Credit Default Swap 16.84 +1.77%
  • Illinois Municipal Debt Credit Default Swap 168.0 -1.44%
  • Western Europe Sovereign Debt Credit Default Swap Index 31.42 -1.5%
  • Asia Pacific Sovereign Debt Credit Default Swap Index 63.63 -1.29%
  • Emerging Markets Sovereign Debt CDS Index 246.68 +4.70%
  • Israel Sovereign Debt Credit Default Swap 77.11 -.5
  • Iraq Sovereign Debt Credit Default Swap 357.56 -1.35%
  • Russia Sovereign Debt Credit Default Swap 295.65 +4.97%
  • China Blended Corporate Spread Index 323.93 +.16%
  • 10-Year TIPS Spread 1.90% -4.0 basis points
  • TED Spread 22.75 +1.5 basis points
  • 2-Year Swap Spread 21.75 unch.
  • 3-Month EUR/USD Cross-Currency Basis Swap -9.50 +1.5 basis points
  • N. America Investment Grade Credit Default Swap Index 65.5 -.30%
  • European Financial Sector Credit Default Swap Index 67.22 -.48%
  • Emerging Markets Credit Default Swap Index 281.71 +4.59%
  • CMBS AAA Super Senior 10-Year Treasury Spread  to Swaps 87.0 unch.
  • M1 Money Supply $2.900 Trillion +1.85%
  • Commercial Paper Outstanding 1,079.60 +.60%
  • 4-Week Moving Average of Jobless Claims 285,000 +6,000
  • Continuing Claims Unemployment Rate 1.8% unch.
  • Average 30-Year Mortgage Rate 4.01% -1 basis point
  • Weekly Mortgage Applications 372.90 -.85%
  • Bloomberg Consumer Comfort 38.2 +.1 point
  • Weekly Retail Sales +3.80% -20 basis points
  • Nationwide Gas $2.91/gallon -.04/gallon
  • Baltic Dry Index 1,264 -12.04%
  • China (Export) Containerized Freight Index 1,040.62 -.31%
  • Oil Tanker Rate(Arabian Gulf to U.S. Gulf Coast) 30.0 unch.
  • Rail Freight Carloads 271,113 -3.11%
Best Performing Style
  • Large-Cap Growth +.7%
Worst Performing Style
  • Small-Cap Value -.2%
Leading Sectors
  • Gaming +5.0%
  • Internet +3.9%
  • Homebuilders +3.0%
  • HMOs +2.6%
  • Gold & Silver +2.6%
Lagging Sectors
  • Construction -2.5% 
  • Utilities -2.8%
  • Hospitals -2.8%
  • Alt Energy -3.2%
  • Steel -3.9%
Weekly High-Volume Stock Gainers (29)
  • ECOM, CZR, SUSQ, ACHN, MGNX, SCMP, FUEL, QTWO, ENV, CVT, PTX, ICUI, FICO, RAX, RDI, MPAA, XON, ISIS, VSAT, PGEM, EBIX, PAHC, GOGO, EVDY, EV, ZTS, FOSL, XOXO and VWR
Weekly High-Volume Stock Losers (22)
  • ADVS, WLH, MDRX, RXN, SEAS, ALG, AGM, MRD, HGR, BRKR, DY, HCI, FSLR, UBNT, ASCMA, VSLR, ANF, RVNC, FNGN, RYN, SLXP and ICPT
Weekly Charts
ETFs
Stocks
*5-Day Change

Stocks Slightly Lower into Final Hour on Russia/Ukraine Tensions, Rising European/Emerging Markets Debt Angst, Technical Selling, Biotech/Healthcare Sector Weakness

Broad Equity Market Tone:
  • Advance/Decline Line: Modestly Lower
  • Sector Performance: Mixed
  • Volume: Below Average
  • Market Leading Stocks: Performing In Line
Equity Investor Angst:
  • Volatility(VIX) 13.70 -.65%
  • Euro/Yen Carry Return Index 152.08 +.85%
  • Emerging Markets Currency Volatility(VXY) 8.14 +1.12%
  • S&P 500 Implied Correlation 43.18 +1.50%
  • ISE Sentiment Index 138.0 +35.29%
  • Total Put/Call .88 -6.38%
  • NYSE Arms .82 -25.82% 
Credit Investor Angst:
  • North American Investment Grade CDS Index 65.66 +.94%
  • European Financial Sector CDS Index 66.68 +2.19%
  • Western Europe Sovereign Debt CDS Index 31.41 +.42%
  • Asia Pacific Sovereign Debt CDS Index 63.53 -.45%
  • Emerging Market CDS Index 283.12 +.95%
  • China Blended Corporate Spread Index 323.84 -.18%
  • 2-Year Swap Spread 21.75 -.25 basis point
  • TED Spread 22.75 +.5 basis point
  • 3-Month EUR/USD Cross-Currency Basis Swap -9.25 +1.0 basis point
Economic Gauges:
  • 3-Month T-Bill Yield .01% unch.
  • Yield Curve 181.0 -2.0 basis points
  • China Import Iron Ore Spot $75.47/Metric Tonne -.67%
  • Citi US Economic Surprise Index 15.40 +2.1 points
  • Citi Eurozone Economic Surprise Index -26.40 +2.7 points
  • Citi Emerging Markets Economic Surprise Index -5.10 +2.2 points
  • 10-Year TIPS Spread 1.90 unch.
Overseas Futures:
  • Nikkei Futures: Indicating -30 open in Japan
  • DAX Futures: Indicating -23 open in Germany
Portfolio: 
  • Slightly Lower: On losses in my biotech/medical sector longs and emerging markets shorts
  • Disclosed Trades: None
  • Market Exposure: 25% Net Long

Today's Headlines

Bloomberg:
  • NATO Says Russian Forces Are in Ukraine as Putin Goes to G-20. (video) NATO’s chief said Russia is sending troops and heavy weapons into Ukraine as President Vladimir Putin heads to a Group of 20 summit in Australia that’s overshadowed by the crisis. “We have observed in the past days that Russia has again brought arms, equipment, artillery, tanks and rockets over the border into Ukraine,” North Atlantic Treaty Organization Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg said in an interview with Germany’s Bild newspaper. “President Putin has clearly broken the truce agreement and has violated Ukraine’s integrity.” Ukraine is threatened with a return to open warfare, as seen before the Sept. 5 truce that’s being violated on an almost daily basis.
  • Ruble Extends Longest Weekly Losing Streak in Nine Years on Oil. The ruble weakened, extending the longest stretch of weekly losses since 2005, as oil trading below $80 a barrel exerts pressure on Russia’s revenue and pushes the economy closer to recession. The currency fell 0.9 percent to 47.2235 per dollar at 7:04 p.m. in Moscow, taking the drop in the past five days to 1.2 percent. Ten-year government bond yields climbed nine basis points to a five-year high of 10.29 percent. The dollar-denominated RTS Index slumped 1.2 percent to the lowest since August 2009.
  • Russia Braces for 'Catastrophic' Drop in Oil Prices. President Vladimir Putin said Russia's economy, battered by sanctions and a collapsing currency, faces a potential “catastrophic” slump in oil prices. Such a scenario is “entirely possible, and we admit it,” Putin told the state-run Tass news service before attending this weekend’s Group of 20 summit in Brisbane, Australia, according to a transcript e-mailed by the Kremlin today.
  • China Slowdown Deepens as Targeted Stimulus Fails. Aggregate financing in October was 662.7 billion yuan ($108 billion), the People’s Bank of China’s said in Beijing yesterday, down from 1.05 trillion yuan in September and lower than the 887.5 billion yuan median estimate in a Bloomberg survey of analysts. Earlier this week, reports showed deceleration in industrial output and fixed-asset investment. The evidence underscores concern that, outside the U.S., the global economic outlook is deteriorating.
  • China Busts Underground Banks With $23 Billion Transactions. Beijing police raided more than 10 underground banks that were together involved in $23 billion of transactions as authorities tighten their controls on the movement of money across China’s borders. Police in the Chinese capital busted the groups on Sept. 18, with 59 people arrested, after they handled almost 140 billion of transactions over the “past few years,” the Beijing Municipal Public Security Bureau said in a statement on its official microblog today. It didn’t give a more detailed time frame for the transfers. 
  • ECB Can’t Expand Balance Sheet and Revive ABS Market, Pimco Says. The European Central Bank’s plans to expand its balance sheet and revive the region’s moribund asset-backed securities market are unlikely to work, according to Pacific Investment Management Co. The ECB’s decision to buy asset-backed debt risks crowding out existing investors, cutting liquidity in the market and pushing yield premiums to levels where buyers are no longer adequately compensated, Felix Blomenkamp, the head of Pimco’s European ABS team, wrote in a note to investors. Pimco manages $1.87 trillion of assets. “We believe that the ECB will not likely be able to accomplish the two divergent goals of reviving the ABS market and buying ABS in size at the same time,” wrote Blomenkamp, who is based in Munich. “Buying ABS in any meaningful size would debilitate the market, rather than revive it.”
  • Italy’s Slump Enters Fourth Year, Complicating Renzi’s Plans. Italy’s economy shrank in the third quarter pushing the nation into a fourth year of a slump that has complicated Prime Minister Matteo Renzi’s efforts to revive growth and keep public finances in check. Gross domestic product fell 0.1 percent from the previous three months, when it declined 0.2 percent, the national statistics institute Istat said in a preliminary report in Rome today. That matched the median forecast in a Bloomberg survey of 22 economists. Output was down by 0.4 percent from a year earlier. 
  • European Stocks Little Changed as Health-Care Shares Fall. European stocks were little changed, paring a weekly advance, as slides in health-care and commodity-producer shares offset gains in media companies. A gauge of health-care stocks was the biggest drag on the Stoxx Europe 600 Index, as Novartis AG and AstraZeneca Plc retreated. Outokumpu Oyj and Anglo American Plc paced miners lower. Abengoa SA and SBM Offshore NV led oil and energy-related companies down. Schibsted ASA (SCH) pushed a measure of media stocks higher after announcing a deal for joint ventures in online classifieds across four countries. The Stoxx Europe 600 Index slipped 0.1 percent to 335.63 at the close of trading, paring its weekly gain to 0.1 percent
  • Asset Bubbles Are Top Concern for Heartland's Central Banker. As a Federal Reserve bank examiner in the mid-1980s, Esther George delivered bad news to a Nebraska banker: she was downgrading overdue loans, putting his firm’s survival on the line. The owner “broke down and said, ‘This was my life’s work and your decisions are taking my bank away from me,’ ” George, now president of the Federal Reserve Bank of Kansas City, said in an interview. “I was absolutely sympathetic. I knew what it meant for the community.”
ZeroHedge: 
Business Insider: 
StockTwits: