Tuesday, September 22, 2015

Wednesday Watch

Evening Headlines 
Bloomberg: 
  • Chinese Factory Gauge Drops to Lowest Level Since March 2009. A private Chinese manufacturing gauge fell to the lowest in 6 1/2 years, underscoring challenges facing the nation’s factories as the economy’s old growth engines splutter. The preliminary Purchasing Managers’ Index from Caixin Media and Markit Economics was at 47.0 for September, missing the median estimate of 47.5 in a Bloomberg survey and below the final reading of 47.3 in the previous month. Readings remained below 50 since March, indicating contraction. Premier Li Keqiang’s expansion target of about 7 percent for this year is being challenged by a slowdown in manufacturing and property investment even as services and consumption hold up better. President Xi Jinping downplayed concern about weakening Chinese growth in a speech in Seattle to mark the start of his U.S. trip. 
  • China Said to Suspect Citic Illegally Profited From Stock Rescue. A Chinese probe found evidence that Citic Securities Co., the nation’s biggest brokerage, engaged in insider trading connected to the government’s rescue of the stock market, people familiar with the matter said. A preliminary investigation concluded that the brokerage used advance knowledge of government-orchestrated stock purchases to execute trades that benefited the firm, said the people, who asked not to be identified because the matter is private. A Citic spokeswoman said the company hasn’t received any formal notification regarding the nature of the investigation. The China State Regulatory Commission didn’t immediately respond to a request for comment. Citic Securities is one of the brokerages that was drafted in to government-led rescue efforts which have included 1.5 trillion yuan ($235 billion) of stock purchases since June, according to a Sept. 7 estimate by Goldman Sachs Group Inc. Emergency measures unleashed to counter the nation’s stock bust have also involved a widening enforcement crackdown, with officials targeting so-called “malicious short-sellers” and vowing to “purify” the market.
  • China Heads to Japan-Like Slowdown as Debt Swells, Chanos Says. China is on a path similar to the one that preceded Japan’s lost decade in the 1990s as the country’s debt level grows twice as fast as its economy, according to Jim Chanos, the hedge fund manager who predicted the 2001 collapse of Enron Corp. “We have an economy addicted to credit,” Chanos, founder of Kynikos Associates LP, said during a panel discussion on China in New York Tuesday. While the country doesn’t appear to be facing an “imminent collapse,” it is on a trajectory similar to the one Japan was on before its asset-price collapse in 1991 “but on steroids,” he said. Chinese annual loan growth has slowed to about 15 percent from more than 30 percent in 2009, that’s still double the pace of expansion in gross domestic product. Total household and corporate debt surged to 207 percent of GDP in June, up from 125 percent at the end of 2008 when China embarked on a borrowing binge to stimulate the economy, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. Japan’s total debt swelled to 176 percent of GDP in 1990 from 127 percent in 1980, according to JPMorgan Chase & Co. The burst of the housing and stock market bubble since then led to anemic economic growth in the following years, a period commonly referred to as a lost decade.
  • China's Stock Probes Entangle Regulators, Securities Executives. A former head of the Shanghai and Shenzhen stock exchanges is among the regulators and securities-firm employees publicly named as being under investigation after a summer slump in the nation’s stocks. The probes follow a market rout that wiped $5 trillion from the value of Chinese shares. The government’s response to the market slide, which has involved state purchases of shares and various restrictions on selling equities, has raised questions among investors about its commitment to market reforms. Here is a list of those named by state media, including a journalist for business magazine Caijing. None of them is known to have been charged and Bloomberg News was unable to contact them.  
  • China's Richest Stock Traders Aren't Buying Xi's Bullish Message. Chinese policy makers have a message: the stock market is stabilizing. Their biggest challenge will be persuading the richest investors. As the boom turned to bust, the number of accounts holding shares worth more than 10 million yuan ($1.6 million) almost halved in the past three months, the biggest decline among four categories of investor wealth tracked by the nation’s clearing agency. While accounts with less than 100,000 yuan rose by 3.8 percent in August, those with the biggest funds fell 17 percent -- partly due to a 12 percent drop in the Shanghai Composite Index.
  • China’s Ponzi-Dodging Pensioners Chase High Returns, Free Lunch. Little-known private investment firms have been popping up all over China, luring pensioners’ savings by promising annual returns of more than 10 percent, and sometimes as high 60 percent, to fund cash-thirsty projects unable to get bank loans. Distributing fliers outside supermarkets and drawing on word-of-mouth, the private firms -- part of China’s unregulated network of shadow financing-- typically lure retirees with the offer of free lunch. A recent feast of radish soup, spare ribs, red-cooked pork, fried vegetables and a yogurt cup at a downtown Beijing restaurant drew about 100 mostly elderly people to hear a passionate lecture on the importance of investing. Attendees were treated to a magic show in which a magician chopped off the hand of his assistant in a bloody flourish, a bamboo flute concert, a whirling acrobat, and lucky drawings -- as well as the promise of 12 percent annual returns to lend their money to a real estate project in Chengdu.
  • Volkswagen-Induced Pain in Auto Stocks Seen Deepening by Options. Money manager Michael Woischneck has been inundated with calls from charities, foundations and churches -- clients that prefer investing in socially responsible companies -- urging him to avoid Volkswagen AG. He says he has had little choice but to dump the automaker’s shares. His firm, Lampe Asset Management, is among many surprised by the German company’s widening scandal over faked pollution controls. That caused VW to lose a third of its value, or about 23 billion euros ($25 billion), in just two days. The pessimism has proven contagious for Europe’s auto stocks, further dragging down an industry already hurt this year by a rebound in the euro and jitters about China’s economy. Options traders are preparing for more pain, sending the hedging costs of VW, BMW AG and Renault SA soaring. “This can be a much, much wider scandal,” said Woischneck, who oversees the equivalent of $148 million at Lampe Asset Management in Dusseldorf, Germany. “The concern is that the origin of all this is on the supplier side, and that would affect a lot of the other car companies.”  
  • Volkswagen Emissions Scandal Takes Toll in Corporate Bond Market. Volkswagen AG’s escalating scandal over emissions-test cheating is beginning to ripple across the $10 trillion global corporate bond market. Investors in the U.S. were demanding yields of as much as 4.6 percent to own the German automaker’s dollar-denominated debt on Tuesday. That’s more in line with companies with ratings closest to junk than the A grade that Volkswagen has from Standard & Poor’s. Credit-default swaps traders drove up the cost to protect against losses on debt across the auto industry as they braced for the potential of a widening probe.The rapid selloff in the debt of such a large and creditworthy borrower was starting to remind some investors of the market fallout when BP Plc faced cleanup costs from the 2010 oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico.
  • Offshore Yuan Drops as China PMI Declines to Lowest Since 2009. The yuan dropped 0.27 percent, the most since Sept. 11, to 6.4241 a dollar as of 10:14 a.m. in Hong Kong, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. The spot rate in Shanghai weakened 0.12 percent to 6.3834, China Foreign Exchange Trade System prices show.  
  • Aussie Falls With Kiwi for Third Day on China's Economic Woes. Australia’s dollar dropped 0.6 percent to 70.44 U.S. cents at 9:55 a.m. in Singapore, extending its three-day decline to 2 percent. New Zealand’s currency fell 0.4 percent to 62.70 U.S. cents. The kiwi has tumbled 15 percent and the Aussie has slumped 7.8 percent this year, the worst performers of 10 developed-nation currencies tracked by Bloomberg Correlation-Weighted Indexes. The U.S. dollar rose 8.8 percent and the yen gained 8.6 percent.
  • Emerging Currencies Fall on Fed Confusion; Commodity Stocks Drop. Emerging-market currencies retreated for a third day and stocks fell as slumping commodity prices and conflicting signals from the Federal Reserve on when it will start raising interest rates curtailed demand for riskier assets.Brazil’s real slumped to the weakest level on record against the dollar as concern mounted that the government won’t be able to avoid further credit rating cuts. A gauge tracking 20 developing-nation currencies fell 0.9 percent to a two-week low.
  • Asian Stocks Extend Global Selloff Before China Factory Report. Asian stocks dropped for a third day, extending a global selloff, as investors awaited a report on China’s manufacturing amid concern the slowdown in the world’s second-largest economy is deepening. The MSCI Asia Pacific Excluding Japan Index fell 0.4 percent to 402 as of 8:01 a.m. in Hong Kong, as commodity producers led declines after raw-material prices tumbled. Futures on the Nikkei 225 Stock Average slumped 2.6 percent in Singapore, with Japan’s equity market shut for a holiday.
  • After Commodity Meltdown, Citi Warns to Brace for More Losses. The worst commodity meltdown since 2008 probably isn’t the end of the pain for bulls, according to Citigroup Inc. Excess supplies and a sluggish world economy mean that it’s “hard to argue that most commodity prices have reached their trough for the year,” analysts led by Ed Morse, the global head of commodities research, said in a report Tuesday. The bank is bearish on crude oil, aluminum, platinum, iron ore, cocoa and wheat in the next three to six months. Prices for raw materials are languishing near a 16-year low as inventories climb just as demand growth slows in China, the world’s biggest consumer of everything from cotton to zinc. Money has been flowing out of funds linked to metals, crops and energy, while investors have punished shares of miners and oil drillers.
Wall Street Journal: 
  • Struggles in China Push Cisco to Strike Deal. U.S. technology giant to unveil partnership with Chinese server maker. U.S. technology giant Cisco Systems Inc. helped build China’s Internet, working so closely with the Chinese government that a spiritual group once accused it of helping the country spy on its own citizens, an accusation Cisco denied.
  • Green Illusions Fell an Auto CEO. Volkswagen bet its U.S. future on curing American drivers of their aversion to diesel. What puzzled a business columnist five years ago remains puzzling today. Martin Winterkorn, the now-embattled Volkswagen chief, grandly pronounced a goal to make VW the world’s biggest car maker by sales. Shouldn’t a business manager care about whether capital is productively deployed to maximize returns, not about generating sales volume for its own sake?
  • The Assault on Drug Innovation. Clinton tanks biotech stocks as she comes out for price controls. The political blaze over drug costs that kicked up a year ago over the Hepatitis C cure Sovaldi has moved on to therapies for more diseases—and beyond white heat too. Now Hillary Clinton and others upset with the price of medical progress are proposing government remedies, including price controls.
Fox News:
  • Clinton breaks silence, announces opposition to Keystone XL pipeline. (video) Hillary Clinton on Tuesday broke her years-long silence over her stance on the Keystone XL pipeline, announcing in Iowa that she opposes the controversial project. The former secretary of state previously had dodged questions about her position on the pipeline, citing her role in reviewing the project at the State Department and saying the ongoing review needs to run its course.
CNBC:
  • Hank Paulson: China economy has 'run out of steam'. (video) China and the United States need to collaborate to expedite reforms and combat slowing growth in the world's second-largest economy, former Treasury Secretary Hank Paulson said Tuesday. "They have an economic model that has run out of steam. They need to place much more reliance on domestic-led growth, domestic consumption," he told CNBC from Seattle, where Chinese President Xi Jinping will meet with American business leaders Tuesday.
Zero Hedge: 
Reuters:
  • Brazil gov't sees deeper economic recession in 2015. The Brazilian government revised its 2015 economic recession estimate to 2.44 percent from 1.49 percent, an official report showed on Tuesday, envisioning a contraction more in line with market expectations.
Financial Times:
  • Harvard endowment warns of market ‘froth’. Harvard is looking for investment managers with expertise as short-sellers, as the world’s biggest university endowment becomes more cautious about the outlook for financial markets. In its latest annual report, which showed investment returns fell to 5.8 per cent in the year to June, the $38bn endowment said its managers had started to increase cash holdings and feared that some markets had become “frothy”.
Evening Recommendations 
  • None of note
Night Trading
  • Asian equity indices are -1.75% to -1.25% on average.
  • Asia Ex-Japan Investment Grade CDS Index 150.75 +3.75 basis points.
  • Asia Pacific Sovereign CDS Index 81.50 +5.0 basis points.
  • S&P 500 futures -.89%.
  • NASDAQ 100 futures -.83%.

Earnings of Note
Company/Estimate
  • (FUL)/.68
  • (SCS)/.33
  • (WOR)/.51
Economic Releases
9:45 am EST
  • Preliminary Markit US Manufacturing PMI for September is estimated to fall to 52.8 versus 53.0 in August.
10:30 am EST
  • Bloomberg consensus estimates call for a weekly crude oil inventory decline of -1,162,500 barrels versus a -2,104,000 barrel decline the prior week. Gasoline supplies are estimated to rise by +762,500 barrels versus a +2,840,000 barrel gain the prior week. Distillate inventories are estimated to rise by +912,500 barrels versus a +3,060,000 barrel gain the prior week. Finally, Refinery Utilization is estimated to fall by -.47% versus a +2.2% gain prior.
Upcoming Splits
  • None of note
Other Potential Market Movers
  • The Fed's Lockhart speaking, ECB's Draghi speaking, Eurozone Manufacturing PMI report, $35B 5Y T-Note auction, weekly MBA Mortgage Applications report, CSFB Steel/Mining conference, (TOT) investor day and the (STLD) investor day could also impact trading today.
BOTTOM LINE: Asian indices are lower, weighed down by commodity and technology shares in the region. I expect US stocks to open lower and to maintain lossses into the afternoon. The Portfolio is 25% net long heading into the day.

Stocks Falling Substantially into Final Hour on China Bubble-Bursting Fears, Asian Currency Worries, Surging European/Emerging Markets/US High-Yield Debt Angst, Hombuilding/Transport Sector Weakness

Broad Equity Market Tone:
  • Advance/Decline Line: Substantially Lower
  • Sector Performance: Every Sector Declining
  • Volume: Around Average
  • Market Leading Stocks: Underperforming
Equity Investor Angst:
  • Volatility(VIX) 23.59 +17.08%
  • Euro/Yen Carry Return Index 139.64 -.92%
  • Emerging Markets Currency Volatility(VXY) 12.22 +3.21%
  • S&P 500 Implied Correlation 65.81 +3.36%
  • ISE Sentiment Index 75.0 -46.81%
  • Total Put/Call 1.21 +19.8%
  • NYSE Arms 1.86 +85.56% 
Credit Investor Angst:
  • North American Investment Grade CDS Index 83.15 +2.20%
  • America Energy Sector High-Yield CDS Index 946.0 +2.62%
  • European Financial Sector CDS Index 88.88 +4.64%
  • Western Europe Sovereign Debt CDS Index 21.10 +4.12%
  • Asia Pacific Sovereign Debt CDS Index 81.04 +5.97%
  • Emerging Market CDS Index 364.43 +4.62%
  • iBoxx Offshore RMB China Corporates High Yield Index 119.57 +.13%
  • 2-Year Swap Spread 11.75 unch.
  • TED Spread 31.50 -2.0 basis points
  • 3-Month EUR/USD Cross-Currency Basis Swap -24.25 +1.75 basis points
Economic Gauges:
  • Bloomberg Emerging Markets Currency Index 70.72 -.85% 
  • 3-Month T-Bill Yield -.01% +1.0 basis point
  • Yield Curve 146.0 -3.0 basis points
  • China Import Iron Ore Spot $56.21/Metric Tonne -1.90%
  • Citi US Economic Surprise Index -28.3 -.6 point
  • Citi Eurozone Economic Surprise Index 12.4 +.7 point
  • Citi Emerging Markets Economic Surprise Index -21.6 +1.0 point
  • 10-Year TIPS Spread 1.52 -4.0 basis points
  • # of Months to 1st Fed Rate Hike(Morgan Stanley) 5.04 -.5
Overseas Futures:
  • Nikkei 225 Futures: Indicating -455 open in Japan 
  • China A50 Futures: Indicating -159 open in China
  • DAX Futures: Indicating +28 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 Investors Shun World's Wildest Stocks as Trading Dries Up. Plunging turnover and the world’s wildest price swings mean that China’s stock market just keeps getting uglier for investors. The value of shares traded on mainland bourses has fallen to $90 billion a day from about $380 billion on May 28, with the difference being equivalent to the average daily trading in the U.S. The Shanghai Composite Index’s volatility over the past 30 days was twice as extreme as the average for the biggest global markets. That’s bad news for government efforts to stabilize equities, according to IG Asia Pte. "For long-term investors, high volume and low volatility is preferred," said Bernard Aw, a strategist at IG in Singapore. "Should liquidity in Chinese stock markets continue to fall, as indicated by falling volume, then we could see greater price swings."
  • Bad-Loan Hiatus Ending for Canada Banks as Oil and Economy Slump. Soured loans from slumping oil prices and a weakened economy are likely to push Canada’s banks next year to set aside the most money since 2009. Toronto-Dominion Bank, Royal Bank of Canada and four other large lenders are forecast to allocate 27 percent more money for bad debt next year, according to estimates of analysts surveyed by Bloomberg, adding further pressure to earnings as lending slows. “This is what may create some significant headwinds in 2016,” John Aiken, a Barclays Plc analyst, said in an interview. “The biggest villain is low oil prices and what that’s doing to the Alberta economy. However, broadly speaking, the Canadian economy is not doing well.”
  • GM May Need to Cut Capacity in South Korea as Exports Slow. General Motors Co. may need to cut production capacity in its South Korean operations if the company can’t increase sales of the vehicles built there, the president of the GM International division said. The automaker sold 113,000 vehicles from its Korean operations last year and is running its plants at only about 60 percent of their capacity, Stefan Jacoby told reporters Monday. Automakers generally need to run plants at more than 80 percent to make a profit.
  • Glencore Slumps to Record Low as Mining Losses Pick Up Speed. The rout across metals and mining shares accelerated as evidence of China’s slowdown renewed investor worries and analysts said prices are heading lower. Glencore tumbled as much as 16 percent, the most ever, and slid below 100 pence for the first time since it began trading in 2011. Anglo American Plc touched a 15-year low and Antofagasta Plc sank 7.3 percent. KAZ Minerals Plc, a small copper miner in Kazakhstan, lost 25 percent.
  • EU Spars Over Refugees as OECD Predicts Years-Long Influx. (video) European leaders sparred over border management and the sheltering of refugees, as a study predicted an unabated influx of people fleeing persecution and poverty. Southeast European states continued to object to mandatory quotas for spreading 120,000 refugees around the continent, setting up testy meetings in Brussels of national ministers on Tuesday and of European Union leaders on Wednesday. Those numbers were dwarfed by an Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development forecast that the tide of migrants into Europe will rise to 1 million in 2015 from 630,000 last year and will remain around that level for most of the decade.
  • Volkswagen emission scandal widens: 11 million cars affected. (video) Volkswagen could be facing a criminal investigation by the U.S. Department of Justice and further probes at home and abroad after admitting to cheating on emissions tests. Bloomberg's Hans Nichols reports on "Countdown." Bloomberg.
  • Islamic State Threatens Cyber-Attack Against U.K., SITE Says. Islamic State threatened to carry out a cyber-attack against the U.K. on Wednesday, according to SITE Intel Group, which monitors jihadist social media. The group made its threat in a video posted on the Internet that opens with images of militants picking up long knives as they forced a group of Western hostages to march forward and kneel in the dirt. The video goes on to make the cyber-attack threat.  
  • In Top-Secret Brazil Vaults, Diamonds Are Evidence of a Downturn. Scattered across southern Brazil, three clandestine buildings brimming with gold and diamonds are a testament to the nation’s troubled times. Business at the government-run pawnshops that feed the secret vaults is booming as Brazil’s economy is forecast to contract this year and next, its longest recession in eight decades. The pawnshops -- different from U.S. storefronts that hawk everything from used guitars to leather jackets -- are operated exclusively by state-owned bank Caixa Economica Federal and take mainly rare stones and jewelry.
  • Brazilian Real Drops to Record Low Against U.S. Dollar. Brazil’s real fell to its lowest level since its introduction two decades ago and stocks dropped a fourth day on concern that President Dilma Rousseff won’t be able to shore up the country’s budget and avoid further credit-rating cuts. The currency sank to as low as 4.0519 per dollar, the weakest intraday level since it was created in 1994, and traded 1.6 percent lower as of 11:56 a.m. in Sao Paulo. The MSCI Brazil Index of stocks dropped 4 percent to a three-month low, led by a rout in companies that depend on consumer demand.
  • Dollar Climbs as Fed Speakers Revive 2015 Rate-Rise Speculation. The dollar reached its strongest level in almost two weeks against the euro after Federal Reserve officials said the U.S. economy is strong enough to withstand an interest-rate increase this year. The greenback climbed versus all but two of its 16 major peers. Futures traders saw 47 percent odds of a Fed move in December, up from 44 percent on Sept. 17. Fed Bank of Atlanta President Dennis Lockhart said he remains confident the U.S. will tighten policy this year, even as recent market volatility raised risks to the economic and inflation outlook. European Central Bank Executive Board member Peter Praet said in Geneva on Monday that policy makers “would forcefully react” if the ECB’s inflation goal is at risk.  
  • Europe Stocks Slide as Carmakers Head for Biggest Drop Since '11. Volkswagen AG’s unfolding emission-test scandal and worries about global growth weighed on investor sentiment in Europe, sending the region’s stocks lower. Volkswagen tumbled 20 percent, dragging a measure of carmakers to its biggest two-day slump since 2008, after saying irregularities on diesel-output readings extend to 11 million vehicles around the world, and it has set aside 6.5 billion euros ($7.3 billion) in an initial tally of the costs. Shares have lost 35 percent since its admission of cheating on U.S. air-pollution tests. PSA Peugeot Citroen SA fell 8.8 percent after France’s finance minister called for a European investigation of the industry. “The extremely negative thing about it is that you cannot quantify the overall costs and penalties for VW that will occur,” said Matthias Jasper, head of equities at WGZ Bank in Dusseldorf. “It may take years to come and people are getting really nervous about it. I’m completely unable to give a time horizon when this may end; it’s a pretty scary picture. This is also the reason why even long-term oriented investors are dumping the shares.” The Stoxx Europe 600 Index dropped 3.1 percent to 346.67 at the close of trading, its lowest since Aug. 24.
  • Copper Leads Metals Slump as Zinc Falls to Lowest in Five Years. Copper led losses in industrial metals and zinc fell to a five-year low on concern that a weakening economy will reduce demand in China, the world’s biggest metals user. The Asian Development Bank cut its growth forecasts for China, and said ebbing consumption of raw materials in the nation would hurt commodity-focused exporters like Mongolia and Indonesia. Production will exceed demand by 598,000 tons by 2017, double the surplus this year, and prices are expected to decline, Nomura Holdings Inc. said in a report dated Monday. Copper for delivery in three months dropped 3.6 percent to settle at $5,078 a metric ton ($2.30 a pound) at 5:51 p.m in London, after touching $5,036, the lowest since Aug. 27. Zinc fell as much as 2.1 percent to the lowest since June 2010. Aluminum, nickel, lead and tin also fell.
  • Burned by Oil Trade, Debt Investors Think Twice This Time Around. When banks began to scale back financing for energy companies earlier this year amid the slump in oil prices, some of Wall Street’s savviest asset managers sought to capitalize by lending at high rates. That didn’t work out so well, as crude continued to plunge and lenders were stuck with losing positions. Now, banks are again contemplating credit cuts. But this time hedge funds and private-equity firms are showing more reluctance to step in. “Those so-called lenders of last resort are not out there this time around,” said John Castellano, a managing director at the consulting firm AlixPartners LLP who focuses on advising energy companies. “Many were burned and are staying away.”  
  • European Coal Prices Slump to a Record Low. European coal for 2016 dropped below $50 a metric ton for the first time amid slumping demand from China, the biggest consumer. Prices have declined 26 percent so far in 2015, heading for a fifth straight year of drops in the benchmark year-ahead contract, according to broker data compiled by Bloomberg. The slump came as lackluster global demand with diminished prospects for growth, including a 35 percent drop in Chinese coal imports from January to July, combined with plenty of available low-cost supply, according to Societe Generale SA.
  • The Surprisingly Big Market for Sand Just Collapsed. In New Auburn, Wisconsin, a desolate, little outpost carved from the rolling pine-tree forests that run into Lake Superior, the collapse in oil is wreaking havoc on every aspect of the economy. It’s not that there’s any oil here. None in fact for hundreds of miles around. What they’ve got is sand. Real good sand, piled high in giant mounds. 
  • Chart-Watchers Zero In on More Warning Signals for U.S. Equities. (video) Equity investors rattled by last month’s correction, the prospects for the global economy and the Federal Reserve’s interest rate policy can add a few more reasons to worry. Several technical charts are sounding warning signals that the worst of equities turmoil may not be over. So is the market headed toward another selloff? It may depend on how much stock you put into such omens. The latest signals come after Wall Street early last month was fixated on another chart -- the “death cross,” in which the 50-day moving average of the Dow Jones Industrial Average fell below the 200-day average. The two lines crossed on Aug. 11, and less than two weeks later the gauge dropped 10 percent in four days for its first correction since 2011. With that in mind, here’s what the chartists are seeing in the latest batch of data: 
  • Goldman(GS) Chief Blankfein Discloses Curable Lymphoma Disease. Lloyd Blankfein, chief executive officer of Goldman Sachs Group Inc., said he has a “highly curable” form of lymphoma and will undergo chemotherapy over the next several months. “My doctors have advised me that during the treatment, I will be able to work substantially as normal, leading the firm,” Blankfein, 61, said Tuesday in a statement. “My doctors’ and my own expectation is that I will be cured.”
Wall Street Journal:
CNBC:
  • Look out below—where stocks could bottom: Paulsen. (video) Stocks appear vulnerable to test and maybe even break the lows seen toward the end of August, closely followed market watcher Jim Paulsen said Tuesday, as the Dow Jones industrial average plunged about 200 points on the open. "I think at a minimum we go challenge the old lows we had set on the initial crash," the chief investment strategist at Wells Capital Management told CNBC, referring to Aug. 25 when the Dow sunk to 15,666 and the S&P 500 fell to 1,867. "My best guess is we break those maybe and head down towards 1,800-ish [on the S&P] or that level before we finally scare everyone entirely, and maybe finally find a bottom in this correction," Paulsen said on "Squawk Box." The S&P at 1,800 would represent a nearly 8.5 percent drop from where the index closed Monday at 1,966.
Business Insider:
Financial Times:
  • Canada’s troubles are also the Fed’s. The US does not directly trade significantly with China. But it does trade heavily with neighbours Canada and Mexico (which are more prominent in Steinberg’s cover than those faraway countries). As Ms Yellen implied, if China’s economic slowdown hurts America’s neighbours, then it hurts the US.
Telegraph:
Xinhua:
  • China to use less power in 2015. China's electricity consumption, a key indicator of economic activity, is expected to climb 2 percent this year from 2014, the slowest pace in 17 years, an official said on Tuesday. The slowdown is related to China's economic slowdown, as well as the rapid growth of power demand in past years, Wang Zhixuan, secretary-general of China Electricity Council, told Tuesday's Economic Information Daily. China's power use grew 11.9 percent in 2011, 5.6 percent in 2012, 7.5 percent in 2013 and 3.8 percent in 2014. In the first half of 2015, power use rose only 1.3 percent.

Bear Radar

Style Underperformer:
  • Small-Cap Growth -2.13%
Sector Underperformers:
  • 1) Coal -8.51% 2) Homebuilders -3.78% 3) Biotech -3.35%
Stocks Falling on Unusual Volume:
  • IBB, LAKE, ST, BPMC, THO, HZNP, KMX, RTRX, HQY, SJM, TEN, AGU, DPLO, BWA, RHT, WBMD, ANIP, IHG, CCL, NRG, AGTC, MRTX, POT, FCAM, FCAU, CAG, TSCO, LRCX, KBH, SJM, AEIS, BMRN, ZAYO, ALSN, CLVS, WGO, VRTX, SWFT, CAG, THO, MOS, NRG, SPLS, DYN and ANIP
Stocks With Unusual Put Option Activity:
  • 1) AMD 2) X 3) MOS 4) FFIV 5) ATML
Stocks With Most Negative News Mentions:
  • 1) FFIV 2) MOS 3) CMI 4) MDC 5) BIIB
Charts:

Bull Radar

Style Outperformer:
  • Small-Cap Value -1.61%
Sector Outperformers:
  • 1) Hospitals -.61% 2) Oil Service -.63% 3) HMOs -.82%
Stocks Rising on Unusual Volume:
  • BIS
Stocks With Unusual Call Option Activity:
  • 1) ODP 2) HZNP 3) SLH 4) SO 5) DUST
Stocks With Most Positive News Mentions:
  • 1) JACK 2) WFT 3) AZO 4) FENX 5) GCO
Charts:

Morning Market Internals

NYSE Composite Index: