Friday, August 07, 2015

Morning Market Internals

NYSE Composite Index:

Friday Watch

Evening Headlines 
Bloomberg:
  • China’s Stock Crash Is Spurring a Shakeout in Shadow Banks. China has been struggling to tame its shadow banks for years. Now, a stock market crash has hamstrung some of the fastest growing ones in a matter of weeks. Loans from sources such as online lenders for equity purchases have plunged by at least 700 billion yuan ($113 billion), a drop of 61 percent from this year’s peak, after authorities banned them from funding stock buying in July, according to a Bloomberg survey conducted last month. Peer-to-peer Internet lending for the purchases had more than tripled to 8 billion yuan in the second quarter, data from research firm Yingcan Group show.   
  • Great Wall Motor Sales Fall in July on H6 SUV Slump. Great Wall Motor Co., China’s largest SUV maker, fell in Hong Kong trading after sales declined for the first time in 10 months, raising concern that demand is faltering for local automakers in the world’s largest market. The shares fell 3.6 percent to HK$24.10 at 9:46 a.m., headed for the lowest close since December 2012. Deliveries fell 1.7 percent to 47,445 units in July, even after the company offered discounts, according to a company filing to the Hong Kong stock exchange on Thursday. Sales for its most popular model, the H6 sport utility vehicle, dropped 13 percent.
  • The Irresistible China Trade That Keeps Burning Investors. It looked like a no-brainer for buyers of Chinese shares in Hong Kong. Valuations in April were 25 percent cheaper than in the mainland, monetary stimulus was just getting started and money was pouring in through Hong Kong’s new exchange link with Shanghai. Bulls snapped up funds tracking so-called H shares at a record pace, while analysts at some of the world’s biggest banks predicted big gains to come. The only problem, though, is that the trade hasn’t worked.  
  • Bank of Japan Leaves Monetary Policy Unchanged as Forecast. The Bank of Japan refrained from expanding monetary stimulus as Governor Haruhiko Kuroda bets the world’s third-biggest economy will emerge from a recent soft patch and inflation will pick up. The central bank will keep increasing the monetary base at an annual pace of 80 trillion yen ($640 billion), it said in a statement on Friday in Tokyo. The result was expected by all 37 economists surveyed by Bloomberg.
  • Australia Central Bank Signals Unemployment Has Peaked, Pushes Back Growth Upswing. Australia’s central bank indicated the jobless rate has peaked as signs mount the economy is improving, even as it pushed back forecasts of a growth upswing by a year. “Data on the domestic economy over the past few months have generally been positive,” the Reserve Bank of Australia said Friday in Sydney. “The unemployment rate is now forecast to remain little changed over the next 18 months or so from a level that is a bit lower than had earlier been forecast, before declining over 2017 as demand growth picks up.”
  • Asian Stocks Follow U.S. Shares Lower Before U.S. Jobs, BOJ. Asian stocks fell, following a slide in U.S. equities, ahead of a U.S. jobs report that may cement prospects that the Federal Reserve will raise interest rates as soon as next month. The MSCI Asia Pacific Index declined 0.2 percent to 140.55 as of 9:01 a.m. in Tokyo.
  • The Shale Patch Faces Reality. Shale producers lack the majors’ ability to remain afloat in an oil glut. The runup was short-lived. Fears over weak demand from China, along with rising production in the U.S., Saudi Arabia, and Iraq pushed prices back below $50. In July, even as the summer driving season boosted U.S. gasoline demand close to record highs, oil posted its biggest monthly drop since October 2008. “The much feared double-dip is here,” Francisco Blanch, head of global commodity research at Bank of America, wrote in a July 28 report.
  • Carnage in Junk-Rated Energy Bonds Returns With Plunging Oil. Bond investors that lent to the riskiest energy companies have seen $3.5 billion of market value evaporate this week as oil trades at a four-month low. SandRidge Energy Inc.’s $1.25 billion of 8.75 percent securities maturing in 2020 issued in May have fallen to 72 cents on the dollar, according to Trace, the bond-price reporting system of the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority. Prices on $1.3 billion of notes sold in 2010 by Chesapeake Energy Corp., an energy producer that halted its stock dividend last month, have fallen to 82 cents on the dollar to yield 11.4 percent. Up until June, the riskiest energy companies had tapped investors for a record $26.9 billion of debt this year
  • Bank of America said planning sale of $1.2 billion in home loans. Bank of America Corp. is offering $1.2 billion of mostly delinquent home loans, extending a series of sales by lenders seeking to pare holdings and meet demand by investment firms for soured mortgages. The company is selling five pools consisting of nonperforming debt, loans that have been modified and resumed payment, and some that haven't defaulted, according to a person with knowledge of the matter. Four of the pools are being serviced Bank of America and one is managed by Ocwen Financial Corp., said the person, who asked not to be identified because the planned sale is private.
  • Biogen(BIIB) Drops on Doctor Worry Over Drug Class Including TecfideraBiogen Inc. shares sank after doctors in a top medical journal said more instances of brain infections may occur in people taking a type of medication that includes the drugmaker’s top-selling multiple sclerosis treatment. The shares fell 5.6 percent to $316.60 at the close in New York following the publication of the letter in the New England Journal of Medicine, in which doctors in the Netherlands called for “further studies concerning safety monitoring and new methods for identification of patients at risk” for people taking dimethyl fumarate. More cases may arise as more people use dimethyl fumarate, the doctors said. Biogen makes a formulation of dimethyl fumarate marketed as Tecfidera.
Wall Street Journal:
  • Iran Deal Splits Democrats Along Regional Lines. New York Sen. Charles Schumer, likely the next Senate Democratic leader, says he must oppose deal. President Barack Obama’s pursuit of congressional support for his landmark nuclear agreement with Iran has hit some turbulence in New York. At least four House Democrats from the state have already rejected the agreement reached last month between Iran and six global powers, which imposes strict limits on 
  • Despite Glut of Oil, Energy Firms Struggle to Turn Off the Tap. Companies keep finding ways to drill wells faster in an effort to deal with declining crude prices. Despite all their spending cutbacks and idle drilling rigs, American energy producers are finding it hard to turn off the taps that have helped lead to a global glut of oil. Rising crude production was a major theme in the past week as shale drillers reported their second-quarter earnings. Devon Energy Corp. and Whiting Petroleum Corp. said they pulled record amounts of oil...
  • Clinton’s Email Evasions. The FBI has plenty to investigate if it wants to get serious. The FBI is finally looking into Hillary Clinton’s handling of email as Secretary of State, but her campaign says not to worry because it’s not a “criminal referral” and she followed “appropriate practices.” The relevant question is why isn’t it a criminal probe?
  • Trump: A Mismatch for the GOP. Conservatives are more focused than ever on substance and consistency. Of the 10 Republicans in Thursday’s debate, none is harder to explain than Donald Trump. It’s not that he isn’t a serious candidate. It’s that he’s on the wrong stage, with the wrong people, at the wrong time.
Fox News:
CNBC:
  • Russia hacks Pentagon computers: NBC, citing sources. (video) U.S. officials tell NBC News that Russia launched a "sophisticated cyberattack" against the Pentagon's Joint Staff unclassified email system, which has been shut down and taken offline for nearly two weeks. According to the officials, the "sophisticated cyber intrusion" occurred sometime around July 25 and affected some 4,000 military and civilian personnel who work for the Joint Chiefs of Staff.
  • Capital One(COF) nears deal to acquire GE healthcare unit. Credit card lender Capital One is in exclusive talks to acquire General Electric's U.S. healthcare finance unit, in a deal likely to top $10 billion, according to people familiar with the matter. Capital One has outbid other potential buyers in an auction for the unit, the people said on Thursday, cautioning that the negotiations are ongoing and that a deal has not yet been finalized.
Zero Hedge:
Reuters:
  • Top Brazil hedge fund Verde says country 'flirting with an abyss'. Verde Asset Management, Brazil's largest hedge fund, said the country is flirting with disaster as policy response to growing fiscal disarray and fallout from a political crisis are clouding visibility for investments in Latin America's largest economy. In a monthly letter to investors published late on Thursday, money managers led by Luis Stuhlberger said the list of headwinds facing Brazil is long: a swelling budget deficit, an unstable currency that could tank further, rapidly eroding support for President Dilma Rousseff and policymakers' failure to head off stubborn inflation.
Securities Times:
  • Some China Banks Cut Back on Stock-Pledge Loans. Some banks and brokerages cut the amount of loans that investors could get using stocks as collateral, citing unidentified people from multiple banks and a securities co.
Evening Recommendations 
  • None of note
Night Trading
  • Asian equity indices are -1.0% to +.50% on average.
  • Asia Ex-Japan Investment Grade CDS Index 113.25 +1.25 basis points.
  • Asia Pacific Sovereign CDS Index 64.75 +1.0 basis point.
  • S&P 500 futures +.13%.
  • NASDAQ 100 futures +.19%.

Earnings of Note
Company/Estimate
  • (NILE)/.19
  • (CVC)/.24
  • (EBIX)/.48
  • (GRPN)/.02
  • (HSY)/.75
  • (HMSY)/.13
  • (JD)/-.13
  • (BID)/1.24
  • (WLH)/.31
  • (BRK/B)/2962.61
Economic Releases
8:30 am EST
  • The Change in Non-Farm Payrolls for July is estimated to rise to 225K versus 223K in June.
  • The Unemployment Rate for July is estimated at 5.3% versus 5.3% in June.
  • Average Hourly Earnings for July is estimated to rise +.2% versus unch. in June.
  • The Labor Force Participation Rate is estimated at 62.6% versus 62.6% in June.
3:00 pm EST
  • Consumer Credit for June is estimated to rise to $17.0B versus $16.086B in May.
Upcoming Splits
  • None of note
Other Potential Market Movers
  • The UK Trade Balance report and the Japan Central Bank decision could also impact trading today.
BOTTOM LINE: Asian indices are mostly lower, weighed down by industrial 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.

Thursday, August 06, 2015

Stocks Falling into Final Hour on China Bubble-Bursting Fears, Fed Rate Hike Worries, Rising Emering Markets/US High-Yield Debt Angst, Biotech/Retail Sector Weakness

Broad Equity Market Tone:
  • Advance/Decline Line: Substantially Lower
  • Sector Performance: Most Sectors Declining
  • Volume: Slightly Above Average
  • Market Leading Stocks: Underperforming
Equity Investor Angst:
  • Volatility(VIX) 13.99 +11.83%
  • Euro/Yen Carry Return Index 142.34 +.06%
  • Emerging Markets Currency Volatility(VXY) 9.49 unch.
  • S&P 500 Implied Correlation 56.11 +.23%
  • ISE Sentiment Index 60.0 -35.48%
  • Total Put/Call 1.21 +24.74%
  • NYSE Arms .62 -40.46% 
Credit Investor Angst:
  • North American Investment Grade CDS Index 74.38 +3.22%
  • America Energy Sector High-Yield CDS Index 1,7867.0 -.01%
  • European Financial Sector CDS Index 74.64 +1.66%
  • Western Europe Sovereign Debt CDS Index 22.09 +.02%
  • Asia Pacific Sovereign Debt CDS Index 64.55 +1.28%
  • Emerging Market CDS Index 336.85 +3.91%
  • iBoxx Offshore RMB China Corporates High Yield Index 121.10 +.10%
  • 2-Year Swap Spread 25.5 +.75 basis point
  • TED Spread 24.5 -.5 basis point
  • 3-Month EUR/USD Cross-Currency Basis Swap -19.75 +.5 basis point
Economic Gauges:
  • 3-Month T-Bill Yield .03% -5.0 basis points
  • Yield Curve 153.0 -1.0 basis point
  • China Import Iron Ore Spot $56.40/Metric Tonne -.67%
  • Citi US Economic Surprise Index -7.6 +.6 point
  • Citi Eurozone Economic Surprise Index 21.5 +3.5 points
  • Citi Emerging Markets Economic Surprise Index -5.5 -.5 point
  • 10-Year TIPS Spread 1.67 -3.0 basis points
  • # of Months to 1st Fed Rate Hike(Morgan Stanley) 4.68 -.03
Overseas Futures:
  • Nikkei 225 Futures: Indicating -41 open in Japan 
  • China A50 Futures: Indicating -200 open in China
  • DAX Futures: Indicating -18 open in Germany
Portfolio: 
  • Slightly Lower: On losses in my biotech/retail/medical/tech sector longs 
  • Disclosed Trades: None
  • Market Exposure: 25% Net Long

Today's Headlines

Bloomberg: 
  • China Said to Resume Private Share-Sale Reviews Frozen Amid Rout. Chinese regulators will resume processing applications for private share sales this week, signaling an easing of market curbs imposed during a $3.4 trillion equity rout, according to people with knowledge of the matter. The China Securities Regulatory Commission will review no more than five applications on Friday and a maximum of 10 next week, said the people, who asked not to be identified because the matter is private. Initial public offerings will remain suspended, they said.
  • GM(GM) China Sales Fall for Third Time in Four Months. General Motors Co. deliveries slumped for a third time in the past four months in China amid an industrywide slowdown in the world’s largest auto market. GM and its China joint ventures sold 229,175 vehicles in July, 4 percent fewer than a year earlier, according to a statement on its website Thursday. The decline was mainly due to a dip in sales leading up to the introduction of new models and the phasing out of older Chevrolets, the company said. The Detroit-based carmaker cut its outlook for China’s industrywide growth for this year to a low single-digit range last month, from the 6 percent to 8 percent range it projected earlier. The automaker also said it expects a more volatile market in China as growth moderates and stiffer competition to increase the pressure to cut prices.  
  • Currencies in Freefall Handcuff Bankers From Chile to Colombia. Central bankers in commodity-dependent Andes economies aren’t even considering interest-rate cuts to revive growth, even as prices for oil, copper and other raw materials collapse. That’s because the deepening price slump is also dragging down currencies in Colombia and Chile -- a swoon that’s fanning inflation and tying policy makers’ hands. Fixed-income traders have now ratcheted up cost-of-living expectations for Colombia and Chile after their tenders sank more than 10 percent in the past three months.
  • Greek May Jobless Rate at 25% With Economy Facing Bleak Outlook. Greece’s unemployment rate dropped to a three-year low in May even as the country faced off with international creditors. The jobless rate fell to 25 percent in May from 25.6 percent in April, according to data published on Thursday. While that’s the lowest since June 2012 and less than the 25.5 percent median estimate from five economists in a Bloomberg survey, the figures predate the country’s banking shutdown in June that lead to a collapse in economic confidence.
  • Europe Moves to Cut Risk in $505 Trillion Derivatives Market. Banks and investors in the European Union will have to send trades of some interest-rate swaps to a third party under new rules intended to make financial markets safer. The banks and major investors that hold the derivatives will have to use a third party called a clearinghouse to process their trades, the European Commission, the EU’s executive arm, said in a statement on Thursday.
  • China Stocks Extend $3.4 Trillion Tumble as Turnover Plummets. China’s stocks fell for a fifth time in six days and turnover plummeted as unprecedented government intervention fails to stop a $3.4 trillion rout. The Shanghai Composite Index lost 0.9 percent to 3,661.54 at the close. Telecom and health-care companies led losses. The volume of shares trading on the measure was 51 percent lower than the 30-day average. The Shanghai Composite has fallen 29 percent from its June 12 peak as traders bet valuations were unsustainably high. 
  • Media Rout Sinks Nasdaq as Selloff in Emerging Assets Worsens. A rout in U.S. media stocks sent the Nasdaq 100 Index to its biggest decline in a month, while emerging- market equities and currencies tumbled amid the specter of higher U.S. interest rates. The Nasdaq 100 plunged 1.8 percent at 11:53 a.m. in New York, and the Standard & Poor’s 500 Index lost 0.9 percent. Media stocks from Viacom Inc. to 21st Century Fox Inc. plunged in the biggest two-day selloff since 2008. The MSCI Emerging Markets Index fell 0.8 percent to a two-year low, while a gauge of developing-nation currencies slid to a fresh record. U.S. crude sank below $45 a barrel.
  • European Stocks Fall Most in a Week Led by Commodity Producers. (video) European stocks slid, extending losses as miners and oil shares deepened declines and investors weighed the prospect of a Federal Reserve rate increase. Commodity producers posted the worst performance among industry groups as BHP Billiton Ltd. and Glencore Plc lost 2 percent or more. BP Plc and Tullow Oil Plc fell at least 1.4 percent as oil dropped to its lowest level since March. Among shares moving on earnings, Zurich Insurance Group AG slid 4.6 percent after posting worse-than-estimated profit. The Stoxx Europe 600 Index lost 0.8 percent to 400.7 at the close of trading, the most since July 27.  
  • Heady Days of Mining Boom Over as ‘New Normal’ Reigns, Rio Says. Rio Tinto Group doesn’t see the good old days of booming commodity prices and record profits coming back anytime soon. China’s economic slump and expanding mine output mean “challenging” times for the industry, Rio said in its earnings statement on Thursday. While the company has been insulated by lower costs, it reported a 43 percent drop in first-half profit after iron ore prices collapsed because of a global glut.
  • Dairy Drop Drags Food Prices Down in Longest Run in 16 Years. The biggest drop in dairy prices in almost a year helped drag down global food costs for a ninth month, the longest stretch of declines since 1999. An index of 73 food prices fell 1 percent in July to 164.6, the lowest since September 2009, the United Nations’ Food & Agriculture Organization said in a report Thursday. Dairy product costs slumped 7.2 percent, the most since August 2014, to a six-year low.
  • Explorers In Need of Cash Are Selling Oil Fields as Last Resort. Energy explorers reeling from the rout in oil prices are looking for liquidity in an obvious place: their rocks. Having exhausted other ways to raise cash as a glut of global supply depresses prices, a slew of producers from Anadarko Petroleum Corp. to Comstock Resources Inc. announced more than $2.4 billion in asset sales last month, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. Selling oil and gas fields to pay off lenders and fund new drilling -- often a wildcatter’s option of last resort -- is surging after a six-month lull. 
  • Another Major Pillar of the Bull Market Is Collapsing. A bull market without Apple Inc. is one thing. Removing cable television and movie stocks from the 6 1/2-year rally in U.S. equities is a little harder to imagine. Ignited by a plunge in Walt Disney Co., shares tracked by the 15-company S&P 500 Media Index have tumbled 11 percent in two days, poised for the biggest slump since 2008.
  • Loeb Sees Energy Credit Opportunity, Builds Short Stock Bets. Hedge fund manager Dan Loeb said he’s looking for opportunities in energy-related debt after oil prices resumed their decline. “Energy is presenting some very interesting opportunities in credit right now,” Loeb said Thursday in a conference call discussing results at Third Point Reinsurance Ltd., the reinsurer where he oversees investments. “So we are looking at that.” Loeb said he has mostly steered clear of energy recently, sidestepping a second plunge in oil prices that hurt investors who were “suckered in.” He said in February that money managers raising funds to capitalize on energy distress might be disappointed. The money manager has increased bets that securities will decline as he seeks to cope with market volatility. “Increased short exposure in 2015 has helped the portfolio,” including in June, he said. “We continue to increase this exposure through both hedges and single-name equity positions.” 
  • Credit Risk Is Staging a Comeback. For years, investors poured money into junk-rated corporate debt with impunity. Arguably, bonds were bought indiscriminately, with seemingly little thought about the actual risk of a company defaulting on its debt. Interest rates, after all, were hovering at zero percent, money was plentiful, and there seemed little likelihood that a company would find itself suddenly starved of credit. With corporate default rates forecast to remain stubbornly low, one junk-rated company was pretty much the same as another. That is beginning to change. The collapse of the commodities complex is feeding into the credit markets, as energy companies have played a significant role in bond sales in recent years. You can see the trend in the chart below from Deutsche Bank, which shows spreads of all CCC-rated bonds, in blue, and CCC-rated spreads stripping out all the bonds sold by energy companies, in red.

Zero Hedge:
Reuters:
  • Sinopec Plans to Cut Crude Processing From Oct. Co. plans to cut monthly crude processing volume by 1m tons from Oct., citing a person familiar with the matter. Co. to reduce oil refining as fuel stockpiles rise and growth of diesel demand slows, the report says.
Telegraph:
Xinhua:
  • China Machinery Industry Faces Downward Pressure. Output in China's machine industry rose 5.7% in 1H, citing data released by China Machinery Industry Federation. The growth rate is .6 ppt lower than overall industrial output in 1H, which is rare in recent years.

Bear Radar

Style Underperformer:
  • Small-Cap Growth -2.62%
Sector Underperformers:
  • 1) Biotech -4.01% 2) Semis -2.62% 3) Retail -2.41%
Stocks Falling on Unusual Volume:
  • CORI, SUM, MPW, VIAB, VIA, PHH, GMCR, CSII, DIS, IMS, SCAI, GNRC, PSIX, AMCX, GTN, INOV, MG, FOXA, SUNE, SBH, PGTI, TWX, FOX, ALB, UVE, JACK, MPW, TWX, CHTR, MPLX, CCOI, NRZ, SEMI, YRCW, AEL, LC, SBGI, CLMT, HAR, CARA, NWBO, DWA, STR, STRZA, OZM, TROX, EAT, RYN, LGF, SCTY, HMHC, INVN, PRXL, NXST, XENT, GOGO, GDDY, BKE, XPO, PMT, MUSA, LL, ZUMZ, ACAD, TRCO, HSNI, TSLA, LAMR, TERP, ENS, HABT, GNRC, QLYS, SBH, OPK, FIT, TDC, VIAB, HRTG, MEG, GTN, CSII, TA, ECHO and SSTK
Stocks With Unusual Put Option Activity:
  • 1) VIAB 2) XLV 3) XLP 4) DIS 5) CBS
Stocks With Most Negative News Mentions:
  • 1) GMCR 2) FIT 3) VIAB 4) TSLA 5) PHH
Charts:

Bull Radar

Style Outperformer:
  • Large-Cap Value -.73%
Sector Outperformers:
  • 1) Gold & Silver +4.44% 2) Oil Service +2.09% 3) Steel +.62%
Stocks Rising on Unusual Volume:
  • DERM, USCR, AAOI, DDD, HDP, HLF, NXTM, ENOC, DXCM, ZU, KND, RIG, COUP, SCMP and SSYS
Stocks With Unusual Call Option Activity:
  • 1) VIAB 2) MDRX 3) ZU 4) HLF 5) FOXA
Stocks With Most Positive News Mentions:
  • 1) KBR 2) S 3) CF 4) ABX 5) MRGE
Charts: