Wednesday, August 26, 2015

Morning Market Internals

NYSE Composite Index:

Tuesday, August 25, 2015

Wednesday Watch

Evening Headlines 
Bloomberg: 
  • China’s Stocks Slump as Rate Cut Fails to Stop $5 Trillion Rout. China’s stocks extended the steepest five-day drop since 1996 as an interest-rate cut by the central bank failed to stop a $5 trillion rout. The Shanghai Composite Index sank 3.8 percent to 2,852.21 at 10:42 a.m. local time, rising as much as 1.2 percent earlier. About eight stocks fell more each that rose on the gauge. The fifth interest-rate cut since November was announced hours after the benchmark measure closed with a 7.6 percent drop on Tuesday. Chinese equities have lost at least $5 trillion, or half their value, since mid-June as margin traders closed out bullish bets and concern deepened that valuations are unjustified by the weak economic outlook. The government has halted intervention in the equity market this week as policy makers debate the merits of an unprecedented rescue, according to people familiar with the situation. “The prevailing sentiment is still that investors want to cash out, whatever the government does,” said Ronald Wan, chief executive at Partners Capital International in Hong Kong. “Confidence is already damaged. Doubts over the effectiveness of policies are getting bigger. The market will remain under selling pressure for a while.” The Hang Seng China Enterprises Index dropped 0.7 percent. Hong Kong’s Hang Seng Index fell 1.2 percent as the value of shares traded reached double the 30-day average for this time of day.
  • Volkswagen Auto Sales Slid in July as Emerging Markets Stumble. Volkswagen AG, aiming to become the world’s largest automaker by 2018, said Tuesday that global sales slipped 3.7 percent in July amid turmoil in key markets. Volkswagen delivered 792,100 vehicles last month, bringing the 2015 total to 5.83 million, 1 percent less than the Wolfsburg, Germany-based company sold in the same period a year earlier. “The overall economic situations in China, Russia and Brazil continue to be tense,” Christian Klinger, VW’s sales chief, said in a press release. “In the second half of the year, we expect the patchy development of markets to remain a key factor in the various regions.” In China, Volkswagen’s biggest market, sales for the first seven months of the year declined about 5 percent to 1.99 million vehicles. 
  • Danger Signs That Made Fund Quit 25% of Assets Say Worst to Come. John Lekas’s “sell” triggers helped the bond fund manager dodge some losses amid the worst month this year for distressed debt from emerging markets. They’re now warning of more pain to come. Lekas, who oversees $1.4 billion at Leader Capital Corp. in Portland, Oregon, trimmed about a quarter of his holdings in the past two months based on his modeling’s signals. That included Noble Group Ltd.’s 2020 notes before they fell almost 20 percent. He’s now buying short-term U.S. Treasuries and predicting a deeper fallout in emerging markets. “We sold about 25 percent of our portfolio because things are not working out, it got too risky,” said Lekas. “I would have sold more -- the liquidity in the market has become more problematic.” Lekas’s modeling uses components such as interest rates, market volatility and risk-reward scenarios.
  • GM Moves to Cut Jobs at Brazil Factory Amid Economic Turmoil. General Motors Co. plans to cut 800 jobs in Brazil, after announcing less than a month ago that it will invest another $1.9 billion in the South American nation. The automaker reached an agreement with a union at a plant near Sao Paulo to put the reductions on hold, after a two-week strike. The 800 workers will be on paid leave for five months, with GM and the government each paying half of their wages, company spokesman Nelson Silveria said. They probably will be released after that period because of weak demand, he said.
  • China's Yuan Shock Gives Carry-Trade Crowd Worst Year Since '08. China just gave investors one more reason to shun the most popular trading strategy in the $5.3 trillion-a-day currency market. Carry trades, or borrowing one currency cheaply to invest in a higher-yielding asset elsewhere, were already suffering the biggest losses since 2008 as the rout in emerging markets sent potential purchases tumbling. By cutting interest rates two weeks after its shock devaluation, China effectively crossed the yuan off investors’ shopping lists, too. Add to this a surge in volatility -- which is kryptonite for these transactions because it can wipe out the profit from the interest-rate differential -- and carry traders are finding fewer and fewer ways to make money. JPMorgan Private Bank and the asset-management unit of Bank of China both say the strategy’s best days are behind it.
  • Ringgit Slumps to 17-Year Low on Emerging-Market Jitters, Oil. Malaysia’s ringgit plunged to a 17-year low, leading losses among Asian currencies, on concern about the outlook for emerging markets and lower energy prices. The ringgit depreciated 1.7 percent to 4.2838 a dollar as of 8:47 a.m. in Kuala Lumpur, according to prices from local banks compiled by Bloomberg. It reached 4.2990, the lowest since July 1998, and has weakened more than 18 percent in 2015.
  • Asian Stocks Rise After China Cuts Rates, Reserve Requirements. Asian stocks rose, with Japanese shares rebounding from the biggest two-day plunge since 2011, as investors awaited the opening of mainland Chinese markets following Tuesday’s cut in interest rates. The MSCI Asia Pacific Index advanced 0.7 percent to 125.75 as of 9:07 a.m. in Tokyo, after capping an eighth straight decline Tuesday to enter a bear market.
  • Bank of Montreal CEO Sees Further Loan Losses If Oil Prices Drop. Bank of Montreal, Canada’s fourth-largest lender, will see further loan losses from oil-and-gas firms if energy prices remain low, Chief Executive Officer William Downe said. “If oil prices stay down, we will have provisions for credit loss that we otherwise wouldn’t have,” Downe said Tuesday in a phone interview. “They’re not a good thing, but with respect to potential losses relative to the size of the bank or our total overall portfolio, they remain manageable.”
  • Blame Oil Glut on Investors Who Still Love Drilling Over Profits. Investors sent a surprising message to U.S. shale producers as crude fell almost 20 percent in August: keep calm and drill on. While most oil stocks have fallen sharply this month, the least affected by the slump share one thing in common: they don’t plan to slow down, even though a glut of supply is forcing prices down. Cimarex Energy Co. jumped more than 8 percent in two days after executives said Aug. 5 that their rig count would more than double next year. Pioneer Natural Resources Co. rallied for three days when it disclosed a similar increase.
  • Merger Bubble May Burst as Record Goodwill Piles Up: Real M&A. The biggest threat to U.S. stocks right now may not be China, currencies or commodities prices. It might be American companies’ own merger appetite. Acquirers worldwide have already spent $2.2 trillion on transactions in 2015, putting the year on track for a record. The buying spree has been particularly audacious in the U.S., where acquirers are offering record prices relative to the revenue and profit they’re gaining from the deals.
Wall Street Journal:
  • Stock-Market Tumult Exposes Flaws in Modern Markets. Exchange-traded funds became hard to price as stocks tied to them cratered. Monday’s mayhem exposed significant flaws in the new architecture of Wall Street, where stock-linked funds—as much as shares themselves—now trade en masse on U.S. markets. Many traders reported difficulty buying and selling exchange-traded funds, a popular... 
  • Glut of Chinese Steel Looms Large. China is increasingly using recycled steel, pressuring iron-ore prices and global miners. The world’s biggest producers of iron ore have a problem, and it lies in the steel that has already gone into China’s cars, bridges and skyscrapers.
  • Closing the Planned Parenthood Loophole. Whatever your stance on abortion, it’s clear the laws governing fetal tissue don’t work—and should be fixed. Disturbing videos that show Planned Parenthood personnel casually discussing the sale of fetal organs from abortions have caused widespread outrage. As each new video is released, the calls for Congress to cut Planned Parenthood’s federal funding grow stronger. No matter where you stand in that debate, the videos provide unarguable proof that current laws governing the fetal-tissue trade don’t work. Congress must tighten them.
Fox News:
MarketWatch.com: 
  • Transocean(RIG) seeks to cancel two dividend payments. Transocean Ltd. is seeking to cancel the third and fourth installments of its dollar-denominated dividend this year, which the company had already approved in May. Shares dropped 12% to $10.75 in after-hours trading. Through Tuesday's close, they had fallen 67% in the past 12 months. The offshore driller said in February that it planned four installments of 15 cents each, which represented an 80% reduction from the previous payout rate, citing its "cyclical and capital-intensive industry."
Zero Hedge:
Reuters:
  • Century Aluminum to idle Kentucky smelter due to weak prices. Century Aluminum Co, which is owned by Glencore PLC, said on Tuesday it will idle its Hawesville, Kentucky, smelter, the first aluminum plant to shut in years as sinking prices and increased Chinese exports harm producers. Century said in a statement it would begin curtailing capacity on Oct. 24, blaming weak metal prices caused by low-priced exports from China. It will "completely idle the plant" on Oct. 31, a spokesman said.
  • U.S. slashes forecast for 2015 farm incomes. U.S. farm incomes will drop by more than half from their peak two years ago, according to U.S. Department of Agriculture estimates issued on Tuesday that signal deeper pain for sellers of agricultural equipment and land. The USDA projected farm incomes this year will drop by 36 percent from 2014 to $58.3 billion due to declining crop and livestock prices. The forecast is down 20 percent from the USDA's February estimate of $73.6 billion.
  • BHP Billiton(BHP) expects China's growth to "drift down" in coming years. China's economic growth will cool from the 7 percent forecast for 2015, curbing demand for some commodities as the country completes investments in major construction projects, BHP Billiton chief Andrew Mackenzie said on Tuesday. The mining group's underlying net profit was more than halved in the year to June, part of a succession of bad numbers from a sector feeling the down-draft of plunging prices for iron ore, copper, coal and oil.
  • Brazil real weakens to 3.6 per dollar for 1st time in 12 years. The Brazilian real slid 1.5 percent late on Tuesday and crossed the psychologically important level of 3.6 per dollar for the first time in more than 12 years as traders worried about a growing political crisis in Latin America's largest economy. The Brazilian currency extended losses even as other emerging market currencies steadied following a decision by the Chinese central bank to cut interest rates.
Financial Times:
  • Gloomy reality dawns on Brazil. Roberto Setubal, the head of Brazil’s biggest private bank, sees a long period of gloom for Brazil’s economy as unemployment rises and Congress is roiled by corruption scandals. However, he does not believe Dilma Rousseff, the president, will be impeached.
Telegraph:
  • Chinese alarm over? No, this is merely a pause in an ongoing debt crisis. Six years after the global financial crisis, the world economy still looks as unstable, unbalanced, uncoordinated and ultimately unsustainable as ever. 
China Daily:
  • China Rate Cuts Don't Signal Monetary Policy Shifts: PBOC's Ma. The recent interest rate and reserve requirement ratio cuts don't represent a shift in China's prudent monetary policy, citing Ma Jun, the chief economist with PBOC's research bureau.
Evening Recommendations 
  • None of note
Night Trading
  • Asian equity indices are -.75% to +.25% on average.
  • Asia Ex-Japan Investment Grade CDS Index 138.5 +2.5 basis points.
  • Asia Pacific Sovereign CDS Index 82.5 -4.5 basis points.
  • S&P 500 futures -.07%.
  • NASDAQ 100 futures -.24%.

Earnings of Note
Company/Estimate
  • (ANF)/-.04
  • (BF/B)/.75
  • (CHS)/.22
  • (FRO)/.19
  • (GES)/.15
  • (PVH)/1.29
  • (WSM)/.58
  • (WDAY)/-.06
Economic Releases
8:30 am EST
  • Durable Goods Orders for July are estimated to fall -.4% versus a +3.4% gain in June.
  • Durables Ex Transports for July are estimated to rise +.3% versus a +.8% gain in June.
  • Cap Goods Orders Non-Defense Ex Air for July are estimated to rise +.4% versus a -.1% decline in June.
10:30 am EST
  • Bloomberg consensus estimates call for a weekly crude oil inventory build of +944,440 barrels versus a +2,630,000 barrel gain the prior week. Gasoline supplies are estimated to fall by -611,110 barrels versus a -2,708,000 barrel decline the prior week. Distillate inventories are estimated to rise by +1,343,330 barrels versus a +594,000 barrel gain the prior week. Finally, Refinery Utilization is estimated to fall by -.48% versus a -1.0% decline prior.
Upcoming Splits
  • None of note
Other Potential Market Movers
  • The Fed's Dudley speaking, $35B 5Y T-Note auction, Japan Foreign Buyers data and the weekly MBA Mortgage Applications report could also impact trading today.
BOTTOM LINE: Asian indices are mostly lower, weighed down by financial and commodity 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.

Stocks Surging into Afternoon on Central Bank Hopes, Bargain-Hunting, Commodity Bounce, Biotech/Energy Sector Strength

Broad Equity Market Tone:
  • Advance/Decline Line: Substantially Higher
  • Sector Performance: Most Sectors Rising
  • Volume: Above Average
  • Market Leading Stocks: Undperforming
Equity Investor Angst:
  • Volatility(VIX) 30.98 -23.96%
  • Euro/Yen Carry Return Index 142.97 -.48%
  • Emerging Markets Currency Volatility(VXY) 12.08 -1.87%
  • S&P 500 Implied Correlation 55.01 -.74%
  • ISE Sentiment Index 78.0 +69.57%
  • Total Put/Call 1.27 +1.60%
  • NYSE Arms .96 -47.23% 
Credit Investor Angst:
  • North American Investment Grade CDS Index 85.30 -2.96%
  • America Energy Sector High-Yield CDS Index 1,949.0 +3.76%
  • European Financial Sector CDS Index 84.66 -5.44%
  • Western Europe Sovereign Debt CDS Index 24.64 -.14%
  • Asia Pacific Sovereign Debt CDS Index 81.86 -5.97%
  • Emerging Market CDS Index 374.74 -1.90%
  • iBoxx Offshore RMB China Corporates High Yield Index 117.32 -.69%
  • 2-Year Swap Spread 19.75 -1.5 basis points
  • TED Spread 28.0 -2.25 basis points
  • 3-Month EUR/USD Cross-Currency Basis Swap -19.50 -1.5 basis points
Economic Gauges:
  • 3-Month T-Bill Yield .04% +2.0 basis points
  • Yield Curve 149.0 +4.0 basis points
  • China Import Iron Ore Spot $53.45/Metric Tonne +.32%
  • Citi US Economic Surprise Index -15.3 +3.3 points
  • Citi Eurozone Economic Surprise Index 17.9 +2.3 points
  • Citi Emerging Markets Economic Surprise Index -8.0 +.5 point
  • 10-Year TIPS Spread 1.53 +3.0 basis points
  • # of Months to 1st Fed Rate Hike(Morgan Stanley) 6.55 +2.06
Overseas Futures:
  • Nikkei 225 Futures: Indicating +278 open in Japan 
  • China A50 Futures: Indicating +398 open in China
  • DAX Futures: Indicating -150 open in Germany
Portfolio: 
  • Slightly Lower: On losses in my index hedges and emerging markets shorts
  • Disclosed Trades: None
  • Market Exposure: 25% Net Long

Today's Headlines

Bloomberg:
  • Chinese Stocks Crash Again to Extend Biggest Plunge Since 1996. Chinese shares plummeted to extend the steepest four-day rout since 1996 on concern the government is abandoning market support measures. The Shanghai Composite Index tumbled 7.6 percent to 2,964.97 at the close, sinking below the 3,000 level for the first time in eight months. The gauge has dropped 22 percent in four days since Aug. 19. More than 700 stocks fell by the 10 percent daily limit in Shanghai on Tuesday, including PetroChina Co., the nation’s biggest company by value. Hours after the market closed, the central bank cut interest rates and lowered the amount of cash banks must set aside. Speculation around the government’s intentions has escalated since Aug. 14, after China’s securities regulator signaled authorities will pare back the campaign to prop up share prices as volatility falls. The China Securities Regulatory Commission made no attempt to reassure investors after Monday’s plunge, unlike a month ago when officials issued two statements shortly after an 8.5 percent drop. “It’s panic selling and an issue of confidence,” said Wei Wei, an analyst at Huaxi Securities Co. in Shanghai. “The government won’t step in to rescue the market again as it’s a global sell-off and it’s spreading everywhere now. It’s not going to work this time.” Tuesday’s drop is the seventh decline of more than 6 percent for the benchmark gauge in the past three months. The CSI 300 Index declined 7.1 percent, with gauges of energy, technology and material companies sinking more than 8 percent. PetroChina, long considered a favorite holding of state-linked rescue funds, closed at its lowest level since December. 
  • China Falls Back on Rate-Cut Lever to Stem Stock Market Rout. (video) China fell back on its major levers to stem the biggest stock market rout since 1996 and a deepening slowdown, cutting interest rates for the fifth time since November and lowering the amount of cash banks must set aside. The one-year lending rate will drop by 25 basis points to 4.6 percent effective Wednesday, the Beijing-based People’s Bank of China said on its website Tuesday, while the one-year deposit rate will fall a quarter of a percentage point to 1.75 percent. The required reserve ratio will be lowered by 50 basis points for all banks to cover funding gaps, it said.
  • German Economy Boosted by Exports Shows Risks of China Slowdown. Germany’s economic growth was led by exports last quarter, highlighting the risks to Europe’s powerhouse as a slowdown in China threatens to curb global trade. A breakdown of German gross domestic product showed overseas sales climbed 2.2 percent in the three months through June, according to data on Tuesday from the Federal Statistics Office in Wiesbaden. Private consumption rose 0.2 percent, while capital investment shrank 0.4 percent. The economy expanded 0.4 percent, matching an Aug. 14 estimate.  
  • Russia Trims GDP Forecasts as New Oil Plunge Batters Ruble. Russia lowered its economic forecasts for this year and next year as a renewed plunge in energy prices sank the ruble and sanctions over Ukraine looked set to persist. Gross domestic product in the world’s largest energy exporter will fall 3.3 percent in 2015 before rebounding as much as 2 percent in 2016, Economy Minister Alexei Ulyukayev said Tuesday in Kuala Lumpur, the Interfax news service reported. The ministry had earlier projected a 2.8 percent contraction followed by 2.3 percent growth. Russia’s slump reached a “fragile” bottom last month, Ulyukayev said, predicting an improvement in the economy in the fourth quarter. “I don’t think we’ll go any lower but it’s hard to say when we’ll see significant growth.”
  • Petrobras(PBR) Among Brazil Borrowers Most at Risk From Weaker Real. Petroleo Brasileiro SA, the state-controlled oil producer with $55 billion of overseas bonds, is among the Brazilian companies most at risk of seeing leverage ratios swell as the real posts the world’s biggest currency losses. For Petrobras, the electric utility known as Eletrobras, airline Gol Linhas Aereas Inteligentes SA and mall operator General Shopping Brasil SA, every 10 percent depreciation in the real boosts the companies’ debt-to-earnings ratio by a factor of one, according to Fitch Ratings.
  • Japan Stocks Plunge Again in Wildest Trading Day in Four Years. Japanese stocks plummeted, after seesawing from gains to losses in the wildest trading range in four years. Volume was more than twice the average. The Topix index slid 3.3 percent to 1,432.65 at the close in Tokyo, reversing an intraday rally of 1.9 percent. It has plunged 15 percent since China sparked a global rout on Aug. 11 when it devalued the yuan. The Nikkei 225 Stock Average dropped 4 percent to 17,806.70, the lowest close since Feb. 10.  
  • European Stocks Rebound After Worst Day Since 2008. The worst day for European equities since the financial crisis gave way to the biggest rebound in four years. The Stoxx Europe 600 Index climbed 4.3 percent at 4:32 p.m. in London, extending gains to 4.7 percent after China’s central bank cut interest rates and lowered the amount of cash that banks have to set aside. Today’s rebound is just as broad-based as yesterday’s slump, with almost all Stoxx 600 companies rising, and volume of shares changing hands about double the 30-day average.
  • Jiangxi Copper Says First-Half Profit Drops on Slowing Economy. Jiangxi Copper Co., China’s biggest smelter, reported a 17 percent fall in first-half profit as a slowdown in the world’s biggest buyer of metals curbed demand and sent prices skidding to six-year lows. Net income declined to 1.06 billion yuan ($165 million) from 1.27 billion yuan, Jiangxi Copper said in a statement. Sales fell 19 percent to 75.5 billion yuan under Chinese accounting standards. “Prices of company’s main line of products including copper, gold, silver dropped largely amid weak economy, strong dollar and slowing consumption, putting huge pressure on company’s production and operations,” the world’s fifth-biggest smelter said.
  • BHP Cuts China Steel Forecast as Profit Slumps 52% on Prices. BHP Billiton Ltd. reported full-year profit plunged 52 percent on tumbling commodity prices and cut its long-term forecasts for steel output in China, its largest customer. Underlying profit was $6.4 billion in the year ended June 30 from $13.3 billion a year earlier, the world’s biggest mining company said Tuesday in a statement. BHP will increase its dividend by 2.5 percent to $1.24 a share. The producer’s revision is a response to China’s faltering growth, Ric Spooner, a chief market strategist at CMC Markets Asia Pty, said by phone from Sydney. “At this stage, their views on production are unlikely to lead to changes in existing strategy, because those strategies are well advanced.”
  • Iron ore rout awaits Goa as mines reopen after long gap. Goa’s mines are due to restart in October. Mumbai: Goa is preparing to mine iron ore after a three-year gap just as the commodity plunges anew amid a global surplus. The benchmark price of ore with 62% iron content at China’s Qingdao port fell 5% on Monday and is down about 41% in the past year. Goa’s mines are due to restart in October, even as Goldman Sachs Group Inc. sees a drop of about 30% in global prices over 18 months on excess supplies. 
  • Chemical Makers Signal U.S. Manufacturing to Slow. Slumping chemical index suggests U.S. industrial production will decline further. Chemical industry activity is slowing, which isn't a good sign for the future of U.S. industrial output. One of the big questions surrounding the outlook for the U.S. expansion is how slowing growth abroad and a strong dollar will affect U.S. exports and manufacturing. The Federal Reserve's index of industrial production has slowed this year, rising 1.3 percent for the 12 months ending July, down from a 4.5 percent gain at the start of the year. The Chemical Activity Barometer (CAB), whose indicators include the production, inventory and selling prices of numerous chemicals as well as prices of chemical stocks, rose 1.8 percent in August from a year ago (on a 3-month moving average basis), the slowest pace since late 2012. That's concerning since declines in chemical demand have preceded drops in industrial output in the past, according to Kevin Swift, chief economist for the American Chemistry Council and creator of the index.
  • Bond Traders Bet on More Candy From Fed After Latest Tantrum. Parents of screaming toddlers have a choice: Give in, and set a bad precedent for tomorrow, or place limits and risk a prolonged tantrum. Central bankers face a similar dilemma with markets these days. So far, their response has been largely the former, deferring to traders’ fits by maintaining or even adding to their stimulus, as China did Tuesday. Now, bond traders are betting the Federal Reserve will continue to coddle investors by pushing back the timing of its first interest-rate increase since 2006. Why? Because things look a little shaky right now. Global equity markets lost more than $5 trillion of value in less than two weeks as traders grew increasingly worried about a bigger-than-expected slowdown in China derailing global growth. David Kelly, chief global strategist at JPMorgan Chase & Co.’s JPMorgan Funds unit, said it would be a mistake for the Fed to base its decision on recent market moves. “It’s a lot like raising a 2-year-old: you have to set limits and be consistent,” Kelly said. “It reduces uncertainty” to stick with a steady message and stay on course. Futures traders are pricing in a 26 percent chance the Fed will raise rates from near zero in September, down from 40 percent at the end of July, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. Barclays Plc now sees the Fed making a move in March after previously forecasting September, chief U.S. economist Michael Gapen said in a report Monday. 
  • Toll(TOL) Profit Drops as Luxury Homebuilder Hurt by Lower Prices. Toll Brothers Inc., the largest U.S. luxury-home builder, said fiscal third-quarter earnings fell as lower prices and unit sales caused revenue to decline. Net income for the three months ended July 31 totaled $66.7 million, or 36 cents a share, compared with $97.7 million, or 53 cents, a year earlier, the Horsham, Pennsylvania-based company said in a statement Tuesday. Revenue fell to $1.03 billion from $1.06 billion. 

Wall Street Journal
Fox News:
  • IRS reveals existence of another Lois Lerner email account. (video) The IRS admitted to a federal court there was a second personal email account that Lois Lerner, the official at the heart of the Tea Party targeting scandal, used to conduct agency business. The email account apparently was set up under the name, "Toby Miles."
CNBC:
  • He called the collapse; here's what he's watching. (video) Raoul Pal, Global Macro Investor, gives his outlook for a recession and perspective on today's historic selloff. Stocks were slammed in Monday's session, continuing a brutal three-day stretch that saw the Dow shed more than 1,400 points at breakneck speed. More than $680 billion in market cap evaporated from S&P 500 companies on Monday alone. But even with all three major U.S. averages now firmly in correction territory, one noted market analyst, who has been calling for a sharp selloff, says the bleeding could be far from over. "World growth has slowed somewhat, quiet significantly, and I think U.S. growth has slowed a lot," Raoul Pal of the Global Macro Investor and Real Vision TV told CNBC's "Fast Money" on Monday.
Zero Hedge: 
NY Times:
  • Leon Cooperman Fund Said to Have Lost 11% This Month. Leon Cooperman's fund was said to have lost 11% this month as of Friday, citing unidentified people. Bridgewater Associates told investors on Friday that its Pure Alpha fund was down 4.7% for the month.
Financial Times: 
  • This year is worst for trade since crisis. World trade recorded its largest contraction since the financial crisis in the first half of this year, according to figures that will feed concerns over the global economy and add fuel to a debate over whether globalisation has peaked. The volume of global trade fell 0.5 per cent in the three months to June compared to the first quarter, the Netherlands Bureau for Economic Policy Analysis, keepers of the World Trade Monitor, said on Tuesday. Economists there also revised down their result for the first quarter to a 1.5 per cent contraction, making the first half of 2015 the worst recorded since the 2009 collapse in global trade that followed the crisis.

Bear Radar

Style Underperformer:
  • Small-Cap Value +.93%
Sector Underperformers:
  • 1) Gold & Silver -2.91% 2) Utilities -.61% 3) Road & Rail +44%
Stocks Falling on Unusual Volume:
  • POM, DSW, EXC, SAFM, SYT, ATNI, AEM, MOV, MGEE, SAFT, CP, ULTA, AMWD, FNV, BIS, TLLP, RGLD, LNT, BCPC, ACC, AYA, GLOP and NAVI
Stocks With Unusual Put Option Activity:
  • 1) EWJ 2) KBH 3) EXC 4) UNH 5) EWC
Stocks With Most Negative News Mentions:
  • 1) SUNE 2) SAFM 3) TWX 4) PAGP 5) GLF
Charts:

Bull Radar

Style Outperformer:
  • Large-Cap Growth +2.67%
Sector Outperformers:
  • 1) Biotech +4.32% 2) Internet +3.62% 3) Alt Energy +3.35%
Stocks Rising on Unusual Volume:
  • ACOR, BBY, QUNR, JKS, PTCT, LOCO, CLDX, NFLX, MYGN, FB, WDR, UA, SBUX, AAPL, BAC, OPK, PVH and CCL
Stocks With Unusual Call Option Activity:
  • 1) MDLZ 2) MW 3) XRX 4) CVC 5) ESI
Stocks With Most Positive News Mentions:
  • 1) AEO 2) BBY 3) BAC 4) AMZN 5) JPM
Charts: