Monday, September 07, 2015

Today's Headlines

Bloomberg:    
  • China's Banks Getting Less Strict on Bad Loans, Moody's Says. China’s banks are getting less strict in recognizing bad loans, failing to include some debts that have been overdue for at least 90 days, according to Moody’s Investors Service. The ratings company cited its analysis of the first-half results of 11 listed banks including Industrial & Commercial Bank of China Ltd. and China Construction Bank Corp., in a statement in Hong Kong on Monday. Moody’s argues that the pace of the increase in loans overdue for at least 90 days isn’t being reflected in increases in overall bad-loan numbers in a struggling Chinese economy. The Moody’s assessment highlights investors’ concerns that Chinese lenders’ bad debts may be understated, a factor dragging on their shares. While the industry’s nonperforming loan ratio stood at 1.5 percent as of June 30, Guotai Junan Securities Co. calculated in May that 16 listed lenders’ shares were priced as if their soured credit stood at an average of more than 11 percent.
  • Bearish China ETF Assets Swell as Investors Bet on More Declines. As the chaos in China’s stock market rattles global investors, the asset growth in two new exchange-traded funds that seek to profit from either daily gains or losses in mainland equities show U.S. traders are decidedly bearish. A Direxion Investments ETF structured to make money when stocks fall has boosted its assets more than 60 times to $253 million as of Sept. 3 since it began trading in June. That’s one of the fastest growth rates among almost 200 exchange-traded funds launched in the U.S. this year, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. Direxion’s leveraged bullish fund has expanded assets by a factor of less than three to $55.8 million since it was created in April.  
  • Mobius to Beijing: Quit Fighting the Market and Let Stocks Fall. (graph) How do you get a bottom-up stock picker, a chart watcher and an economist to agree? Try asking them about Chinese equities. Mark Mobius, Tom DeMark and George Magnus -- world-renowned forecasters who view markets through three very different lenses -- are all finding common ground with their predictions that Chinese shares have further to drop. They say government efforts to prop up the $5.1 trillion market are futile, a view that’s gaining traction among analysts after an unprecedented two-month rescue effort failed to spark a sustained rally.
  • Hong Kong Home Prices May Start to Slump in 2016, JPMorgan Says. Hong Kong’s property prices may correct next year despite gains in the second half of 2015, as an economic slowdown in China and Hong Kong starts to weigh on real estate, according to JPMorgan Chase & Co. Residential prices may start to fall by 5 percent to 10 percent annually starting in 2016, Cusson Leung, head of Hong Kong research, conglomerates and property for JPMorgan, said in a briefing on Friday.  
  • Indonesia Is More Exposed to Capital Flight Than Malaysia, Says S&P. Rocked by a political scandal and falling oil prices, Malaysia has been dominating headlines in recent months as the ringgit leads a drop in Asian currencies. That’s taken the spotlight off the economy of neighboring Indonesia, which Standard & Poor’s says is more exposed to capital flight. “The thing about Malaysia is that the capital market is deeper there, so there’s less reliance on foreign capital among corporates or banks to fund their growth,” said Kyran Curry, S&P’s director of sovereign ratings in Singapore. “Indonesia is much more vulnerable to shifts in outflows and inflows. We’re worried about Indonesia’s foreign-exchange reserves.”  
  • Ringgit Falls to New 1998 Low as Asia Selloff Sends KLCI Lower. Malaysia’s ringgit dropped to a new 1998 low and stocks fell as sentiment continues to sour for emerging-market assets amid slowing Chinese growth and prospects for a U.S. interest-rate increase. The ringgit came under renewed pressure on Monday from a decline in Brent crude and the narrowing in the oil-exporter’s trade surplus. Data on Friday showed a mixed picture of the U.S. jobs market, which is key for determining when the Federal Reserve will tighten policy. While the unemployment rate fell to a seven-year low, non-farm payrolls numbers missed estimates. Higher U.S. borrowing costs may spur more capital outflows from developing nations, just as China’s slowing economy curbs risk appetite.
  • Aussie Shanghaied With Chinese Stocks Flagging Slump to Six-Year Low. For currency dealers, trading in Australia’s dollar and the Shanghai Composite Index are fast becoming the same thing. The Aussie is moving almost in lockstep with China’s tumbling equity gauge, helping it slide to a six-year low last week. Their correlation underlines Australia’s dependence on the Asian nation, which buys more than 30 percent of its exports and whose economic slowdown is infecting markets worldwide. The Australian dollar rebounded Monday from a six-year low and extended gains as Chinese markets opened in positive territory after being closed during last week’s World War II victory parade.
  • Saudi Central Banker Sees No Threat to Currency's Dollar Peg. Central bank Governor Fahad Al-Mubarak said Saudi Arabia will stick with its currency peg as long as oil underpins the economy, dismissing speculation that the country’s currency system is coming under pressure. Investors have increased bets that Saudi Arabia and others in the region will be next to drop their pegs after China devalued the yuan and Kazakhstan allowed its currency to float. One-year forward contracts for the Saudi riyal, an indicator of where investors expect it to trade, are near the highest since 2003. 
  • Draghi's QE Dispenses Unwanted Results to European Stock Buyers. Mario Draghi’s stimulus program hasn’t quite succeeded at unleashing the desired animal spirits across Europe. Here’s the evidence: six months in, and 96 percent of companies in the Euro Stoxx 50 Index have actually gotten cheaper relative to earnings. The European Central Bank’s plan to flood the financial system with cash by purchasing bonds was supposed to ignite the same celebration of risk-taking it did in the U.S. six years ago. In fact, the opposite has happened, culminating in as much as $526 billion of share values being wiped out last month.
  • Dubai Stocks Drop With Mideast Markets on Fed Rate-Increase Bets. Dubai stocks declined with most Middle Eastern equities after the U.S. jobless rate dropped to a level the Federal Reserve considers to be full employment, bolstering the case for an interest-rate increase and depressing demand for riskier assets. Saudi equities rose. The DFM General Index retreated 0.8 percent to close at 3,542.14, following six weeks of losses, the longest streak in almost four years 
  • Asian Stocks Swing With Chinese Shares After Holiday; Yen Drops. Asian stocks fluctuated as early gains by Chinese shares evaporated after national holidays. U.S. equity-index futures advanced, while the yen declined.The Shanghai Composite Index fluctuated after rising as much as 1.8 percent after the open, while a gauge Chinese companies in Hong Kong pared gains after closing at a two-year low Friday. Japanese shares swung between gains and losses as the yen slipped. The MSCI Asia Pacific Index slid 0.6 percent by 11:34 a.m. in Tokyo after the early gains in China had seen it erase a drop of as much as 1 percent. The Hang Seng China Enterprises Index added 0.5 percent. The measure that tracks Chinese companies listed in Hong Kong has risen one day out of the previous 15 and registered its lowest close since July 2013 on Friday.
  • Oil Drops a Second Day as Venezuela Seeks OPEC Summit Amid Glut. Oil declined for a second day as Venezuela proposed an OPEC summit to stabilize prices amid a global glut. Futures slid as much as 2 percent in New York. Producers from outside of the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries including Russia will be invited to the meeting, Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro told state-owned broadcaster Telesur. Cutting output for a short-term price gain isn’t the cure for the “sickness” affecting global markets, Russian Energy Minister Alexander Novak said Friday. Brent for October settlement lost as much as 83 cents, or 1.7 percent, to $48.78 a barrel on the London-based ICE Futures Europe exchange. The European benchmark crude traded at a premium of $3.56 to WTI.
 Wall Street Journal:
  • Emotional Debbie Wasserman Schultz Backs Iran Nuclear Deal. Florida Rep. Debbie Wasserman Schultz, the chairwoman of the Democratic National Committee, said Sunday she would vote to support the Iran nuclear deal. Although she said she still has some concerns, Ms. Wasserman Schultz told CNN’s “State of the Union” that the deal’s opponents had provided no evidence that an alternative plan, such as applying economic pressure to force Iran back to the negotiating table, would work.
  • The West’s Refugee Crisis. What happens in the Middle East doesn’t stay in the Middle East. The photograph of 3-year-old Aylan Kurdi, who drowned trying to flee to Greece with his brother and mother, has focused the world on Europe’s Middle Eastern refugee crisis. Demands for compassion are easy, but it’s also important to understand how Europe—and the U.S.—got here. This is what the world looks like when the West abandons its responsibility to maintain world order.
Fox News: 
  • 'Who needs this?' Police recruits abandon dream amid anti-cop climate. (video) Police departments face a recruiting shortage amid a growing anti-cop mood that some fear has taken the pride out of peacekeeping and put targets on the backs of the men and women in blue. Open calls for the killing of police have been followed by assassinations, including last week's murder in Texas of a Harris County sheriff's deputy. Instead of dialing back the incendiary rhetoric, groups including "Black Lives Matter" have instead doubled down at demonstrations with chants of "Pigs in a blanket, fry em like bacon." Public safety officials fear the net effect has been to demonize police, and diminish the job. 
Zero Hedge:
Reuters: 
Contra Corner:
Financial Times:
  • US shale oil industry hit by $30bn outflows. US shale producers reported a cash outflow of more than $30bn in the first half of the year, in a sign of the challenges facing the US’s once-booming industry as the slump in oil prices begins to take effect. The shortfall points to a rise in bankruptcies and restructurings in the US shale oil industry, which has expanded rapidly in the past seven years but has never covered its capital expenditure from its cash flow. Capital spending by listed US independent oil and gas companies exceeded their cash from operations by about $32bn in the six months to June, approaching the deficit of $37.7bn reported for the whole of 2014, according to data from Factset, an information service.
  • Capital flight now the big concern for slowing China. In the four quarters to the end of June, such outflows, (which do not include debt repayment) have totalled more than $500bn according to data from Citigroup. China’s mountain of foreign reserves, once around $4tn, are now down to less than $3.7tn and are expected to drop further to $3.3tn by the end of the year, Citi calculates.
Economic Daily News:
  • TSMC's Factory Utilization Falls as Demand Slows. TSMC won't utilize 100% of its 8-inch wafer fab capacity in 4Q as demand from non-Apple(AAPL) clients misses expectations, citing people in the semiconductor industry. Utilization of 12-inch wafer plants also declines; with smaller competitors, such as Globalfoundries, starting price cut to grab orders. MediaTek also cuts 3G chip prices to help boost demand.

Saturday, September 05, 2015

Today's Headlines

Bloomberg: 
  • China’s Zhou Kept Repeating the Bubble ‘Burst’ at G-20 Meeting. Zhou Xiaochuan, governor of China’s central bank, couldn’t stop repeating to a G-20 gathering that a bubble in his country had “burst.” It came up about three times in his explanation Friday of what is going on with China’s stock market, according to a Japanese finance ministry official. When asked by a reporter if Zhou was talking about a bubble, Japanese Finance Minister Taro Aso was unequivocal: “What else bursts?” A dissection of the slowdown of the world’s second-largest economy and talk about the equity rout which erased $5 trillion of value was a focal point at the meeting of global policy makers in Ankara. That wasn’t enough for Aso, who said that the discussions hadn’t been constructive.  
  • Japan Isolated by China Complaints as G-20 Embraces Zhou's Plans. Japan was left isolated among Group of 20 nations after Finance Minister Taro Aso criticized a Chinese plan to stabilize its financial markets. While most policy makers at a two-day meeting in Ankara publicly welcomed China’s explanation of how it plans to minimize the disruption from its economic transition, Japanese Finance Minister Taro Aso said the presentation was too short on detail to be useful. Aso was the only delegate to complain about the plan, according to two officials at the talks who asked not to be named. “The issue with China is overblown,” Saudi Arabia’s central bank Governor Fahad Al-Mubarak said in an interview with Bloomberg Television in Ankara. “We’re confident that China is on the path of reform.” 
  • Lagarde Says Fed Must Be Sure of Jobs and Prices Before Moving. The U.S. Federal Reserve must be certain that the job market and inflation are strong enough to justify raising interest rates, the head of the International Monetary Fund said after a Group of 20 meeting focused on the pressure the increase may place on the global economy.
  • Volatility Is Back in Global Currency Markets Before Fed Meets. (graph) With the countdown to the Federal Reserve’s September meeting underway, volatility is returning to global currency markets. A gauge of price swings extended its longest streak of gains since January this week amid anxieties about the Fed’s path and a renewed focus on China’s slowdown. Foreign-exchange investors pared positions and moved to traditional havens even as U.S. economic reports show continued growth.
  • Maybe Computers Weren't to Blame for August's Stock Selloff After All. Pssst. Maybe it was your money manager. Risk parity—the "all-weather" investment strategy pioneered by Ray Dalio's Bridgewater Associates—has been grabbing all sorts of attention in recent weeks, of the wrong kind. The strategy, in which funds tend to automatically adjust portfolios of bonds, stocks, and other assets in response to higher market volatility, has been blamed by some for exacerbating the recent selloff by shifting holdings into cash. Bloomberg News reported that Bridgewater's All Weather Fund itself is said to have lost 4.2 percent in August. Meanwhile, JPMorgan analyst Marko Kolanovic, who has been vocal about the selling pressures caused by such quantitative funds, said on Thursday that heightened volatility means that risk parity players would probably have to get rid of another $100 billion in stocks in the next one to three weeks.
  • VIX Not Budging as Stocks Drop Anew in Week of S&P 500 Setbacks. Want evidence this selloff isn’t like the others? Consider that the VIX, the market’s fear indicator, has now spent 11 straight sessions above 25 -- a level that before August it had touched on just five days since 2011. Or the Standard & Poor’s 500 Index, which through Friday has swung up or down an average of 2 percent a day for more than two weeks. Prior to Aug. 20, the 2015 average was around 0.6 percent. The Dow Jones Industrial Average has suffered declines of more than 270 points in five of the last 12 sessions, the biggest cluster of selloffs since the summer of 2011.
 Wall Street Journal
  • Thousands of Migrants Pour Into Austria, Germany After Hungary Trek. European foreign ministers discussing how to respond to crisis. Thousands of migrants poured into Austria and Germany on Saturday, as escalating tensions in Hungary forced the two countries to open their borders to one of the largest waves of displaced people since World War II.
  • Ben Carson’s Insurgency. The real conservative outsider has been staging a quiet rise. Republican voters have been expressing in every way they can that they’re fed up with Washington and the political class. But as angry as they are about the Obama era of governance, that doesn’t mean they’ll want an angry presidential nominee—or accept brashness as a substitute for conservative reform. Witness the rise of Ben Carson.
  • Khamenei the Democrat. The Ayatollah issues a new demand on the nuclear deal. President Obama got the votes he needs this week to survive Congressional rejection of his Iran deal, and now the Administration is looking to bring a few more Senators on board so Democrats can filibuster a final vote on the deal. If the absence of U.S. democratic accountability disturbs you, consider its expression in Iran. We aren’t entirely jesting.
Fox News: 
  • Clinton acknowledges paying State Department staffer to maintain private email server. (video) Democratic presidential candidate Hillary Clinton on Saturday confirmed that she and her family personally paid a State Department staffer to maintain the private email server that Clinton used when she led the agency. “We obviously paid for those services and did so because during a period of time we continued to need his technical assistance,” the former secretary of state told reporters after a campaign stop in Portsmouth, N.H.
Zero Hedge
Business Insider:
  • Wall Street could be 'pulling in their reins' ahead of 3rd-quarter earnings. Slowing growth in emerging markets and currency fluctuations in anticipation of a U.S. interest rate hike may push third-quarter revenue and earnings estimates lower this month. Wall Street expects a 3.4 percent decline in earnings for the S&P 500 for the quarter. Estimates have already fallen for 9 out of 10 of the benchmark index's sectors so far this year, according to Thomson Reuters data. S&P revenue is expected to fall 2.8 percent for the quarter, led by steep declines in the energy and materials sectors.
NY Times:
  • U.S. Warns Russia Over Military Support for Assad. Secretary of State John Kerry told his Russian counterpart on Saturday that the United States was deeply concerned by reports that the Kremlin may be planning to vastly expand its military support for President Bashar al-Assad of Syria, warning that such a move might even lead to a “confrontation” with the American-led coalition, the State Department said.
Financial Times:
  • EM turmoil and strong franc cast shadow over Swiss luxury industry. The biggest problems have come in Asia, where demand has faltered in China and Japan, and collapsed in Hong Kong. But other markets have also proved difficult: the gyrations of the rouble have hit Russian demand — and sales in the UAE, an increasingly important market, have declined.
Telegraph:

Friday, September 04, 2015

Market Week in Review

  • S&P 500 1,921.22 -3.40%*
 photo uuu_zpslrxsgq8o.png
The Weekly Wrap by Briefing.com.

*5-Day Change

Weekly Scoreboard*

Indices
  • S&P 500 1,921.22 -3.40%
  • DJIA 16,102.38 -3.24%
  • NASDAQ 4,683.92 -2.99%
  • Russell 2000 1,136.17 -2.30%
  • S&P 500 High Beta 29.59 -2.86%
  • Goldman 50 Most Shorted 122.94 -1.93% 
  • Wilshire 5000 20,096.17 -3.23%
  • Russell 1000 Growth 941.39 -3.14%
  • Russell 1000 Value 921.47 -3.49%
  • S&P 500 Consumer Staples 475.61 -2.50%
  • Solactive US Cyclical 118.03 -2.90%
  • Morgan Stanley Technology 983.56 -3.76%
  • Transports 7,793.83 -1.45%
  • Utilities 541.97 -5.28%
  • Bloomberg European Bank/Financial Services 103.83 -4.3%
  • MSCI Emerging Markets 32.51 -3.97%
  • HFRX Equity Hedge 1,159.36 +.62%
  • HFRX Equity Market Neutral 1,012.72 +.13%
Sentiment/Internals
  • NYSE Cumulative A/D Line 228,206 +.29%
  • Bloomberg New Highs-Lows Index -288 +29
  • Bloomberg Crude Oil % Bulls 27.27 -23.01%
  • CFTC Oil Net Speculative Position 215,563 +2.37%
  • CFTC Oil Total Open Interest 1,677,151 -.69%
  • Total Put/Call 1.43 +11.72%
  • OEX Put/Call 2.05 +177.03%
  • ISE Sentiment 67.0 -15.19%
  • NYSE Arms 3.14 +196.22%
  • Volatility(VIX) 27.80 +6.72%
  • S&P 500 Implied Correlation 63.97 +6.60%
  • G7 Currency Volatility (VXY) 10.89 +7.19%
  • Emerging Markets Currency Volatility (EM-VXY) 12.47 +7.31%
  • Smart Money Flow Index 16,696.35 -.11%
  • ICI Money Mkt Mutual Fund Assets $2.678 Trillion -.6%
  • ICI US Equity Weekly Net New Cash Flow -$9.789 Billion
  • AAII % Bulls 32.4 -.4%
  • AAII % Bears 31.7 -17.3%
Futures Spot Prices
  • CRB Index 196.70 -.2%
  • Crude Oil 46.09 +1.28%
  • Reformulated Gasoline 141.63 +2.20%
  • Natural Gas 2.66 -2.60%
  • Heating Oil 159.54 +1.50%
  • Gold 1,121.40 -1.09%
  • Bloomberg Base Metals Index 148.23 +1.68%
  • Copper 232.10 -.88%
  • US No. 1 Heavy Melt Scrap Steel 210.67 USD/Ton unch.
  • China Iron Ore Spot 56.50 USD/Ton +.82%
  • Lumber 228.40 -3.67%
  • UBS-Bloomberg Agriculture 1,001.98 -1.37%
Economy
  • ECRI Weekly Leading Economic Index Growth Rate -1.7% -80.0 basis points
  • Philly Fed ADS Real-Time Business Conditions Index .1913 unch.
  • S&P 500 Blended Forward 12 Months Mean EPS Estimate 126.48 +.21%
  • Citi US Economic Surprise Index -15.6 -8.1 points
  • Citi Eurozone Economic Surprise Index 25.4 +10.8 points
  • Citi Emerging Markets Economic Surprise Index -23.8 -14.2 points
  • Fed Fund Futures imply 70.0% chance of no change, 30.0% chance of 25 basis point hike on 9/17
  • # of Months to 1st Fed Rate Hike(Morgan Stanley) 4.39 -25.84%
  • US Dollar Index 96.24 +.09%
  • Euro/Yen Carry Return Index 138.51 -2.6%
  • Yield Curve 143.0 -4.0 basis points
  • 10-Year US Treasury Yield 2.13% -5.0 basis points
  • Federal Reserve's Balance Sheet $4.437 Trillion +.02%
  • U.S. Sovereign Debt Credit Default Swap 16.60 +1.38%
  • Illinois Municipal Debt Credit Default Swap 244.0 -3.26%
  • Western Europe Sovereign Debt Credit Default Swap Index 21.87 -2.08%
  • Asia Pacific Sovereign Debt Credit Default Swap Index 83.42 +4.13%
  • Emerging Markets Sovereign Debt CDS Index 274.90 -1.41%
  • Israel Sovereign Debt Credit Default Swap 68.61 -2.67%
  • Iraq Sovereign Debt Credit Default Swap 756.73 +2.74%
  • Russia Sovereign Debt Credit Default Swap 384.20 +2.11%
  • iBoxx Offshore RMB China Corporates High Yield Index 116.86 +.06%
  • 10-Year TIPS Spread 1.52% -10.0 basis points
  • TED Spread 31.75 +4.5 basis points
  • 2-Year Swap Spread 13.25 -2.0 basis points
  • 3-Month EUR/USD Cross-Currency Basis Swap -24.0 -2.75 basis points
  • N. America Investment Grade Credit Default Swap Index 82.95 +4.72%
  • America Energy Sector High-Yield Credit Default Swap Index 1,802.0 -4.34%
  • European Financial Sector Credit Default Swap Index 83.98 +3.43%
  • Emerging Markets Credit Default Swap Index 360.98 +4.76%
  • CMBS AAA Super Senior 10-Year Treasury Spread  to Swaps 114.5 +13.5 basis points
  • M1 Money Supply $3.054 Trillion +.50%
  • Commercial Paper Outstanding 1,032.30 -1.70%
  • 4-Week Moving Average of Jobless Claims 275,500 +3,000
  • Continuing Claims Unemployment Rate 1.7% unch.
  • Average 30-Year Mortgage Rate 3.89% +5 basis points
  • Weekly Mortgage Applications 459.50 +11.34%
  • Bloomberg Consumer Comfort 41.4 -.6 point
  • Weekly Retail Sales +1.60% -10.0 basis points
  • Nationwide Gas $2.42/gallon -.09/gallon
  • Baltic Dry Index 891.0 -1.54%
  • China (Export) Containerized Freight Index 820.91 -2.78%
  • Oil Tanker Rate(Arabian Gulf to U.S. Gulf Coast) 22.5 +12.5%
  • Rail Freight Carloads 284,531 +1.99%
Best Performing Style
  • Small-Cap Value -2.1%
Worst Performing Style
  • Large-Cap Value -3.5%
Leading Sectors
  • Airlines +1.1%
  • Homebuilders unch.
  • Tobacco -.7%
  • Telecom -1.1%
  • Foods -1.3%
Lagging Sectors
  • Biotech -4.5% 
  • Medical Equipment -5.0%
  • Utilities -5.5%
  • Coal -7.0%
  • Gold & Silver -8.6%
Weekly High-Volume Stock Gainers (16)
  • PSEM, VRA, MDCO, MEI, MTRX, TKAI, BGS, LE, GEF, SWHC, ISLE, MPG, BIG, NAV, UAL and MDP
Weekly High-Volume Stock Losers (12)
  • ABM, ADSK, FIVE, VRNT, RGS, SAIC, DLTR, SCOR, TDOC, AVAV, JOY and HTWR
Weekly Charts
ETFs
Stocks
*5-Day Change

Stocks Falling Substantially into Afternoon on Global Growth Fears, Fed Rate Hike Worries, Oil Decline, Commodity/Financial Sector Weakness

Broad Equity Market Tone:
  • Advance/Decline Line: Substantially Lower
  • Sector Performance: Almost Every Sector Declining
  • Volume: Below Average
  • Market Leading Stocks: Performing In Line
Equity Investor Angst:
  • Volatility(VIX) 28.92 +12.92%
  • Euro/Yen Carry Return Index 138.57 -.68%
  • Emerging Markets Currency Volatility(VXY) 12.26 n/a
  • S&P 500 Implied Correlation 65.56 +1.83%
  • ISE Sentiment Index 83.0 +5.0%
  • Total Put/Call 1.44 +28.57%
  • NYSE Arms 2.71 +284.26% 
Credit Investor Angst:
  • North American Investment Grade CDS Index 83.53 +1.93%
  • America Energy Sector High-Yield CDS Index 1,802.0 -3.34%
  • European Financial Sector CDS Index 84.05 +2.70%
  • Western Europe Sovereign Debt CDS Index 21.87 +2.80%
  • Asia Pacific Sovereign Debt CDS Index 83.42 +2.49%
  • Emerging Market CDS Index 360.77 +3.13%
  • iBoxx Offshore RMB China Corporates High Yield Index 116.86 +.02%
  • 2-Year Swap Spread 13.25 -1.0 basis point
  • TED Spread 31.75 -.5 basis point
  • 3-Month EUR/USD Cross-Currency Basis Swap -23.75 +.25 basis point
Economic Gauges:
  • 3-Month T-Bill Yield .03% +1.0 basis point
  • Yield Curve 143.0 -4.0 basis points
  • China Import Iron Ore Spot $56.50/Metric Tonne n/a
  • Citi US Economic Surprise Index -15.6 -.9 point
  • Citi Eurozone Economic Surprise Index 25.4 -1.5 points
  • Citi Emerging Markets Economic Surprise Index -23.8 -.6 point
  • 10-Year TIPS Spread 1.51 -3.0 basis points
  • # of Months to 1st Fed Rate Hike(Morgan Stanley) 4.39 n/a
Overseas Futures:
  • Nikkei 225 Futures: Indicating -283 open in Japan 
  • China A50 Futures: Indicating n/a open in China
  • DAX Futures: Indicating -61 open in Germany
Portfolio: 
  • Slightly Higher: On gains in my index hedges and emerging markets shorts
  • Disclosed Trades: None
  • Market Exposure: 25% Net Long

Today's Headlines

Bloomberg:   
  • China Stocks Sink in Hong Kong to Two-Year Low on Mainland Risks. China’s stocks slumped in Hong Kong to a two-year low amid speculation mainland shares will decline when trading resumes on Monday after holidays. The Hang Seng China Enterprises Index lost 1.4 percent to 9,169.59 at the close as developer China Vanke Co. and bad-loan manager China Cinda Asset Management Co. led declines. The measure tumbled 6 percent this week to its lowest level since July 2013. Hong Kong financial markets were shut on Thursday for a holiday. The Hang Seng Index dropped 0.5 percent. The gauge of Chinese stocks in Hong Kong has tumbled 23 percent this year, the worst performing index in the world after Peru.
  • Hong Kong Home Sales to Slide as Stocks Tank, Centaline Says. Home sales in Hong Kong, where prices have surged to a record, are set to extend declines as buying interest slumped with a stock rout, according to one of the city’s two largest property brokers. Transactions of properties valued from HK$10 million ($1.3 million) to HK$20 million may shrink 20 percent in September from August, Louis Chan, chief executive officer of the residential unit of Centaline Property Agency Ltd., said in a phone interview. Sales of all existing homes done by the closely held real estate agency fell as much as 30 percent in August, Chan said. Hong Kong’s benchmark Hang Seng Index tumbled 12 percent last month, with the gauge slumping 5.2 percent, or more than 1,000 points on Aug. 24, as concerns about a slowdown in China sent equities worldwide into a tailspin. The index is down another 4 percent so far this month. “We got quite nervous on the day when the HSI dropped 1,000 points, because our daily revenue vanished 50 to 60 percent in a single day,” Chan said. “Nobody was in the mood to buy an apartment.”
  • China: What are the Global Concerns? (video).
  • Linking China Dependence, Suffering Commodity Economies. (video)
  • German Factory Orders Fell in July in Sign of Bumpy Recovery. German factory orders fell more than expected in July, signaling that growth in Europe’s largest economy may yet be bumpy. Orders, adjusted for seasonal swings and inflation, dropped 1.4 percent after increasing a revised 1.8 percent in June, data from the Economy Ministry in Berlin showed on Friday. The typically volatile number compares with a median estimate of a 0.6 percent decline in a Bloomberg survey. Orders unexpectedly slid 0.6 percent from a year earlier. German exporters are exposed to a potential cooling of global trade as China’s economy slows, meaning companies may have to rely more on domestic demand. Export orders dropped 5.2 percent in July as domestic demand climbed 4.1 percent, the Economy Ministry report showed. Orders from outside the 19-nation euro area slumped 9.5 percent, and orders from within the currency bloc rose 2.2 percent. Orders for consumer goods fell 6.3 percent, investment goods orders shrank 1.6 percent, and basic goods orders slid 0.2 percent. 
  • Germany's Stocks Capitulate as Decline Triggers DAX Death Cross. German equities, which have already lost most of their gains for the year, have now fallen into a bearish chart pattern known as a death cross. The DAX Index’s 50-day moving average dropped below its 200-day mean for the first time in a year. For technical analysts, that’s a sign that price momentum is fading. The gauge has fallen 18 percent since reaching a record in April, leaving it up only 3.5 percent for the year.“It’s the market saying we want to see a retest of the August low and touching even a new low,” said Jean-Charles Gand, a senior market strategist at BBSP SAS in Paris. 
  • Russia Bows to Cheap Oil as Putin Aide Sees $50 Price for Budget. Russia will assume that crude prices will stay near their present level in calculating next year’s budget as the world’s largest energy exporter adjusts to a downturn on the oil market, according to President Vladimir Putin’s top economic aide. The budget will be based on an average oil price of $50 a barrel, Andrey Belousov told reporters in Vladivostok on Friday. Putin said he’s asking parliament to support a shift to a one-year fiscal plan in 2016 because it’s “impossible” to predict the direction of global markets. Non-OPEC member Russia, whose currency has plunged 45 percent in the past 12 months, is growing resigned to slumping oil, which together with gas accounts for about half of budget revenue. 
  • VW, Ford(F) Open Engine Plants in Russia Amid Car Market Plunge. Volkswagen AG and Ford Motor Co. are sticking with long-planned investments in Russian engine factories even as car sales there head toward a six-year low. Volkswagen opened a 250 million-euro ($279 million) plant on Friday, with Russian Prime Minister Dmitry Medvedev attending the inaugural ceremony. The factory near Kaluga, an industrial city southwest of Moscow where Volkswagen already produces vehicles, will have capacity to make 150,000 engines a year for Russian-made VW-brand and Skoda cars, helping reduce prices, Marcus Osegowitsch, head of the carmaker’s Russian unit, said at the event.
  • Emerging Markets Quiver as U.S. `Full Employment' Backs Fed Move. Emerging-market stocks and currencies headed for weekly declines as the U.S. jobless rate dropped to a level the Federal Reserve considers to be full employment, bolstering the case for an interest-rate increase. The MSCI Emerging Markets Index slumped 1.7 percent to 787.85 at 11:29 a.m. in New York. The gauge has dropped 4 percent in the last five days, poised for its 15th decline in the 19 weeks since April. Stocks have tumbled 10 percent since Aug. 11, when China unexpectedly devalued the yuan, deepening a rout amid concern that the slowdown in the second-biggest economy will damp global demand. A gauge of 20 developing-nation currencies is heading for a 1.6 percent weekly decline, extending a record low.
  • European Stocks Snap Winning Streak, Traders Wait on Fed. (video)
  • Lacker Says It’s Time for Fed to End Era of Zero Rates. Federal Reserve Bank of Richmond President Jeffrey Lacker said it’s time for the central bank to end the era of record-low interest rates, now that the impacts from winter weather and energy prices have passed. The Richmond Fed president, who’s historically been more inclined toward tighter policy than most of his colleagues, said Friday that labor-market slack has been reduced to pre-recession levels, and shorter-term inflation measures are tracking the U.S. central bank’s 2 percent target. “I am not arguing that the economy is perfect, but nor is it on the ropes, requiring zero interest rates to get it back into the ring,” Lacker said in the text of a speech in Richmond. “It’s time to align our monetary policy with the significant progress we have made.”
  • Glencore Posts Worst Week Ever as Mining Shares Extend Slump. Glencore Plc shares posted the biggest weekly decline since the company went public in 2011 as the selloff in mining shares showed no signs of slowing. The commodities producer and trader slid 6 percent by the London close on Friday, bringing losses for the week to 17 percent. Vedanta Resources Plc, an Indian miner of copper, aluminum and zinc, dropped 12 percent for the biggest retreat in the FTSE 350 Mining Index. Anglo American Plc and Antofagasta Plc sank more than 5 percent.
  • Wheat Glut Erodes U.S. Exports as Cheap Russia Grain Wins Buyers. Oil isn’t the only commodity where the largest producers are fighting for market share in a world awash with supply. Russia and the U.S., two of the biggest wheat exporters, are going head-to-head in a battle for customers. Russian shippers, with the advantage of a weak currency and falling freight rates, can undercut most competitors, selling their grain about 16 percent cheaper than cargoes from the U.S.
  • Caterpillar(CAT) Downgraded to Neutral at Baird. (video)
CNBC: 
  • Europe markets close sharply lower after US jobs report. (video) European stocks closed sharply lower on Friday, as the latest U.S. non-farm payrolls report boosted investors' fears that the Federal Reserve could raise interest rates at its meeting later this month. The pan-European STOXX 600 closed around 2.5 percent lower, extending losses after the jobs report, with all major bourses and down more than 2 percent. The French CAC 40 closed down 2.8 percent, the British FTSE 100 was down 2.4 percent and the German DAX closed unofficially 2.5 percent lower.
  • This obscure market is pointing to more pain for stocks. (video) According to McDonald, deterioration in the Asian credit markets actually started before the recent bout of selling in U.S. equities, and has been a reliable indicator for where they are heading. "We actually saw Asian credits significantly deteriorate almost a week before we had the big selloff here," he said. 
  • Obamacare's many double-digit price hikes for next year.
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