Evening Headlines
Bloomberg:
- Greece and Germany Head for a Showdown. (video)
- Yuan Usage Is Losing Momentum Outside Asia, HSBC Survey Suggests. The yuan’s rise in global trade is losing
momentum and adoption outside of Asia-Pacific remains limited as
complex rules deter companies, according to an annual survey by
HSBC Holdings Plc. The report highlights the challenge for China as it seeks
to internationalize its currency and open up its capital
markets. Premier Li Keqiang is pushing for the yuan to be added
to the International Monetary Fund’s basket of four reserve
currencies, aiding the nation’s attempts to contest the dollar’s
dominance in global trade and finance.
- Most Asian Stocks Retreat as Investors Await China Factory Data. Most Asian stocks fell, following a drop in
U.S. equities, as industrial companies declined and investors
awaited manufacturing data from China.
About three shares dropped for every two that rose on the
MSCI Asia Pacific Index, which traded little changed at 148.77
as of 9:03 a.m. in Tokyo.
- Iron Ore Cut 28% at Morgan Stanley on China’s Loss of Confidence. Morgan Stanley, which began the year saying
the worst was probably over for iron ore prices, cut forecasts
for the raw material through 2017, citing weak conditions in
China and a seaborne surplus that’ll more than double. The steel-making commodity will average $57 a metric ton in
2015, 28 percent less than a previous forecast, analysts Tom
Price and Joel Crane wrote in a quarterly report on Tuesday. The
2016 outlook was cut 13 percent to $65 and the 2017 forecast was
reduced 5 percent to $71 a ton, according to the report.
- Fed’s Rate Path Post-Liftoff Won’t Be Smooth, Fischer Says. Federal Reserve Vice Chairman Stanley
Fischer wants investors to fasten their seatbelts. Fischer said on Monday in New York that raising interest
rates “likely will be warranted before the end of the year”
and cautioned policy wouldn’t be uniform or predictable.
- Buyback Blackout Leaves U.S. Stocks on Their Own Before Earnings. U.S. stocks are entering part of the year
when one of their biggest support systems goes away. Buybacks, which reached a monthly record in February and
have surged so much they make up about 2 percent of daily
volume, are customarily suspended during the five weeks before
companies report quarterly results, according to Goldman Sachs
Group Inc. With the busiest part of first-quarter earnings
seasons beginning in April, the blackout is getting started now.
Wall Street Journal:
- U.S. Car-Making Boom? Not for Auto-Industry Workers. U.S. auto-industry wages have declined despite rise in output due to competition from foreign parts makers. U.S. auto production is nearing all-time highs on the back of strong
domestic demand and steady export increases. But American-made cars and
trucks are increasingly loaded with parts imported from Mexico, China
and other nations.
- Fed’s Williams: Midyear Will Be Time to Start Rate Increase Debate. Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco President John Williams reiterated on Monday his belief that central bankers should consider raising rates some time this summer.
- The Rising Menace From Disintegrating Yemen. The U.S. suffers a major setback in the war on terror as a proxy war between Iran and Saudi Arabia looms. The evacuation of U.S. Special Forces from their base in southern Yemen
on Friday because al Qaeda had taken over the nearby city of al-Houta is
hard to spin as anything but a major setback for the war on terror. All
the more so since last month the few remaining U.S. diplomats in Yemen
had flown out of San’a, the capital, because of the threat from Houthi
rebels. The American ambassador to Yemen now operates from the Saudi
port city of Jeddah.
Fox News:
- Terror triumvirate: ISIS, Al Qaeda, Boko Haram training together in Mauritania: analyst. (video) The world’s three most infamous terrorist organizations are working
together at Al-Qaeda-run training camps in the Sahara Desert in
Mauritania, where dozens of recruits from the U.S., Canada and Europe
are being indoctrinated into violent jihad and training for attacks that
could expand the so-called caliphate across North and West Africa,
according to analysts.
Zero Hedge:
Business Insider:
Financial Times:
- Raise rates or face ‘devastating’ bubbles, says Fed official. The
US risks inflating asset price bubbles with “devastating consequences”
if it leaves interest rates at zero, according to a senior Federal
Reserve official. James Bullard, head of the Reserve Bank of St
Louis, told the Financial Times on Monday the Fed “should get on with
normalisation” as soon as possible so that it does not have to raise rates more aggressively later causing significant market volatility.
Evening Recommendations
Night Trading
- Asian equity indices are -.75% to +.25% on average.
- Asia Ex-Japan Investment Grade CDS Index 112.75 -.25 basis point.
- Asia Pacific Sovereign CDS Index 60.25 -.25 basis point.
- NASDAQ 100 futures +.03%.
Morning Preview Links
Earnings of Note
Company/Estimate
- (GIII)/.83
- (HDS)/.10
- (IHS)/1.36
- (MKC)/.64
- (CBK)/-.10
- (SONC)/.12
- (SCS)/.20
Economic Releases
8:30 am EST
- The CPI for February is estimated to rise +.2% versus a -.7% decline in January.
- The CPI Ex Food & Energy for February is estimated to rise +.1% versus a +.2% gain in January.
9:00 am EST
- The FHFA House Price Index for January is estimated to rise +.5% versus a +.8% gain in December.
9:45 am EST
- Preliminary US Markit Manufacturing PMI for March is estimated to fall to 54.6 versus 55.1 in February.
10:00 am EST
- New Home Sales for February are estimated to fall to 464K versus 481K in January.
- Richmond Fed Manufacturing Index for March is estimated to rise to 3.0 versus 0.0 in February.
Upcoming Splits
Other Potential Market Movers
- The
Fed's Bullard speaking, Eurozone PMI, UK CPI, 2Y T-Note auction, weekly
US retail sales reports and the BB&T Industrials conference
could also impact trading today.
BOTTOM LINE: Asian indices are mostly lower, weighed down by technology and real estate 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: Modestly Higher
- Sector Performance: Mixed
- Market Leading Stocks: Underperforming
Equity Investor Angst:
- Volatility(VIX) 13.01 -.08%
- Euro/Yen Carry Return Index 136.96 +.93%
- Emerging Markets Currency Volatility(VXY) 10.29 -.96%
- S&P 500 Implied Correlation 61.41 +1.94%
- ISE Sentiment Index 94.0 -5.05%
- Total Put/Call .82 +2.50%
Credit Investor Angst:
- North American Investment Grade CDS Index 62.29 -1.12%
- America Energy Sector High-Yield CDS Index 1,024.0 -.19%
- European Financial Sector CDS Index 67.33 +4.72%
- Western Europe Sovereign Debt CDS Index 21.76 -.14%
- Asia Pacific Sovereign Debt CDS Index 60.60 -.06%
- Emerging Market CDS Index 317.89 -1.28%
- iBoxx Offshore RMB China Corporates High Yield Index 114.25 +.04%
- 2-Year Swap Spread 27.25 +.75 basis point
- TED Spread 26.75 +.75 basis point
- 3-Month EUR/USD Cross-Currency Basis Swap -22.75 unch.
Economic Gauges:
- 3-Month T-Bill Yield .00% unch.
- Yield Curve 134.0 -1.0 basis point
- China Import Iron Ore Spot $54.81/Metric Tonne +.27%
- Citi US Economic Surprise Index -73.30 -1.2 points
- Citi Eurozone Economic Surprise Index 39.70 -.5 point
- Citi Emerging Markets Economic Surprise Index .7 +1.3 points
- 10-Year TIPS Spread 1.75 -2.0 basis points
Overseas Futures:
- Nikkei Futures: Indicating -45 open in Japan
- DAX Futures: Indicating +25 open in Germany
Portfolio:
- Slightly Higher: On gains in my medical/tech/retail sector longs
- Market Exposure: 50% Net Long
Bloomberg:
- Draghi Rejects Accusation That ECB Is Blackmailing Greece. Mario Draghi pushed back against an
accusation that the European Central Bank is blackmailing Greece
and compounding the pressure on the country. “Let me disagree with you about everything you said,”
Draghi told Portuguese lawmaker Marisa Matias during his regular
hearing at the European Parliament in Brussels. He was
responding to a question about the withdrawal of a waiver that
allowed the ECB to accept the country’s junk-rated debt as
collateral.
- Russia Accuses Ukraine of Truce Breaches as Clashes Persist. Clashes between Ukrainian troops and pro-Russian rebels continued to undermine a cease-fire in the
country’s east as Russia accused the government in Kiev of
violating the truce. The United Nations raised its death toll estimate to at
least 6,072 and said 15,345 people have been wounded in the
conflict that started last April. About 1.2 million people have
registered as displaced within Ukraine and 747,357 have fled
abroad, including 610,558 to Russia, the UN Office for the
Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs said in a report Monday. Skirmishes between government troops and pro-Russian rebels
continue to underscore the tenuous nature of a truce agreement
negotiated last month in the Belarusian capital. While the
cease-fire has checked the worst of the fighting, both sides are
accusing each other of violations that are threatening to return
to conflict to open war.
- U.S.-Russian Relationship `Irrevocably’ Broken: Bremmer. (video)
- Saudis Ready to Take ‘Necessary Measures’ in Yemen If Talks Fail. Saudi Arabia and its Gulf Cooperation
Council partners will take “necessary measures” to restore
stability in Yemen if peace talks fail to resolve the deepening
conflict there, the Saudi foreign minister said. “We hope that this can be done peacefully but if it is not
done peacefully, certainly countries of the region will take the
necessary measures to protect the region from the aggression,”
Saudi Foreign Minister Prince Saud al-Faisal said Monday during
a press conference in Riyadh.
- The Dollar Is Continuing Its Slide. This week doesn't look any better than last week so far. After suffering through one of its worst weeks in quite a while, things
aren't getting any easier for U.S. dollar on Monday. The Dollar Spot
Index is down again today, thanks in part to rallies by the euro and
Swiss franc.
- Europe Stocks Drop After Nearing Record With Seventh Weekly Gain. European stocks declined, after a seventh
weekly gain pushed equities near an all-time high.
The Stoxx Europe 600 Index slid 0.7 percent to 401.24 at
the close of trading, paring earlier losses of as much as 1
percent.
- Fed’s Fischer Says Rate Increase Probably Warranted by End-2015. Federal Reserve Vice Chairman Stanley
Fischer said raising interest rates from near zero “likely will
be warranted before the end of the year” and subsequent
increases probably won’t be uniform or predictable. “A smooth path upward in the federal funds rate will
almost certainly not be realized” as the economy will encounter
shocks such as the surprise plunge in oil prices or future
geopolitical crises, Fischer said Monday in remarks prepared for
delivery to the Economic Club of New York. He said while forward
guidance on rates remains important, its role may diminish.
- These Junk Bond Outflows Show Just How Jumpy Buyers Have Become. The promise of low borrowing costs for
longer just doesn’t pack the punch it used to. Last week should have been fantastic for the $1.3 trillion
U.S. junk-bond market: the Federal Reserve scaled back its
prediction for how quickly it will raise benchmark interest
rates while also expressing confidence in the world’s biggest
economy. That’s almost an ideal world for junk bonds. And yet investors yanked $1.3 billion from mutual funds
that buy the debt last week, and they’ve pulled $2.9 billion
this month, according to data compiled by Wells Fargo & Co.
Dollar-denominated high-yield bonds, while rallying some
immediately after the Fed statement was released Wednesday, have
lost about 1 percent in March
CNBC:
ZeroHedge:
Business Insider:
Reuters:
- IBM(IBM) to share technology with China in strategy shift -CEO. IBM Corp will share technology with Chinese firms and will actively help build China's industry, CEO Virginia Rometty said in Beijing as she
set out a strategy for one of the foreign firms hardest hit by
China's shifting technology policies.
- Mester says Fed eyeing dollar as rate hike approaches -Bloomberg. The
Federal Reserve is looking to the
dollar among other factors as it considers when to raise
interest rates, a move that should be made this year, Cleveland Fed
President Loretta Mester said according to Bloomberg. Mester, who spoke
on Bloomberg TV, repeated that June is still a viable option for the
U.S. central bank to hike rates. She added that the drop in oil prices
is going to be a positive for the economy. Mester spoke in Paris earlier on Monday.
Style Underperformer:
Sector Underperformers:
- 1) Road & Rail -3.51% 2) Biotech -2.36% 3) Semis -.73%
Stocks Falling on Unusual Volume:
- LBIO,
PRTA, KSU, SONS, GTN, VRTX, SNP, TRCO, MON, BIB, ARG, NLNK, GLMD, MRTX,
IBB, BFR, IRS, CUK, ESPR, IHG, DQ, BIIB, BRS, LULU, ITCI, RCPT, SONS,
LBIO and TRCO
Stocks With Unusual Put Option Activity:
- 1) BHI 2) ADM 3) MTW 4) TOL 5) MON
Stocks With Most Negative News Mentions:
- 1) IPGP 2) KSU 3) NVDA 4) APC 5) SONS
Charts:
Style Outperformer:
Sector Outperformers:
- 1) Hospitals +3.08% 2) Gold & Silver +1.29% 3) Tobacco +1.05%
Stocks Rising on Unusual Volume:
- FRSH, HLF, CYBR, WUBA, CMCM, JMEI, NMM, THC and TA
Stocks With Unusual Call Option Activity:
- 1) NRF 2) NLY 3) CZR 4) PFE 5) LLY
Stocks With Most Positive News Mentions:
- 1) DRI 2) GENW 3) EBAY 4) DVAX 5) PKE
Charts:
Weekend Headlines
Bloomberg:
- U.S. Should Consider Arming Ukrainians, Top NATO General Says. The U.S. should consider sending defensive
weapons to Ukraine amid signs that last month’s cease-fire is
crumbling, Air Force General Philip Breedlove said Sunday in
Brussels. “I do not think that any tool of the U.S. or any other
nation’s power should necessarily be off the table,” said
Breedlove, the North Atlantic Treaty Organization’s top military
commander. “Could it be destabilizing? The answer is yes.
Inaction could also be destabilizing.” Rebels are amassing forces in the former Soviet republic’s
eastern Donetsk and Luhansk regions, Ukrainian military
spokesman Andriy Lysenko said in Kiev Sunday. Breedlove’s
comments followed declarations by pro-Russian insurgents that
they are preparing for a new offensive to expand their
territory.
- Greece Faces Decisive Week as Tsipras Is Set to Meet Merkel. Greek Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras is set
to meet German Chancellor Angela Merkel for the second time in
five days on Monday, at the start of a week that may prove
decisive for Greece’s future in the euro area. The meeting in Berlin with the leader of the biggest
contributor to Greece’s stalled 240 billion-euro ($259 billion)
bailout is a precursor to make-or-break decisions Tsipras faces
as his country’s financial predicament becomes ever more
perilous. His government needs to spell out economic measures it
plans to undertake as early as this week to unlock long-withheld
aid payments that will keep the country afloat.
- Draghi Cheerleads for Economy as Greek Risk Looms Over Euro Area. Mario Draghi can gauge this week whether his
optimism in the economy is well-founded. From business confidence in Germany to manufacturing in
France and consumer spending in Italy, a smattering of data from
across the 19-nation euro area will provide a glimpse at the
state of the recovery. The European Central Bank president, who
has become more upbeat on the economy since announcing his
quantitative-easing program two months ago, will get a chance to
present his view on Monday when he addresses the European
Parliament in Brussels.
- No Risk Too Big as Bond Traders Plot Escape From Negative Yields. In the negative-yield vortex that is the
European bond market, investors are discovering just what
lengths they’re willing to go to generate returns. Norway’s $870 billion sovereign wealth fund said this month
that it added Nigeria and lifted its share of lower-rated
company debt to the highest since at least 2006. Allianz SE,
Europe’s biggest insurer, is shifting from German bunds to bulk
up on mortgages. JPMorgan Asset Management is buying
speculative-grade corporate debt to boost returns. With the European Central Bank’s fight against deflation
pushing yields on almost a third of the euro area’s $6.26
trillion of government bonds below zero, even the most risk-averse investors are taking chances on assets and regions that
few would have considered just months ago. That’s exposing more
clients to the inevitable trade-off that comes with the lure of
higher returns: the likelihood of deeper losses.
- Iran Talks Set for Decisive Week as Leaders Say Deal Reachable. Diplomats and leaders seeking an accord on
Iran’s nuclear program said a deal is achievable as they prepare
to enter a potentially decisive week for the talks. “We have not yet reached the finish line, but make no
mistake, we have the opportunity to try to get this right,”
U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry said on Saturday in Lausanne.
A six-day session in the Swiss city broke up a day earlier, and
talks are due to resume in the coming week.
- Topix Charts Evoking Calm Before 2013 Rout as Momentum Whips Up. Takashi Aoki has seen this chart before. The Tokyo-based fund manager is watching momentum
indicators flashing signals Japan’s stock market is overheating,
just as they were two years ago. Then and now, he says, few
investors cared. When the pullback came in May 2013, it was
abrupt: hints that the U.S. Federal Reserve would unwind
stimulus drove the Topix index down 15 percent in 10 days.
- China Internet Company Yielding 18% Shows Default Risks Brewing. Bonds of 11 Chinese companies now yield more
than 15 percent as investors brace for the nation’s second
onshore default amid record maturities in the coming quarter. Companies in Asia’s largest economy need to repay 1.5
trillion yuan ($242 billion) of local-currency notes in the
period to June 30, the most for a quarter in Bloomberg data
going back to 1998. The yield on Cloud Live Technology Group
Co.’s 2017 debt jumped 157 basis points to 17.9 percent since
the Beijing-based Internet company said on March 4 its ability
to meet debt obligations next month face “big uncertainties.”
- China’s Internet Boom Starts to Fade. Just as the Nasdaq Composite Index surges to
the cusp of the record high set during the dot-com-era, the
excitement about China’s Internet boom is fading. Half of the 14 Chinese dot-coms that debuted in the U.S.
last year are now trading below their initial sale prices. Even
Alibaba Group Holding Ltd., one of those still up in price, has
dropped 28 percent from its record high in November. On average,
the 14 Chinese shares are down 3.1 percent this year, compared
with a 6.1 percent advance in the Nasdaq. Investor confidence, so high when Alibaba brought its
record $25 billion initial public offering to market last
September, is being undermined now by a wave of poor earnings at
Chinese technology companies. Those that went public last year
including Weibo Corp., the microblogging service, and mobile
dating app developer Momo Inc. have failed to deliver the
revenue investors were expecting.
- Evergrande Scraps $15 Billion Solar Push as China Property Drops. Evergrande Group, the parent of China’s
most-indebted publicly traded homebuilder, scrapped its 90
billion-yuan ($14.5 billion) plan to branch out into solar
power, stymieing its ambitions to become a clean-energy
developer. After surveying the market, Evergrande, owned by
billionaire Hui Ka Yan, concluded “the current timing is
immature” to enter into solar power, the Guangzhou-based
company said in an e-mailed statement to questions seeking an
update on the plans. No funds have so far been spent on the
solar business, the company added.
- Asian Stocks Advance From Six-Month High on Fed Rate Optimism. Asian stocks rose, with the regional
benchmark index extending a six-month high, as speculation the
Federal Reserve will proceed more slowly with interest-rate
increases spurs a worldwide equity advance.
The MSCI Asia Pacific Index gained 0.4 percent to 148.11 as
of 9:01 a.m. in Tokyo, heading for its highest close since Sept.
8.
- Saudi’s Naimi Optimistic on Oil With Output Close to Record High. Saudi Arabia’s Oil Minister Ali al-Naimi is
“optimistic” about the oil market and the world’s biggest
exporter is pumping about 10 million barrels of crude a day,
close to the record amount produced in 2013. Saudi Arabia is able to meet demand from any customer, al-Naimi said at a conference in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, on Sunday.
While global demand for oil is improving, there isn’t enough
need to raise the nation’s production capacity beyond its
current level of 12.5 million barrels a day, he said. OPEC’s refusal to cut production amid the surge in U.S.
shale output fed a surplus that contributed to a drop of almost
half in prices over the past year. The Organization of Petroleum
Exporting Countries would have lost market share if it had cut
output at the group’s Nov. 27 meeting, al-Naimi said. “Saudi Arabia cut output in 1980s to support prices. I was
responsible for production at Aramco at that time, and I saw how
prices fell, so we lost on output and on prices at the same
time,” al-Naimi said. “We learned from that mistake.” Saudi
Arabian Oil Co. is the state oil company known as Saudi Aramco.
Wall Street Journal:
- NATO Military Chief Philip Breedlove Flags Ukraine Risks. ‘Inaction could be destabilizing,’ says Breedlove. The North Atlantic Treaty Organization’s top military commander said
Sunday that not delivering weapons to Ukraine carries risks and
registered continued concerns about the implementation of the war-torn
country’s cease-fire agreement signed in February.
- Sen. Ted Cruz of Texas to Announce 2016 GOP Presidential Bid. Champion of tea party movement sees advantage to starting early. Sen. Ted Cruz of Texas, a champion of the tea party movement who
hopes to woo the GOP’s most conservative voters, is to announce on
Monday that he is a candidate for his party’s presidential nomination in
2016, Cruz campaign aides say. Mr. Cruz would be the first major
Republican candidate to officially announce a start to his campaign in
what is sure to be a crowded field.
- Strong Dollar Hammers Profits at U.S. Multinationals. Analysts have sharply reduced earnings estimates; smaller, domestically focused firms gain allure. The soaring dollar is crunching profits at giant U.S.
multinationals, prompting Wall Street analysts to make their deepest
cuts to earnings forecasts since the financial crisis and boosting the
appeal of smaller, domestically focused companies. The dollar has
jumped 12% in 2015 against the euro and is up 27% from a year ago. The
WSJ Dollar Index, which measures the dollar against a basket of
currencies, is up 5.3% this year.
- It’s High Time to ‘Audit’ the Federal Reserve. Since 2008 the Fed has run vast, and risky, economic experiments without effective congressional oversight. The calls in Washington to “audit” the Federal Reserve are not for a
narrow, bean-counting review of the institution’s financial statements.
The audit’s goal is more fundamental: to assure that the checks and
balances in a democratic government also apply to central bankers. It
means figuring out how our elected representatives can effectively
oversee unelected monetary “experts.” History shows that these
so-called experts are prone to destructive inflationary and deflationary
blunders, and that the Fed’s actions over...
Fox News:
- UN Envoy warns: Yemen is being pushed 'to the edge of civil war'. (video) The U.N. special envoy for Yemen warned an emergency meeting of the
U.N. Security Council on Sunday that events appear to be leading the
country "to the edge of civil war" and urged all parties to step back
from the brink and resolve the conflict peacefully. Jamal Benomar stressed repeatedly in a video briefing from Qatar that "peaceful dialogue is the only option we have."
Zero Hedge:
- The Farce That Is The "Market" In One Chart. This is what happened to the world's most valuable company(AAPL) in the last
minutes of trading, when a few million shares in the last 10 minutes,
and a volume slam in the last few seconds, sent the stock from just shy
of $128 where it had been trading most of the day, to just over $125. A nearly $10 billion move in market cap in seconds.... on nothing.
Business Insider:
- Iran's leader says ‘Of course, yes, death to America’ amid tense nuclear talks. Iran’s Supreme leader Ali Khamenei called for “Death to America” on Saturday, a day
after President Barack Obama appealed to Iran to seize a “historic
opportunity” for a nuclear deal and a better future, and as US Secretary
of State John Kerry claimed substantial progress toward an accord. Khamenei told a crowd in Tehran that Iran would not capitulate
to Western demands. When the crowd started shouting, “Death to
America,” the ayatollah responded: “Of course yes, death to America,
because America is the original source of this pressure.
Reuters:
- Abe-Kuroda honeymoon soured by fiscal friction. A
rift is emerging between Prime Minister Shinzo Abe and his hand-picked
central bank boss on how to fix Japan's tattered finances, which could
blunt the impact of the "Abenomics" stimulus policies they have worked
together to prosecute. Two years into Bank of Japan Governor Haruhiko
Kuroda's tenure, the cracks are becoming hard to conceal and could
affect the timing of any further monetary easing and an eventual end to
the massive money-printing program he set in train.
Financial Times:
- Greece’s leader warns Merkel of ‘impossible’ debt payments. Alexis
Tsipras, the Greek prime minister, has warned Angela Merkel that it
will be “impossible” for Athens to service debt obligations due in the
coming weeks if the EU fails to distribute any short-term financial
assistance to the country. The warning, contained in a letter sent by Mr Tsipras to the
German chancellor and obtained by the Financial Times, comes as
concerns mount that Athens will struggle to make pension and wage
payments at the end of this month and could run out of cash before the
end of April.
Economic Daily News:
- Suppliers Say Apple(AAPL) Watch Monthly Shipments Target Halved.
Apple halved Apple Watch shipment target to 1.25m-1.5m a month because
of suppliers' relatively low yield rates of assembling and display
panels, citing people in the supply chain.
IRNA:
- Iran Is Not Given to Concessions, Negotiator Araghchi
Tells IRNA. Iran is not to give away any concessions in talks with the
5+1, senior nuclear negotiator Abbas Araghchi cited as saying by the country's official Islamic Republic News Agency.
Night Trading
- Asian indices are unch. to +.75% on average.
- Asia Ex-Japan Investment Grade CDS Index 1113.0 -3.0 basis points.
- Asia Pacific Sovereign CDS Index 60.5 -3.5 basis points.
- NASDAQ 100 futures +.13%.
Morning Preview Links
Earnings of Note
Company/Estimate
Economic Releases
8:30 am EST
- The Chicago Fed National Activity Index for February is estimated to fall to .1 versus .13 in January.
10:00 am EST
- Existing Home Sales for February are estimated to rise to 4.92M versus 4.82M in January.
Upcoming Splits
Other Potential Market Movers
- The Fed's Fisher speaking, Fed's Williams speaking, Fed's Mester speaking and the HSBC China PMI data could
also impact trading today.
BOTTOM LINE: Asian indices are mostly higher, boosted by real estate and industrial
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 week.