Monday, August 24, 2015

Monday Watch

Today's Headlines 
Bloomberg:
  • China Stocks Erase 2015 Gain as State Support Fails to Stop Rout. China’s stocks plunged, with the benchmark index erasing its gains for the year, as government support measures failed to allay investor concerns that a slowdown in the world’s second-largest economy is deepening. The Shanghai Composite Index sank 8 percent to 3,226.14 at 10:50 a.m. local time, dropping below the key 3,500 level that previously spurred state buying. The Hang Seng China Enterprises Index lost 5.3 percent. Taiwan’s Taiex index slid as much as 7.5 percent in its biggest decline since 1990. Worsening economic data and signs of capital outflows are undermining unprecedented government attempts to shore up the country’s $6 trillion stock market. While China said over the weekend it will allow pension funds to buy shares for the first time, a speculated cut in bank reserve ratios failed to materialize. “This is a real disaster and it seems nothing can stop it,” Chen Gang, Shanghai-based chief investment officer at Heqitongyi Asset Management Co. “If we don’t cut holdings ourselves, the fund faces risk of forced closure. Many newly started private funds suffered that recently. I hope we can survive.” More than 650 stocks fell by the daily 10 percent limit on the Shanghai Composite, including China Shenhua Energy Co. and China Shipbuilding Industry Co . The gauge has tumbled 37 percent from its June 12 peak to wipe out more than $4 trillion of value.
  • China Traders Say Stock Intervention Misguided Amid Slowdown. As the state-directed rally in Chinese stocks unravels, traders say the slowing economy has left the government fighting a losing battle. The Shanghai Composite Index plunged 12 percent last week, erasing all bar one point of the rebound from July’s $4 trillion selloff. For CMB International Securities Ltd. and KGI Securities Co., the gap between the growth outlook and China’s stock valuations, which are the highest among the world’s biggest markets, means further declines are inevitable. While the benchmark stock gauge still traded 57 percent above the levels of a year earlier through Friday, data from industrial output to exports and retail sales depict a deepening slowdown. China’s first major growth indicator for August showed the manufacturing sector is at the weakest since the global financial crisis. The government is “trying to defy market forces at overvalued levels,” said Daniel So, a strategist at CMB International Securities in Hong Kong. Policy makers should “focus on helping the real economy instead of the stock market,” he said.
  • Dwindling reserves force Southeast Asia to escalate currency war. Southeast Asia's dwindling foreign-exchange holdings are exacerbating the risk of a currency war as policy makers have little choice but to allow weaker exchange rates. Malaysian reserves have fallen 19 per cent this year to $US94.5 billion, reducing the central bank's ability to stem a 16 per cent drop in the ringgit. Indonesia's stockpile, which shrunk 6.9 per cent in the five months through July, may come under greater pressure after Bank Indonesia said Friday that it would seek to prevent the rupiah, which is down 11 per cent in 2015, from "overshooting." Regional currencies are retreating across the board as sliding prices for Southeast Asia's commodity exports coincide with a yuan devaluation and the prospect of higher U.S. interest rates.
  • Could China's Yuan Devaluation Spark a New Financial Crisis? Asia’s biggest economy is slowing, the Federal Reserve is about to kick off an interest rate tightening cycle, and China has just devalued its currency. That chain of events back in 1994 eventually touched off a round of competitive currency devaluations that helped trigger the Asian financial crisis, featuring bank and corporate failures and recessions across much of the region
  • North Korean Submarines Leave Ports as Talks With South Restart. More than two thirds of North Korea’s submarines have left their ports as Kim Jong Un’s top military aide resumes talks with South Korea over tensions across their heavily fortified border. South Korea is unable to track 70 percent of North Korean submarines and has put its troops on high alert, a military official in Seoul said Sunday by phone. The official declined to say how many submarines that meant. A 2014 Defense Ministry white paper estimates North Korea operates 70 in total. The North has doubled its artillery forces along the border with the South since Friday, said the official, who spoke on condition of anonymity because of the nature of the information.
  • Mideast Stocks Sink as Oil at 2009-Low Sparks Growth Concern. Dubai led a retreat in Middle Eastern stocks that drove Saudi Arabia’s index into a bear market, extending last week’s global selloff, as crude’s decline to a six-year low reverberated through a region dependent on oil and gas exports. The DFM General Index lost as much as 7.5 percent, the most this year. Saudi Arabia’s Tadawul All Share Index tumbled 6.9 percent, taking its decline since 2015’s peak in April to 24 percent. Qatar’s QE Index fell 5.3 percent, while Israel’s TA-25 Index lost 4.1 percent. Egypt’s EGX 30 Index slid the most since November 2012. Gauges in Abu Dhabi and Oman declined more than 10 percent since a recent peak, the threshold for a market correction. Given Saudi Arabia’s stature as “a bellwether for the region, we’ll probably see more declines,” following Tadawul’s slump into a bear market, said Tariq Qaqish, who oversees $150 million as the head of asset management at Al Mal Capital PSC in Dubai. “Saudi Arabia is going to have to cut its spending, especially if oil remains at these levels. Otherwise it’s going to impact growth of the Middle East’s biggest economy.” The Bloomberg GCC 200 Index, which tracks 200 stocks in the GCC, sank the most since October 2008. Abu Dhabi’s ADX General Index declined 5 percent, taking losses since a peak in July to 13 percent. Muscat’s MSM30 Index lost 2.9 percent, down 12 percent from a high in February. The bear market in Saudi Arabian equities marks the second in less than a year. Fitch Ratings on Saturday cut the outlook on the nation’s AA debt rating to negative from stable, indicating its next decision may be to lower its assessment.  
  • Taiwan Stocks Sink Most Since 1990 as China Equity Rout Spreads. Taiwan stocks plunged the most in 25 years, sending the benchmark index to the lowest level since 2012 amid concern that a slowdown in China will derail the island’s economic growth. The Taiex dropped as much as 7.5 percent to 7,203.07 at 10:32 a.m. in Taipei. More than 830 stocks fell, while just 4 rose. Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co. sank 5.4 percent.  
  • Asian Stocks Head for Two-Year Low as Global Equity Rout Deepens. Asian stocks extended declines as a global rout deepened, pushing a measure of equities around the region toward a two-year low. The MSCI Asia Pacific Index retreated 2.8 percent to 127.83 as of 10:46 a.m. in Tokyo, heading for the lowest close since June 2013, as stock gauges from Sydney to Hong Kong tumbled. Equities worldwide have lost more than $5 trillion in value since China’s shock currency devaluation on Aug. 11, with U.S. shares succumbing to the selloff at the end of last week. “Things are probably going to get worse before they get better,” Nader Naeimi, Sydney-based head of dynamic asset allocation at AMP Capital Investors Ltd., which oversees about $118 billion, said by phone.
  • Commodities Slide to Lowest in 16 Years as Oil Extends Collapse. Commodities sank to the lowest level in 16 years as China’s economic slowdown exacerbates gluts of everything from oil to metals. The Bloomberg Commodity Index, which tracks 22 raw materials, lost as much 1.1 percent to 86.8556 points, the lowest intraday level since August 1999. The gauge, which was at 86.8620 points at 10:30 a.m. in Singapore, has dropped for the past four years. Brent crude slid below $45 a barrel Monday for the first time since 2009 after Iran vowed to raise supply at any cost to defend market share.
  • Commodities Are Cheapest Since 2002, But Maybe Not Cheap Enough. Here’s one more way to measure just how bad the commodity meltdown has gotten: compare the asset class to stocks. The Standard & Poor’s GSCI Index of 24 raw materials is now trading near its cheapest since 2002 compared with the S&P 500 Index of U.S. shares. But if you trust history for providing guidance, that’s still not low enough. During the last big shift from commodity bull markets to bear markets, the ratio dropped even lower. After peaking in October 1980 amid supply shortages, producers responded to higher prices by boosting output. As gluts emerged, the ratio tumbled 96 percent to a record low of 0.1 in February 1999. From shortages to gluts -- sound familiar? Now, with a similar supply shift, the ratio between the commodity and equity indexes is at 0.17, down about 75 percent from its 2008 peak. Assuming the S&P 500 continues to trade where it’s at, the GSCI commodity measure would have to fall a further 43 percent in order for the ratio to reach the 1999 low of 0.1. That’s on top of the 42 percent plunge in the past year.
  • Iran to Raise Oil Output ‘at Any Cost’ to Defend Market Share. Iran plans to raise oil production “at any cost” to defend the country’s market share and joins calls for an emergency OPEC meeting to help shore up crude prices. “We will be raising our oil production at any cost and we have no other alternative,” said Oil Minister Bijan Namdar Zanganeh, according to his ministry’s news website Shana. “If Iran’s oil production hike is not done promptly, we will be losing our market share permanently.”
  • Bullish Oil Bets Sink to 5-Year Low as Futures Flirt With $40. It’s pretty lonely being an oil bull these days. Hedge funds reduced their net-long position in West Texas Intermediate crude to a five-year low last week, days before prices fell below $40 for the first time since 2009. Citigroup Inc. said it could get worse, with the U.S. benchmark slumping to $32 on a persisting supply glut. Futures are mired in the longest slide since 1986, weighed down by nearly 100 million-barrel supply glut. A spate of outages and fires has sapped U.S. refiners’ capacity to consume the stockpiles before plants shut for seasonal maintenance. Gasoline demand, which has been averaging the highest since 2007, is poised to decline after the Labor Day holiday in early September. The net-long position in WTI slipped by 6,342 contracts, or 6.4 percent, to 93,406 futures and options in the week ended Aug. 18, U.S. Commodity Futures Trading Commission data show. Shorts fell 2.7 percent while longs plunged by 4.1 percent.  
  • Fortescue Full-Year Earnings Plunge 88% on Iron Ore Collapse. Billionaire Andrew Forrest’s Fortescue Metals Group Ltd. reported full-year profit tumbled a more-than-expected 88 percent after iron ore prices plunged on a global glut and a slowdown in China’s steel industry. Net income was $317 million in year ended June 30, compared with $2.7 billion a year earlier, the world’s fourth-biggest exporter said Monday in a statement. That missed the $417 million average of 12 analysts’ estimates compiled by Bloomberg, sending the stock down the most in nine months in Sydney.
  • BlueScope May Shutter Australian Steelmaking on China, Prices. BlueScope Steel Ltd. warned it may shutter its Australian and New Zealand steelmaking operations after prices plunged amid increased exports from China. The company, which has a century-long history of steelmaking in Australia, said it needs government support to keep operating its two remaining primary plants at Port Kembla and Glenbrook. This is even though it’s targeting more than A$200 million ($145 million) in cost savings as part of a review.
  • Hedge Funds Can’t Exit Crop Markets Fast Enough Amid Big Supply. With excesses building in everything from cotton to wheat, hedge funds can’t seem to get away from crop markets fast enough. Bumper global harvests and slowing demand will push combined inventories of corn, soybeans and wheat to a record, according to U.S. government data. Those bountiful supplies prompted money managers to lower their bets on higher prices for a fifth straight week, U.S. government data show. Trading has become more volatile as prices have dropped. The Bloomberg Agriculture Index of eight farm products has declined 15 percent this year, with the measure’s 60-day volatility last week reaching the highest since 2012. “We’ve seen the volatility in the agricultural space as of late,” said Paul Springmeyer, a Minneapolis-based senior portfolio manager at Private Client Reserve at U.S. Bank, which oversees $127 billion. “Most people are trying to reign in the risk in their portfolio, and one way of doing it is just avoiding the space.” Combined positions across 11 agricultural products fell 21 percent to 183,929 futures and options in the week ended Aug. 18, U.S. Commodity Futures Trading Commission data show. The holdings have dropped 67 percent in five weeks. 
  • The Fed Is Looking at a Very Different Dollar Than Wall Street. (graph) That may spell trouble for investors. By many popular measures, the dollar has traded sideways for the last six months. Then there's the Federal Reserve's measure. The greenback is surging, according to an index the Fed created to track the U.S. currency versus 26 of the country's biggest trading partners. It's risen 1.3 percent beyond a 12-year high reached in March, when the central bank fired the first of a series of warnings that a stronger dollar may hurt growth and lower inflation.
  • Stock Rout Was Inevitable to Leuthold’s Ramsey, And Will Worsen. Doug Ramsey, whose quantitative research into market breadth, valuation and investor sentiment foreshadowed the drubbing in American stocks last week, says the selling will get worse. The chief investment officer of Leuthold Weeden Capital Management LLC predicted Sunday that losses in the Standard & Poor’s 500 Index could reach 20 percent. Last week’s decline left the benchmark index down 7.5 percent from its May record. “It’s going to be pretty deep,” Ramsey said in a telephone interview. “We’re in the camp that this is not yet a big move. It’s scary, and those last two day trends look ugly.” A report by the Minneapolis-based money management firm predicted in early August that the “next big move in stocks should be down” as industries and individual shares peeled away from the 6 1/2-year-old bull market. Should the current plunge worsen, the Federal Reserve would probably postpone raising interest rates, he said. “The Fed didn’t put any bullets back in the revolver when they had the chance,” Ramsey said. “I have to believe that if the correction exceeds 10 percent, we’ll start to hear talk of QE4, and any discussion of the first fed funds rate hike would be tabled.”
  • S&P Bulls Are Betrayed By Their Most Loved Stocks. Why have investors been pulling money from U.S. equities at the fastest rate ever? Maybe it’s because the stocks they love the most are the ones giving them the most heartache. From Apple Inc. to Alcoa Inc. to General Electric Co., the 50 companies in the Standard & Poor’s 500 Index with the highest share volume were down 5.7 percent over the three months through July, five times as much as the broader market. That’s the worst underperformance since 2011 and came right before American stocks staged their biggest selloff in four years, data compiled by Bank of America Corp. and Bloomberg show. While heavily traded shares are usually losers in routs, what’s notable now is that they’ve been falling in a market that hasn’t moved much in 2015 even with last week’s plunge. It was pain below a surface of placidity, with losses concentrated in the companies that individuals pay the most attention to.
Wall Street Journal:
  • Foreign Car Factories Curb Output in China. Makers including GM and VW run Chinese plants at less than full capacity as sales slow. China’s foreign-car factories, once among the world’s busiest, are starting to slack off. New weakness in the world’s largest car market has led companies such as General Motors Co. and Volkswagen AG to run their plants there at less than full capacity for the first time, according to industry data. The global auto makers, which have been some of the biggest beneficiaries of Chinese
Fox News:
  • 3 Americans recount how they subdued Paris train gunman. The three Americans hailed as heroes for tackling a man carrying an AK-47 on a Paris-bound train and stopping the gunman from killing those onboard spoke publicly of the encounter for the first time Sunday at the U.S. Embassy in Paris. U.S. Airman Spencer Stone, 23, National Guardsman Alek Skarlatos, 22, from Roseburg, Ore., and their friend, Anthony Sadler, 23, recounted how they overpowered the gunman, a suspected Islamic militant, as the train sped through Belgium Friday.
MarketWatch.com:
CNBC:
  • El-Erian: We need either better econ news or EM policy intervention. (video) Investors will be in for a rough ride moving forward, as this current selloff is not over yet, said Mohamed El-Erian, chef economic adviser at Allianz. "We haven't seen one of two things that we need. Either we need better economic news to calm concerns about an accelerating global slowdown, or some policy intervention, not from the ECB or the Fed ... but that holds in the emerging world," El-Erian told CNBC on Sunday. 
Zero Hedge:
Business Insider:
New York Times:
  • Investors Race to Escape Risk in Once-Booming Emerging-Market Bonds. The large mutual funds that helped fuel rapid growth in developing countries have begun hastily retreating from those investments, contributing to the recent sharp decline in global markets. In the last week alone, investors pulled $2.5 billion from emerging-market bond funds, the largest withdrawal since January 2014.
Financial Times:
  • Market turmoil leaves tech sector exposed. Investors are wary of the technology sector’s prospects this week after one of the market’s remaining bulwarks fell victim to the widespread equities rout late last week amid growing fears over the Chinese economy. Friday’s tumble deepened a slide that left some of the best-known tech names nursing even bigger losses than the rest of the market, with Apple, Microsoft and Intel each falling nearly 9 per cent during the week.
Telegraph:
Night Trading
  • Asian indices are -5.0% to -2.5% on average.
  • Asia Ex-Japan Investment Grade CDS Index 144.75 +13.0 basis points.
  • Asia Pacific Sovereign CDS Index 81.25 +4.0 basis points.
  • S&P 500 futures -2.34%.
  • NASDAQ 100 futures -3.95%.

Earnings of Note
Company/Estimate 
  • None of note
Economic Releases
8:30 am EST
  • The Chicago Fed National Activity Index for July is estimated to rise to .2 versus .08 in June.
Upcoming Splits
  • None of note
Other Potential Market Movers
  • The Fed's Lockhart speaking and the Eurozone Manufacturing PMI could also impact trading today.
BOTTOM LINE: Asian indices are sharply lower, weighed down by technology and industrial shares in the region. I expect US stocks to open sharply lower and to maintain losses into the afternoon. The Portfolio is 25% net long heading into the week.

Sunday, August 23, 2015

Weekly Outlook

Week Ahead by Bloomberg. 
Wall St. Week Ahead by Reuters.
Weekly Economic Calendar by Briefing.com.

BOTTOM LINE: I expect US stocks to finish the week mixed as China bubble-bursting fears, Asian currency concerns and commodity weakness offset central bank hopes, short-covering and bargain-hunting. My intermediate-term trading indicators are giving neutral signals and the Portfolio is 25% net long heading into the week.

Saturday, August 22, 2015

Today's Headlines

Bloomberg:   
  • Stocks Fall Most in 4 Years as China Dread Sinks Global Markets. Turbulence in financial markets gathered momentum amid intensifying concern over slowing global growth, pushing the Dow Jones Industrial Average into a correction and giving other stock gauges their worse losses since 2011. More than $3.3 trillion has been erased from the value of global equities after China’s decision to devalue its currency spurred a wave of selling across emerging markets. The worries over slower economic growth come as a strong dollar and plunge in oil prices take a toll on corporate earnings at the same time the Federal Reserve is contemplating the first boost to interest rates since 2006. “For much of this year, the glass was considered half full and now people the last 48 hours are thinking it’s looking more empty,” George Hashbarger, who oversees $224 million as chief executive officer and portfolio manager at Knoxville, Tennessee-based Quintium Advisors LLC, said by phone. “This is more like October than it is buy-the-dip.” Volatility surged as Standard & Poor’s 500 Index capped the worst week in three years while Europe entered a correction and stocks from Hong Kong to Indonesia tumbled into bear markets. Junk bond yields rose to the highest since October 2012 and U.S. Treasuries had the largest weekly gain in five months. Oil sank below $40 a barrel for the first time since 2009 and was set for its longest losing streak since 1986. The S&P 500 dropped 3.2 percent, the most since November 2011, to below 2,000. The index is down more than 7 percent from a record after sinking below a trading range that has supported it for most of the year. The Dow Jones Industrial Average fell more than 500 points, as is down 10 percent from its record high in May.  
  • World’s Richest People Lose $182 Billion as Market Rout Deepens. The world’s 400 richest people lost $182 billion this week from their collective fortunes as weak manufacturing data from China and a rout in commodities sent global markets plunging. The weekly drop for the Bloomberg Billionaires Index, a group that includes Warren Buffett and Glencore Plc’s Ivan Glasenberg, was the biggest since tracking of the expanded list began in September 2014. The combined net worth of the index members fell by $76 billion on Friday alone, when the Standard & Poor’s 500 Index of U.S. stocks ended its worst week since 2011.
  • JPMorgan Warns This Emerging-Market Credit Strength May Fizzle. Try figuring this one out: Emerging-market stocks have gotten pummeled over the past few weeks while corporate bonds from the same regions have outperformed many other assets. How does this make sense? It doesn’t really, especially as China shows more signs of slowing, said Scott McKee, head of an emerging-markets corporate-debt group at JPMorgan Chase & Co.’s asset-management unit. “There’s a long list of fundamental issues that we could go through that suggest that emerging markets should be doing worse than other fixed-income sectors at the moment,” McKee said in a telephone call this week. “I don’t really understand why it’s been as resilient as it has been.” A growing number of investors seem to agree with McKee, who recommends cutting holdings of the debt below index weightings. Almost $2.5 billion was pulled from emerging-market debt funds over the past week, the biggest withdrawal since the beginning of 2014, according to EPFR Global data. Asia credit funds saw their largest outflow on record, according to Wells Fargo & Co. data. 
  • Koreas Locked in Talks as Kim’s Deadline for Attack Passes. North Korea and South Korea will continue talks Sunday aimed at defusing tensions across their heavily fortified border, after Kim Jong Un’s threat to launch an attack passed without incident. The talks adjourned at 4:15 a.m. and will resume at 3 p.m. local time, South Korean presidential spokesman Min Kyung-wook said, according to the Associated Press. Kim’s top military aide Hwang Pyong So and South Korean President Park Geun Hye’s chief security adviser Kim Kwan Jin met at the border village of Panmunjom.
  • Largest Korea ETF Sees Worst Money Outflow on Record Amid Crisis. The iShares MSCI South Korea Capped ETF, the largest exchange-traded fund tracking the country’s stocks, had the biggest weekly withdrawal since inception in 2000 amid investor concern over a revival of tensions on the Korean peninsula and an escalating selloff in emerging markets. Traders pulled $195.4 million from the ETF, whose top holdings include Samsung Electronics Co. and Hyundai Motor Co., in the five trading days ended Aug. 21, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. The fund, which has $3.1 billion in assets, fell 7.2 percent in New York to an almost four-year low of $45.67 during the week and is down 27 percent from a high in April.
  • Treasuries Log $67 Billion Weekly Rally as Fed Countdown Stalls. While Federal Reserve policy makers have suggested an interest-rate increase is in the cards this year, their plans are facing renewed scrutiny from bond markets. As stocks tumbled this week and oil fell below $40 a barrel for the first time since 2009, Treasuries investors saw the value of their holdings swell by $67 billion, the most since early July, according to Bank of America Merrill Lynch bond indexes. The appeal of government debt grew as declining commodity prices and tumbling inflation expectations suggest global demand is weakening.
  • Kazakh Premier Sees Oil-Nation Currency Pegs Axed as Crude Falls. Currency pegs in crude-producing nations are set to topple as the world enters a “new era” of low oil prices, according to the prime minister of Kazakhstan, which rattled markets this week with its surprise decision to abandon control of the exchange rate. “At the end of the day, most of the oil-producing countries will go into the free floating regime,” including Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates, Karim Massimov said in an interview on Saturday in the capital, Astana. “I do not think that for the next three to five, maybe seven years, the price for commodities will come back to the level that it used to be at in 2014.” Central Asia’s biggest oil producer cut the tenge loose on Thursday, triggering a 22 percent slide to a record low versus the dollar. The move followed China’s shock devaluation of the yuan the week before, which drove down oil prices on concern global growth will stutter and raised the prospect other nations with managed exchange rates will allow their currencies to weaken to stay competitive.
  • Brazil Stocks Enter Bear Market Amid Developing-Nation Selloff. The rout in developing nations sent Brazilian stocks into a bear market as Latin America’s largest economy heads toward the worst recession in 25 years. The real led world losses. The stock gauge extended its slump since its May peak to 21 percent after the weakest Chinese manufacturing data since the global financial crisis accelerated a selloff in riskier assets. State-owned oil producer Petroleo Brasileiro SA fell for a seventh day after crude sank below $40 a barrel. The real posted the biggest decline among 16 global major currencies. “The Brazilian market is on the verge of a nervous breakdown,” Alvaro Bandeira, an economist at Banco Modal, said from Rio de Janeiro. “There’s just awful news coming from all fronts. It’s really discouraging.”
  • Brazil Has Yet Another Big Mess on Its Hands After State Default. Engulfed by political and economic crises, Brazil can ill afford to be beset by more problems. Yet that’s exactly what is happening after its southernmost state of Rio Grande do Sul defaulted on a 280 million real ($80.9 million) payment to the federal government this month -- the first since the nation’s municipal-debt meltdown in 1997. The state, proportionally the most-indebted in Brazil, is in such distress that it didn’t pay salaries to public workers in July.
  • Taiwan’s Stocks Enter Bear Market Amid China Economic Concerns. Taiwan’s stocks entered a bear market amid concern China’s economic slowdown and currency devaluation will curb demand for the island’s technology products. The Taiex index fell 3 percent to 7,786.92 at the close, the lowest level since June 2013. The benchmark gauge has tumbled more than 20 percent from a 15-year high on April 27, the threshold for a bear market. Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co., the biggest stock in the Taiex, dropped 4 percent. 
  • Africa Running Out of Options as China to Kazakhstan Devalue. Currency devaluations from Kazakhstan to China are heaping pressure on African central banks to relinquish control of their exchange rates as they run down reserves faster than any other region. From Nigeria to Uganda, African policy makers are burning through their foreign reserves and tightening monetary policy to prop up their currencies. Thursday’s move by Kazakhstan, central Asia’s largest crude exporter, to abandon its currency peg has intensified speculation that authorities in Africa will devalue or halt intervening in their foreign-exchange markets.  
  • Snipers, Vehicle Moves Among Classified Data E-Mailed to Clinton. The e-mail painted a vivid picture of a fast-deteriorating situation in Libya’s bloody civil war, complete with snipers shooting people, armed forces on the move and diplomatic personnel preparing to evacuate. The message, dated April 10, 2011, was forwarded to “H,” for Hillary Clinton, then the secretary of state. It came from one of her closest aides, Huma Abedin, who is now vice chairman of her presidential campaign.
 Wall Street Journal
  • Two U.S. Military Men Praised for Actions on French Train. Members of Air Force and Oregon National Guard subdued a gunman loaded with weapons. Authorities praised two U.S. military members and their friend who tackled and subdued a man armed with guns and a box cutter on a Paris-bound train Friday as it sped through Belgium, breaking up what could have been a deadly terrorist attack. 
CNBC: 
Zero Hedge:
NY Times:
Reuters:
  • Exclusive: Dozens of Clinton emails were classified from the start, U.S. rules suggest. For months, the U.S. State Department has stood behind its former boss Hillary Clinton as she has repeatedly said she did not send or receive classified information on her unsecured, private email account, a practice the government forbids. While the department is now stamping a few dozen of the publicly released emails as "Classified," it stresses this is not evidence of rule-breaking. Those stamps are new, it says, and do not mean the information was classified when Clinton, the Democratic frontrunner in the 2016 presidential election, first sent or received it. But the details included in those "Classified" stamps — which include a string of dates, letters and numbers describing the nature of the classification — appear to undermine this account, a Reuters examination of the emails and the relevant regulations has found.
Financial Times:
Telegraph:
Bild-Zeitung:
  • ESM's Regling Says Greece Won't Get Money Without Reforms. European Stability Mechanism head Klaus Regling says next Greek government needs to bear in mind reforms must be implemented to get help from partners, citing itv.
Focus:
  • German Majority Says Euro Bailout Not in Their Interest. 47% of Germans think government backing for euro-rescue program isn't serving German interests, citing TNS Emnid poll. 43% backing government on euro-rescue action.

Friday, August 21, 2015

Market Week in Review

  • S&P 500 1,970.89 -5.77%*
 photo bbb_zpsv27aijbp.png
The Weekly Wrap by Briefing.com.

*5-Day Change

Weekly Scoreboard*

Indices
  • S&P 500 1,970.89 -5.77%
  • DJIA 16,459.75 -5.82%
  • NASDAQ 4,706.04 -6.78%
  • Russell 2000 1,156.79 -4.61%
  • S&P 500 High Beta 29.59 -7.59%
  • Goldman 50 Most Shorted 120.14 -8.27% 
  • Wilshire 5000 20,585.55 -5.63%
  • Russell 1000 Growth 957.23 -5.72%
  • Russell 1000 Value 952.28 -5.73%
  • S&P 500 Consumer Staples 489.37 -4.81%
  • Solactive US Cyclical 120.72 -5.81%
  • Morgan Stanley Technology 997.15 -7.12%
  • Transports 7,872.06 -5.37%
  • Utilities 597.65 -1.10%
  • Bloomberg European Bank/Financial Services 107.70 -6.65%
  • MSCI Emerging Markets 33.51 -4.82%
  • HFRX Equity Hedge 1,180.02 -1.43%
  • HFRX Equity Market Neutral 1,007.65 -.32%
Sentiment/Internals
  • NYSE Cumulative A/D Line 226,584 -2.64%
  • Bloomberg New Highs-Lows Index -1040 -647
  • Bloomberg Crude Oil % Bulls 24.39 -28.58%
  • CFTC Oil Net Speculative Position 225,843 -8.6%
  • CFTC Oil Total Open Interest 1,676,233 -3.47%
  • Total Put/Call 1.68 +66.34%
  • OEX Put/Call 2.84 +234.12%
  • ISE Sentiment 60.0 -31.0%
  • NYSE Arms 2.89 +151.30%
  • Volatility(VIX) 28.03 +118.47%
  • S&P 500 Implied Correlation 57.94 +4.49%
  • G7 Currency Volatility (VXY) 9.59 +5.38%
  • Emerging Markets Currency Volatility (EM-VXY) 11.40 +6.05%
  • Smart Money Flow Index 17,021.57 +.24%
  • ICI Money Mkt Mutual Fund Assets $2.686 Trillion +.41%
  • ICI US Equity Weekly Net New Cash Flow -$2.294 Billion
  • AAII % Bulls 26.8 -11.9%
  • AAII % Bears 33.3 -7.8%
Futures Spot Prices
  • CRB Index 191.34 -3.35%
  • Crude Oil 40.45 -4.1%
  • Reformulated Gasoline 154.81 -6.42%
  • Natural Gas 2.67 -4.80%
  • Heating Oil 146.24 -5.74%
  • Gold 1,159.20 +4.15%
  • Bloomberg Base Metals Index 145.17 -2.20%
  • Copper 230.35 -1.69%
  • US No. 1 Heavy Melt Scrap Steel 210.67 USD/Ton -9.0%
  • China Iron Ore Spot 56.10 USD/Ton -1.13%
  • Lumber 245.40 -3.39%
  • UBS-Bloomberg Agriculture 1,019.45 -2.15%
Economy
  • ECRI Weekly Leading Economic Index Growth Rate -.4% -60.0 basis points
  • Philly Fed ADS Real-Time Business Conditions Index .1524 -6.39%
  • S&P 500 Blended Forward 12 Months Mean EPS Estimate 126.25 +.05%
  • Citi US Economic Surprise Index -18.2 -13.8 points
  • Citi Eurozone Economic Surprise Index 16.9 +8.1 points
  • Citi Emerging Markets Economic Surprise Index -8.6 -2.3 points
  • Fed Fund Futures imply 66.0% chance of no change, 34.0% chance of 25 basis point hike on 9/17
  • # of Months to 1st Fed Rate Hike(Morgan Stanley) 4.02 +9.24%
  • US Dollar Index 94.99 -1.67%
  • Euro/Yen Carry Return Index 144.93 +.48%
  • Yield Curve 142.0 -5.0 basis points
  • 10-Year US Treasury Yield 2.04% -16.0 basis points
  • Federal Reserve's Balance Sheet $4.449 Trillion -.04%
  • U.S. Sovereign Debt Credit Default Swap 16.0 -3.03%
  • Illinois Municipal Debt Credit Default Swap 248.0 +8.95%
  • Western Europe Sovereign Debt Credit Default Swap Index 23.66 +5.74%
  • Asia Pacific Sovereign Debt Credit Default Swap Index 81.52 +16.17%
  • Emerging Markets Sovereign Debt CDS Index 329.56 +7.12%
  • Israel Sovereign Debt Credit Default Swap 72.50 +8.39%
  • Iraq Sovereign Debt Credit Default Swap 746.44 +8.98%
  • Russia Sovereign Debt Credit Default Swap 419.24 +11.4%
  • iBoxx Offshore RMB China Corporates High Yield Index 118.51 -.73%
  • 10-Year TIPS Spread 1.54% -9.0 basis points
  • TED Spread 31.25 +8.25 basis points
  • 2-Year Swap Spread 22.75 -1.5 basis points
  • 3-Month EUR/USD Cross-Currency Basis Swap -18.0 +2.75 basis points
  • N. America Investment Grade Credit Default Swap Index 82.12 +6.92%
  • America Energy Sector High-Yield Credit Default Swap Index 1,871.0 -1.56%
  • European Financial Sector Credit Default Swap Index 83.82 +9.74%
  • Emerging Markets Credit Default Swap Index 354.99 +3.44%
  • CMBS AAA Super Senior 10-Year Treasury Spread  to Swaps 101.0 -2.0 basis points
  • M1 Money Supply $3.048 Trillion -2.17%
  • Commercial Paper Outstanding 1,057.0 -.20%
  • 4-Week Moving Average of Jobless Claims 271,500 +5,250
  • Continuing Claims Unemployment Rate 1.7% unch.
  • Average 30-Year Mortgage Rate 3.93% -1 basis point
  • Weekly Mortgage Applications 411.70 +3.57%
  • Bloomberg Consumer Comfort 41.1 +.4 point
  • Weekly Retail Sales +1.70% -20.0 basis points
  • Nationwide Gas $2.63/gallon -.02/gallon
  • Baltic Dry Index 1,014.0 -3.89%
  • China (Export) Containerized Freight Index 844.42 +3.03%
  • Oil Tanker Rate(Arabian Gulf to U.S. Gulf Coast) 25.0 unch.
  • Rail Freight Carloads 276,443 +.74%
Best Performing Style
  • Small-Cap Value -4.1%
Worst Performing Style
  • Large-Cap Growth -5.7%
Leading Sectors
  • Gold & Silver +5.1%
  • Coal +4.8%
  • Homebuilders +.5%
  • Utilities -.7%
  • Telecom -1.5%
Lagging Sectors
  • Semis -7.7% 
  • Social Media -8.1%
  • Energy -8.1%
  • Gaming -8.6%
  • Alternative Energy -10.0%
Weekly High-Volume Stock Gainers (11)
  • OMER, ZU, CTRN, KMPH, NPBC, LZB, TECD, IQNT, SLH, DAR and CENTA
Weekly High-Volume Stock Losers (12)
  • DV, URBN, PRTY, HAIN, BPMC, AEO, AZPN, EL, TFM, AAVL, SSI and LOCO
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