Bloomberg:
- EU Moves Toward Tougher Russia Sanctions as Greece Yields. European Union governments moved toward
imposing further economic sanctions on Russia as Greece’s new
administration refrained from casting a veto that could leave it
isolated in Europe.
EU foreign ministers gave the go-ahead to prepare steps
that would go beyond last year’s decisions to ban financing for
Russian state-owned banks and prohibit the export of advanced
energy-exploration technology. The EU will also extend a
blacklist of 132 people including Russian politicians and
military officers involved in the Ukraine conflict by six months
to September, and add more names to the list by Feb. 9. “It does include preparatory work for further punitive
measures,” EU foreign policy chief Federica Mogherini told
reporters after the 28 national ministers met Thursday in
Brussels. “We hope this can help put pressure in particular on
Russia to make positive steps.”
- Greek Market Moves Don’t Alter EU Stance, Official Says. (video) Market tension in Greece hasn’t weakened the
European Union’s determination that officials in Athens stick to
commitments under the nation’s international bailout, said
Valdis Dombrovskis, the European Commission’s vice president for
the euro. Stocks in Athens fell this week to lows not seen since the
worst of the debt crisis, with Greek banks losing more than $10
billion of value within 48 hours of the appointment of an anti-bailout cabinet under new Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras. The
markets rebounded Thursday as the government sought to downplay
the prospect of a clash with creditors, with the stocks gaining
3 percent and the yield on benchmark 10-year Greek bond falling
21 basis points to 10.12 percent.
- Greek Government’s Signals are ‘Very Mixed,’ ECB’s Jazbec Says. Greece’s new government is sending “very
mixed signals” on its aid program and it's too soon to say how
the country will be treated in the European Central Bank's bond-buying plan, ECB Governing Council member Bostjan Jazbec said. “Our concerns and hopes are related to how the Greek
government will understand the situation and react to it,” he
said in an interview in Ljubljana on Thursday. “It’s too early
to directly answer questions on when and how the ECB can buy
Greek government bonds.”
Jazbec’s comments are the most explicit yet from an ECB
policy maker on the Greek government’s stance.
- German Inflation Rate Is Negative for First Time Since 2009. Germany’s inflation rate turned negative in
January for the first time in more than five years, aggravating
a slump in consumer prices in the euro area. Prices in Europe’s largest economy fell 0.5 percent from a
year earlier, the Federal Statistics Office in Wiesbaden said
today. That’s the lowest rate since September 2009. Economists
predicted a drop of 0.2 percent.
- Nigeria Torn Asunder as Boko Haram Drive Fuels Caliphate Threat. Islamist fighters have declared a caliphate
in northeastern Nigeria that’s the size of Belgium. Whether the
region becomes autonomous or not, the damage has been done. As Nigeria prepares to hold general elections next month,
Boko Haram is expanding a six-year campaign to impose its strict
version of Islamic law on a region around Nigeria’s northeast
and spilling into neighboring Chad and Cameroon. While it’s
failed to capture the Borno’s capital, Maiduguri, the state’s
emergency agency said this month that its officials can’t travel
to 20 of 27 local government areas in Borno.
- Emerging Stocks Decline Amid Crisis Signs From Russia to Greece. Emerging-market stocks fell the most in
three weeks as China intensified its crackdown on speculative
trading and a flareup in the Ukraine conflict stoked concern
that economies in the region are being pushed into crisis. Citic Securities Co. and Haitong Securities Co. fell in
Shanghai as regulators planned a new round of checks into the
margin-lending businesses of brokerages. Russia’s ruble weakened
for a second day and stocks declined on speculation it will face
tougher international sanctions linked to Ukraine. The Ibovespa
sank for a second day in Sao Paulo. Greek banks rebounded from a
slump driven by the new government’s pledge to end austerity.
The MSCI Emerging Markets Index lost 1.4 percent to 971.10
at 11:07 a.m. in New York.
- European Stocks Trim Best Month Since 2009 as Shell Declines. European stocks closed little changed,
paring earlier losses, as German inflation data missed
forecasts, while U.S. jobless claims fell to a 15-year low. Royal Dutch Shell Plc slid 4.3 percent after reporting that
fourth-quarter profit rose less than analysts predicted.
Vallourec SA lost 3.8 percent after saying it will write down
the value of assets by as much as 1.2 billion euros ($1.35
billion) as lower oil prices force some customers to cut
spending. Deutsche Bank AG rose 2.6 percent after posting a
surprise quarterly profit.
The Stoxx Europe 600 Index fell 0.1 percent to 368.76 at
the close of trading, after earlier losing 0.8 percent and
rising 0.2 percent.
- Commodity Shipping Rate Falls to 28-Year Low on China Demand. A measure of global shipping costs for
commodities fell to a 28-year low as slowing growth in China’s
demand exacerbates the effect of a fleet glut. The Baltic Dry Index plunged 5.1 percent to 632 points, the
lowest since Aug. 22, 1986, according to data from the Baltic
Exchange in London on Thursday. Freight rates for all the vessel
types within the measure declined.
- Oil’s Plunge Hurts Houston Office Sales, Calgary Leases. These are early signs that demand is weakening for
commercial properties in cities that depend on the energy
industry after crude oil prices fell below $50 a barrel, the
lowest in five-and-a-half years, from more than $100 in June.
Oil companies looking to reduce costs are cutting jobs and
choosing to stay put rather than buy or lease new space, said
Ross Moore, director of Canada research for CBRE.
- Wall Street Creating CLOs That May Bypass Rules: Credit Markets. Wall Street has another rule it’s trying to
get around: regulations seeking to limit risk-taking by managers
of collateralized loan obligations. Leon Black’s Apollo Global Management LLC, Carlyle Group LP
and a unit of Credit Suisse Group AG have all taken steps in the
past two months to create CLOs now that they may be able to
refinance after the rules take effect in December 2016 without
having to comply with the new regulations, according to three
people with knowledge of the matter. The firms are trying to
avoid a requirement to hold a stake in the funds they manage.
- U.S. Homeownership Rate Falls to a 20-Year Low. The U.S. homeownership rate fell to the
lowest in more than two decades in the fourth quarter as many
would-be buyers stayed on the sidelines, giving the rental
market a boost. The share of Americans who own their homes was 64 percent
in the fourth quarter, down from 64.4 percent in the previous
three months, the Census Bureau said in a report. The rate was
at the lowest since the second quarter of 1994, data compiled by
Bloomberg show.
Fox News:
- Obama seeking to 'fully reverse' sequester cuts, raise spending caps in budget plan. (video) President Obama will push to "fully reverse" the so-called sequester
cuts and significantly raise government spending caps as part of his
upcoming budget plan, a proposal likely to anger fiscal conservatives
who want to see spending limits in place. The across-the-board cuts, agreed to by both parties, have been in
effect since 2013, after lawmakers were unable to produce a more
strategic deficit-cutting plan. Members of both parties have problems
with the cuts, which indiscriminately affect both domestic and defense
programs.
CNBC:
ZeroHedge:
Business Insider:
Reuters:
- Greece could face rating downgrade if troika talks stall - Fitch. Greece could face a rating
downgrade if it cannot come to an agreement with its
international creditors by the time Fitch next assesses the
country in May, said Douglas Renwick, the firm's head of western
European sovereigns on Thursday.
"If by our next review on the 15th of May there is no
progress on these talks or they look to be failing, of course
that would be a trigger for a downgrade," said Renwick during a
conference call.
Telegraph:
Style Underperformer:
Sector Underperformers:
- 1) Steel -3.79% 2) Oil Service -3.70% 3) Gold & Silver -3.65%
Stocks Falling on Unusual Volume:
- TGI, CLB, AERI, POST, ALB, FTNT, OSTK, QCOM, YHOO, HSY, WRLD, CAVM, DSKY, SWFT, PAYC, KNX, HP, BABA, USLV, PCH, VRTX, RTN, UBSH, MMYT, RCL, CRS, GLW, FCX, CHMT, BEAV, CAM, CRUS, RTN, TKR, FNSR, X, GHL, STLD, WWWW and RES
Stocks With Unusual Put Option Activity:
- 1) NFX 2) EWG 3) CTSH 4) HON 5) HOG
Stocks With Most Negative News Mentions:
- 1) VRTX 2) CAT 3) BABA 4) OSTK 5) GHL
Charts:
Style Outperformer:
Sector Outperformers:
- 1) Homebuilders +2.47% 2) Restaurants +1.68% 3) Airlines +1.13%
Stocks Rising on Unusual Volume:
- XNCR, HZO, HAR, KATE, CMPR, IRE, COH, CSH, VAR, AZPN, NOW, MCD, LRN, CSII, OMER, ABMD, CL, PHM, JBLU, APD, BC, SWK, CEMP and TSCO
Stocks With Unusual Call Option Activity:
- 1) VNDA 2) MCD 3) ADT 4) EMES 5) CL
Stocks With Most Positive News Mentions:
- 1) HOLX 2) BA 3) PG 4) FB 5) NOC
Charts:
Evening Headlines
Bloomberg:
- Russia Set to Hold Main Rate at 17% With No Cut Seen Before June. Russia will probably keep its main interest
rate unchanged this week and is unlikely to cut it from an
emergency level before June as stabilizing the ruble and taming
inflation take precedence over a looming recession, according to
two surveys of economists. The first reduction this year is likely in June or July,
according to a majority of respondents in a survey of 23
economists. The central bank will act once the inflation rate
has dropped to 11.2 percent or less, based on the median of 18
estimates. All but one analyst in a separate survey of 19
economists predict the Bank of Russia will hold its benchmark at
17 percent at a meeting on Friday.
- Russian Consumer Crunch Spurs Tinkoff Stock Volatility. Price swings in TCS Group Holding Plc have
surged to the highest level in eight months as analysts cut
projections for the consumer lender amid a financial crisis
that’s making it more difficult for Russians to pay their debts. Fifty-day historical volatility, a measure of price
fluctuations during the period, jumped to 73 percent Wednesday
as the company’s London-traded shares headed for an eighth
straight monthly decline. The stock has sunk 84 percent from its
October 2013 initial public offering price of $17.50.
- Greece Wants a Debt Break. What About Its Poorer Neighbors? The 40-year-old prime minister’s rise to power has put him on a
collision course with Germany, as he struggles to deliver on his
campaign promises to renegotiate his country’s debt and overturn the
painful austerity demanded by Greece's creditors. But if Tsipras is to bring home the deal he feels Greece deserves, he
will have to more than face down the Germans. He’ll have to win over
skeptical taxpayer in other euro zone countries, reassure European
leaders worried about insurgent challenges of their own and make the
case that – in a Europe still reeling from the 2008 global financial
crisis – Greece is uniquely deserving of assistance.
- Japan’s Retail Sales Unexpectedly Slump in Challenge to Abe. Japanese retail sales unexpectedly fell in
December, underscoring challenges to Prime Minister Shinzo Abe’s
effort to stoke a recovery in the world’s third-biggest economy. Sales slid 0.3 percent from November for a third straight
monthly decline, the trade ministry said Thursday in Tokyo. That
compared with the median estimate for a 0.3 percent gain in a
Bloomberg News survey. Sales increased 1.7 percent in 2014.
- With India Bulls Everywhere, a Rare Look at the Risks. There are times in financial-market rallies
where the gains become so spectacular and the euphoria reaches
such a pitch that it becomes easy to forget about the risks. India, it could be argued, is going through such a moment.
- China Stocks Fall for Third Day as CSRC Starts New Margin Probe. China’s stocks fell for a third day, sending
the benchmark index to a one-week low, amid speculation
increased regulatory scrutiny of margin loans will spur some
leveraged investors to reduce holdings. Citic Securities Co. and Haitong Securities led declines
for financial companies with losses of at least 1.8 percent. The
securities regulator plans a new round of checks into the
margin-lending businesses of brokerages, the Xinhua News Agency
reported Wednesday night. Trainmakers China CNR Corp. and CSR
Corp. rose at least 1.6 percent after the government said it
will promote railway firms’ overseas investments. “The authorities sent a signal that they don’t feel
comfortable,” said Yuliang Chang, Hong Kong-based strategist at
Deutsche Bank AG. The pace of growth in margin lending and
umbrella trusts “is creating a systemic risk in the financial
industry,” he said. The Shanghai Composite Index dropped 0.9 percent to
3,275.18 at 10:28 a.m. local time.
- Asian Stocks Track U.S. Declines After Federal Reserve Statement. Asian stocks fell, tracking declines in U.S.
equities, after the Federal Reserve cited international risks to
the American economy and oil slumped below $45 per barrel. The MSCI Asia Pacific Index slid 0.5 percent to 141.74 as
of 9:01 a.m. in Tokyo. The Fed acknowledged global risks in its
statement Wednesday, saying that it will take into account
readings on “international developments” as it decides how
long to keep key rates near zero. While boosting their
assessment of the economy, policy makers said inflation will
probably slow further. U.S. oil supplies climbed to their
highest level in data going back more than 30 years,
exacerbating concerns over a global supply glut.
- Tesla(TSLA) Bears Rev Engine on Falling Oil, China Skepticism. Slumping oil prices have restored Tesla
Motors Inc.’s status as a favorite among short sellers and
bearish options traders. Speculation that a 58-percent plunge in West Texas
Intermediate crude since June and competition from General
Motors Co. will hurt demand have pushed short sales to a one-year high. The difference in the cost of bearish options versus
bullish ones has almost quadrupled from September, reaching the
highest level since November 2012, data compiled by Bloomberg
show.
Wall Street Journal:
- U.S. Must Return Guantanamo for Normal Relations With Cuba, Raúl Castro Says. Demands Come as Two Nations Move Toward Renewing Full Diplomatic Relations. Cuban President Raúl Castro demanded Wednesday that the U.S. return
the base at Guantanamo Bay, lift the half-century trade embargo on Cuba
and compensate his country for damages before the two nations
re-establish normal relations.
- Islamic State Offshoots Spring Up in Egypt, Other Countries. Egyptian Army Battles a Deadly Sinai Insurgency. The video looks hard to distinguish from the ones filmed in Syria and
Iraq. Islamic State gunmen arrive in a fleet of pickup trucks, set up
checkpoints on a busy highway and start hauling away suspected
collaborators with the “apostate” government. It ends, predictably, with
forced confessions and gruesome, close-up shots of killings.
- Militants Driven From Pakistan Flock to Afghan Towns. Migration to Lawless Regions Pose New Threat to National Security. Arab and Central Asian Islamist militants have moved into Afghanistan
after a military offensive by Islamabad largely eliminated havens in
Pakistan’s tribal areas, Afghan officials and local residents say,
posing a potential new threat to the country’s already tenuous security.
- Up to Six Million Households Facing Penalty for Skipping Health Insurance. The Fine for Not Carrying Insurance in 2014 is $95 per Adult, or 1% of Family Income. The U.S. government estimates as many as six million households may have
to pay a penalty for not having had health-insurance coverage last year
as required under the Affordable Care Act, officials said Wednesday.
- Building Toward Another Mortgage Meltdown. In the name of ‘affordable’ loans, the White House is creating the conditions for a replay of the housing disaster. The Obama administration’s troubling flirtation with another mortgage
meltdown took an unsettling turn on Tuesday with Federal Housing
Finance Agency Director Mel Watt’s testimony before the House Financial
Services Committee.
Fox News:
MarketWatch.com:
- Sands China's quarterly profit falls 18%.
Sands China Ltd. (1928.HK), the Macau unit of Las Vegas Sands Corp.
(LVS), said Thursday fourth-quarter net income dropped 18% from a year
earlier amid a softer gaming market in Macau.
Zero Hedge:
Business Insider:
Reuters:
- Qualcomm(QCOM) says key customer passed on new chip, stock drops. Qualcomm Inc reduced its outlook for fiscal 2015, saying it expects its newest Snapdragon mobile chip will not be used in a major customer's flagship smartphone, sending its shares lower. The San Diego, California, company also warned that
"challenges" with another of its chips had hurt its
competitiveness in China, where Qualcomm has been disappointed
with growth that has fallen short of expectations.
Bild:
- EU's
Schulz Sees Non Majority for Greek Debt Cut. EU Parliament President
Martin Schulz says he will speak frankly to Greek Prime Minister Alexis
Tsipras on trip to Athens and tell him to ask the billionaires who
stashed money abroad to pay their taxes, citing an interview. Sees
coalition with right-wing populist party as problematic, remains to be
seen how the parties will cope with their internal contradictions. Greece's rejection of sanctions against Russia doesn't mark a successful debut; EU sanctions have held together and solo efforts don't go so easily without consultations.
Le Figaro:
- EC President Juncker Says Greece Should Respect Europe. Europe won't provide credit unless Greece sticks to commitments, European Commission President Jean-Claude Juncker says in an interview. No question of forgiving Greek debt, he said. A country can't take "democratic choice" to go against European treaties, Juncker said.
Economic Information Daily:
- China 2014 Tax Revenue Growth Lowest in 20 Years. Tax revenue grew 8.8% to 10.4t yuan, citing data from the State Administration of Taxation.
Evening Recommendations
Night Trading
- Asian equity indices are -1.0% to unch. on average.
- Asia Ex-Japan Investment Grade CDS Index 112.0 +2.0 basis points.
- Asia Pacific Sovereign CDS Index 69.25 -1.25 basis points.
- NASDAQ 100 futures +.13%.
Morning Preview Links
Earnings of Note
Company/Estimate
Economic Releases
8:30 am EST
- Initial Jobless Claims are estimated to fall to 300K versus 307K the prior week.
- Continuing Claims are estimated to fall to 2405K versus 2443K prior.
10:00 am EST
- Pending Home Sales for December are estimated to rise +.5% versus a +.8% gain in November.
Upcoming Splits
Other Potential Market Movers
- The
Eurozone CPI, Japan CPI, $35B 5Y T-Note auction, $29B 7Y T-Note
auction, weekly EIA natural gas inventory report, weekly Bloomberg
Consumer Comfort Index and the (KATE) conference call could also impact
trading today.
BOTTOM LINE: Asian indices are lower, weighed down by real estate and industrial shares in the region. I expect US stocks to open mixed and to weaken into the afternoon, finishing modestly lower. The Portfolio is 25% net long heading into the day.
Broad Equity Market Tone:
- Advance/Decline Line: Lower
- Sector Performance: Most sectors declining
- Volume: Slightly Below Average
- Market Leading Stocks: Underperforming
Equity Investor Angst:
- Volatility(VIX) 18.44 +7.08%
- Euro/Yen Carry Return Index 139.10 -.67%
- Emerging Markets Currency Volatility(VXY) 9.74 -3.37%
- S&P 500 Implied Correlation 67.66 +2.05%
- ISE Sentiment Index 93.0 -12.28%
- Total Put/Call .95 -12.04%
Credit Investor Angst:
- North American Investment Grade CDS Index 67.75 +1.22%
- America Energy Sector High-Yield CDS Index 737.0 +.06%
- European Financial Sector CDS Index 64.06 +6.96%
- Western Europe Sovereign Debt CDS Index 24.65 +4.18%
- Asia Pacific Sovereign Debt CDS Index 68.47 -2.89%
- Emerging Market CDS Index 398.02 +1.33%
- iBoxx Offshore RMB China Corporates High Yield Index 112.88 +.53%
- 2-Year Swap Spread 25.25 +.25 basis point
- 3-Month EUR/USD Cross-Currency Basis Swap -12.5 -.75 basis point
Economic Gauges:
- 3-Month T-Bill Yield .02% unch.
- Yield Curve 124.0 -7.0 basis points
- China Import Iron Ore Spot $63.09/Metric Tonne -.65%
- Citi US Economic Surprise Index -4.0 -.3 point
- Citi Eurozone Economic Surprise Index 1.60 +1.6 points
- Citi Emerging Markets Economic Surprise Index -7.40 +3.6 points
- 10-Year TIPS Spread 1.61 -4.0 basis points
Overseas Futures:
- Nikkei Futures: Indicating -115 open in Japan
- DAX Futures: Indicating -35 open in Germany
Portfolio:
- Slightly Higher: On gains in my tech sector longs, index hedges and emerging markets shorts
- Disclosed Trades: Added to my (IWM)/(QQQ) hedges and to my (EEM) short
- Market Exposure: Moved to 25% Net Long
Bloomberg:
- Putin Goes All In as Ukraine Fights for Funding. Vladimir Putin is playing for keeps in
Ukraine and he might bankrupt the country to get what he wants. As fighting flares anew in the 10-month-old conflict and
the death toll mounts, that’s the assessment of analysts in
Ukraine and New York, as well as Moscow. While Kremlin-backed rebels pressure the Ukrainian
government, the U.S. and the European Union are contemplating
tighter economic sanctions on Russia. Putin, however, seems
emboldened in his belief that this is a showdown he must not and
will not lose. “Putin realized that he will never be in the West’s good
graces and this makes him act more decisively,” Igor Bunin,
director of the Center for Political Technologies in Moscow,
with ties to the Kremlin, said Tuesday by phone. “He started
playing all in.”
- U.S. Ready to Push Russia on Ukraine as EU Wrangles on Sanctions. The U.S. said it’s ready to intensify
pressure against Russia for supporting rebels who’ve stepped up
attacks on Ukrainian troops as the European Union tussled over
new sanctions in the face of opposition from Greece. EU states will discuss adding names to and extending the
duration of a black list of Russian and separatist individuals
and companies linked to the conflict at a meeting minister of
the bloc’s foreign ministers on Thursday. U.S. Treasury
Secretary Jacob J. Lew said President Barack Obama’s
administration was prepared to raise pressure on Russia to use
its influence over the separatists to stop the conflict.
- Greece's looming clash in Europe starts with sanctions on Russia. Greece’s new government questioned moves to impose more sanctions on
Russia, adding a foreign-policy angle to its challenge to the status quo
in Europe. Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras’s SYRIZA-led coalition
said it opposed a European Union statement issued in Brussels Tuesday
paving the way to additional curbs on the Kremlin over the conflict in
Ukraine, and complained it hadn’t been consulted. “Greece doesn’t
consent,” the government said in a statement. It added that the
announcement violated “proper procedure” by not first securing Greece’s
agreement.
- Greek Bonds, Stocks Decline as New Government Takes Charge. Greek bonds and stocks slumped for a third
day on concern the nation’s new government will backtrack on
austerity. The yield on three-year notes jumped 268 basis points to
16.71 percent at 5:47 p.m. in Athens and reached its highest
level since Greece completed the biggest-ever debt restructuring
in 2012. The ASE Index fell 9.2 percent to its lowest level
since September of that year, taking its three-day drop to 15
percent as a gauge of lenders extended a record low. Greek sovereign-bond risk jumped, with credit-default swaps signaling
a 70 percent probability the government will fail to meet its
obligations within five years, up from 59 percent on Jan. 23.
- European Stocks Are Little Changed Amid Earnings as ASE Declines. European stocks were little changed as
Nordea Bank AB and Electrolux AB advanced on earnings, while
Greek equities tumbled.
The Stoxx Europe 600 Index added 0.1 percent to 369.08 at
the close of trading, having swung between gains and losses more
than 10 times.
- Iraq Oil Surge to Fan OPEC Rivalry That Triggered Slump. The battle for customers among OPEC members
that helped trigger oil’s collapse is about to escalate. Iraqi crude production is climbing from a 35-year high as
it adds growing Kurdish supplies to its exports, while southern
oilfields remain unscathed by Islamic State militants. Finding
buyers for the new output means offering more attractive terms
than rivals in the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries, say Citigroup Inc., DNB ASA and Barclays Plc.
- Bloomberg Brief: Introducing the 'Fed Spectrometer'.
- Fed Stays Patient on Rates Amid Strong Job Gains, Low Inflation. The Federal Reserve maintained its pledge to
be “patient” on raising interest rates and boosted its
assessment of the economy and labor market, even as it expects
inflation to decline further. “Economic activity has been expanding at a solid pace,”
the Federal Open Market Committee said today in a statement in
Washington. “Labor market conditions have improved further,
with strong job gains and a lower unemployment rate.”
- Treasuries Gain as Oil Stockpiles Lower Prices, Growth Outlook. Treasuries rose as a report showing record
U.S. crude inventories damped inflation projections amid signs
the global economic slowdown is catching up with the U.S. The 30-year bond yield approached record lows before the
Federal Reserve ends a policy meeting and provides an update on
plans to raise interest rates later this year. Greek stocks and
bonds slumped on concern the nation’s newly elected government
will seek to overturn austerity measures, fueling haven demand.
The Treasury’s auction of $26 billion of two-year notes
attracted a lower-than-forecast yield.
ZeroHedge:
Business Insider:
Reuters:
- China to relaunch probe into margin trading, bank lending for stock speculation - sources. Chinese regulators will relaunch
an investigation into stock margin trading, and have been given
notice banks to tighten supervision of their lending practices
to ensure loans aren't funnelled into stock markets, sources
with direct knowledge of the matter told Reuters.
The China Securities Regulatory Commission and the China Banking Regulatory Commission did not respond to request from
Reuters seeking comment. The news comes as Beijing moves cautiously to suppress the
excessive use of leverage to make aggressive bets on Chinese
stock markets, which have gained around 40 percent since
November. Reports of previous investigations and regulatory clamp
downs caused a dramatic collapse in stocks on Jan. 19, and
regulators followed up by reassuring the market that they were
not trying to suppress the rally.
- EMERGING MARKETS-Brazil's Bovespa dragged down by Petrobras plunge. Brazil's main stock index sank
on Wednesday as shares of state-run oil company Petrobras
plunged on concerns over potential losses stemming from a
multibillion-dollar corruption scandal.
The benchmark Bovespa index dropped about 1.4 percent and
was on track for its weakest closing level in over three weeks,
while the broader MSCI Latin American stock index
erased the previous session's gains.
- EXCLUSIVE-EU mulls capital markets restrictions among new Russia sanctions. Union
sanctions against Russia could include further capital markets
restrictions, making it harder for Russian companies to refinance
themselves and possibly affecting Russian sovereign bonds and access to
advanced technology for the oil and gas sectors, EU officials said
on Wednesday.EU foreign ministers are set to ask the executive European
Commission on Thursday to prepare a new round of sanctions over Moscow's
role in eastern Ukraine, however officials said the measures may not be
adopted by EU leaders until late March.
- Oil drops on record-high U.S. crude stocks as pressure mounts. Oil prices fell
on Wednesday after the U.S. government reported record-high crude
inventories, adding to anxieties about the global glut that has
pressured the market since last summer. The U.S. Energy Information
Administration (EIA) said domestic crude oil stocks rose by almost 9
million barrels last week to reach nearly 407
million, their highest since the government began keeping records in
1982.
Telegraph:
Macau Business Daily:
-
Macau Official Sees 1H Gaming Revenue Falling. Macau's 1H gaming
revenue is likely to follow the 2H of 2014 and continue to decline,
citing Secretary for Economy and Finance Lionel Leong.
National Business Daily:
- Shanghai Will Continue Home Purchase Restrictions. The city will
continue to implement existing home purchase restrictions "strictly,"
citing Liu Haisheng, head of Shanghai's housing regulatory authority as
saying during a recent political consultative meeting.