Friday, January 29, 2010

Today's Headlines

Bloomberg:

- Greece’s economic woes will “spook” the derivatives market because of concern the nation’s banks may struggle to honor their credit-default swap trades, according to BNP Paribas SA. Asset quality at the country’s lenders will deteriorate as the economy slows, forcing them to mark down about 40 billion euros ($56 billion) of government bond holdings, analyst Olivia Frieser wrote in a note to clients today. Funding costs are also rising as the European Central Bank tightens its lending criteria, Frieser wrote. “What will spook the markets is CDS counterparty risk, our understanding is that Greek banks were active CDS players, and there is no way of finding out about these particular exposures,” the London-based analyst wrote. “As long as Greek sovereign and bank spreads remain under pressure, this will weigh on the wider European banking sector.” The country’s new 8 billion euros of five-year bonds sold on Jan. 26 have tumbled. The spread on the notes, due August 2015, has widened to 445 basis points over similar-maturity German government notes, according to Bank of Greece prices on Bloomberg. They were issued at a spread of 380 basis points. “The post-issue performance of the bond looks like a horror scenario to any government bond investor,” Tim Brunne, a strategist at UniCredit SpA in Munich wrote in a note to investors today. The French banks that have the largest Greek businesses are Credit Agricole SA, which owns Emporiki Bank of Greece SA, and Societe Generale SA, which has stakes in Geniki Bank SA and Hellas Finance, according to Frieser. Investor concerns about Greece are spreading to nations including Portugal and Spain, which must both tame budget deficits. Claims of foreign banks, led by German lenders, on Spain represent 3.8 times those against Greece, meaning “the Spanish sovereign is indeed more important” than Greece, Frieser wrote. German banks’ claims against Spain are $240 billion, with French banks at $196 billion, BNP said. Credit Agricole owns about 19 percent of Madrid-based Bankinter SA, according to Frieser.

- Corporate bond sales in Europe slumped by almost half this week amid investor concern that ballooning budget deficits for Greece and other nations in the region will stifle economic growth. Alstom SA, the world’s second-largest train maker, and Fortis Bank Nederland NV led 7 billion euros ($10 billion) of issuance this week, down from 13 billion euros in the previous period, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. Investment- grade companies sold 81 billion euros of debt this month, a 43 percent drop from a year earlier. “The markets are so volatile due to sovereign-related concerns that there’s hardly any issuance from the corporate market,” said Puneet Sharma, the London-based head of European credit strategy at Barclays Capital.

- Commodities headed for the biggest monthly drop in 13 months on concern that demand may wane as governments seek to control economic growth. The Standard & Poor’s GSCI Index of 24 raw materials is down 6.2 percent this month, the most since December 2008, led by slides of 16 percent for zinc and 14 percent for lead. Copper has lost 6.6 percent this month, also the most in 13 months, and crude oil is down 6.8 percent, the first decline since July. Investors poured a record $92 billion into commodities last year, Barclays Capital estimates. “The optimism that led into 2010 has dried up very quickly,” said Jonathan Barratt, managing director at Commodity Broking Services Pty in Sydney. “Economies have been running off stimulus packages, not off genuine demand.” “China’s got very high copper stockpiles right now,” Charles Kernot, a mining analyst at Evolution Securities Ltd., said today by phone. “One would have to question how much more buying one can expect from them.” Commodities also have declined as the dollar strengthened, curbing investment demand for raw materials as an alternative asset. The U.S. Dollar Index, a six-currency gauge of the greenback’s strength, has added 1.4 percent this month after gaining 3 percent in December. “Speculators are still liquidating gold, with no physical buying in sight,” Andrey Kryuchenkov, an analyst at VTB Capital in London, said today in a report.

- Legislation to rein in the $605 trillion over-the-counter derivatives market contains exemptions that would leave most of the market unregulated, Commodity Futures Trading Commission Chairman Gary Gensler said. Proposals in Congress do little to curb customized contracts while exempting about 60% of standardized transactions that had been delivered today to the American Bar Association’s annual meeting of commodities lawyers in Palm Beach, Florida.

- President Barack Obama’s efforts to bolster the U.S. housing market, the trigger of the worst recession since the 1930s, may be undone by record unemployment and repossessions by lenders. Foreclosures probably will reach 3 million this year, surpassing the record of 2.82 million in 2009, according to Irvine, California-based RealtyTrac Inc. That would more than offset an estimated 448,000-unit rise in home sales, based on the average forecast of the National Association of Realtors, the Mortgage Bankers Association and Fannie Mae. The housing industry remains a challenge for Obama as he enters his second year of office and government assistance programs near expiration.

- When President Barack Obama challenged lawmakers this week to “let me know” if they had a better idea how to overhaul U.S. health care, several Republicans shot up their hands. Obama asked his opponents during his Jan. 27 State of the Union address to come up with an “approach that will bring down premiums, bring down the deficit, cover the uninsured” and bolster Medicare. Republicans, almost universally opposed to Obama’s plan, say they have less-costly ways of reaching many of those goals and have been advocating them for months. “That’s exactly what the Republican health-care proposal does, much more so than the proposal that he and Democrat leaders are trying to shove down the throats of the American people,” House Republican Leader John Boehner of Ohio told reporters yesterday. The Republican ideas, more limited in scope than the roughly $900 billion medical-system revamp the Democrats seek, may have a bigger role in defining party differences this election year than in crafting a compromise on the health bill. That’s because the gap between the two approaches is so wide. A plan Boehner pushed in November would expand coverage to just 3 million uninsured Americans, compared with more than 30 million in bills passed in the Democratic-controlled House and Senate, according to the nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office. It would cost $61 billion over 10 years. It doesn’t require Americans to obtain insurance. And it spans 219 pages -- compared with the House bill, which runs to about 2,000. Even with their legislation at an impasse, Democratic leaders would likely adopt only a handful of Republican proposals if they wanted to pick up support for a final bill, said John Fortier, a scholar at the American Enterprise Institute in Washington. One possibility, he said, would be imposing limits on medical malpractice awards. Republicans say they want an incremental approach, emphasizing preventive care, affordability and greater access to insurance. “Rather than creating a government-centered bureaucracy, what you want to do is drive down those costs,” said Senator Tom Coburn of Oklahoma. Legislation introduced in May by Coburn and Senator Richard Burr of North Carolina and Representatives Paul Ryan of Wisconsin and Devin Nunes of California, all Republicans, features tax credits to help people obtain insurance. The plan would end the current tax benefit for employer- sponsored plans and shift responsibility for coverage to individuals, who would get a tax credit of $2,300 to buy insurance. Families would get $5,700. It would encourage states to create exchanges where people would shop for coverage and let states band together to ease administrative costs and diversify pooling. It would limit medical-liability lawsuits by setting up state panels to review cases and make judgments. While there’s no requirement that individuals buy coverage or that companies provide it, states would set up “auto- enrollment” options at workplaces, medical centers and other sites. Boehner’s alternative, which would let business groups pool resources to purchase coverage and allow insurance to be bought across state lines, was rejected, 258-176, on Nov. 7 before the House approved the Democratic legislation.

- Taxing equity trades may reduce U.S. stock market volume by 90 percent, Interactive Brokers Group Inc. Chief Executive Officer Thomas Peterffy said. A transaction tax was first discussed in February and revived in December, when Iowa Senator Tom Harkin and Oregon Representative Peter DeFazio said it is the “most painless way” to fund the government’s deficit and curb speculation. French President Nicolas Sarkozy said Jan. 27 that a European debate on the subject is unavoidable. “The mother of all creators of havoc on Wall Street is this looming transaction tax,” said Peterffy, who is also president of the brokerage and automated market-making company, in an interview yesterday. Interactive Brokers is based in Greenwich, Connecticut. “Trading volumes would plunge by about 90 percent, markets would become illiquid and tens of thousands of people would lose their jobs.” Sending a fee to the government for every transaction would hurt asset managers, brokerages and so-called high-frequency traders, a group that accounts for 61 percent of volume, according to New York-based research firm Tabb Group LLC. Interactive Brokers handles about one-seventh of U.S. options that change hands.

- Japan’s housing starts fell to the lowest level since the nation celebrated its postwar recovery by hosting the Olympics in 1964, as builders were hobbled by dwindling household incomes and sustained deflation. Construction companies broke ground on 788,410 homes last year, 27.9 percent fewer than in 2008, the Land Ministry said today in Tokyo. That was the lowest since 751,429 recorded in 1964.

- China’s central bank said rising inflation will complicate management of the world’s third- largest economy in 2010 after record lending sparked a jump in property prices and added to overcapacity in some industries. The government will ensure “balanced” lending and continue fiscal stimulus as policy makers seek to cement a recovery that started last year, the People’s Bank of China said in a report on its Web site today. “Inflation may spiral if monetary policy isn’t proactive,” said Liu Li-Gang, an economist with Australia & New Zealand Banking Group Ltd. in Hong Kong. “It’s a major risk facing the economy this year,” Liu said, adding consumer prices may rise 6.7 percent this year if left unchecked. The central bank cautioned today that the trade environment is “deteriorating” because of a weak global recovery and intensifying protectionism. “Inflation is gaining pace and the sooner the central bank raises interest rates, the easier it will be for them to manage inflation expectations,” said Xing Ziqiang, an economist at China International Capital Corp. in Beijing. Xing expects consumer prices to rise 1.8 percent this month from a year earlier, peaking at 4.5 percent mid-year.

- Russia urged China to dump its Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac bonds in 2008 in a bid to force a bailout of the largest U.S. mortgage-finance companies, former Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson said. The Russians made a “top-level approach” to the Chinese “that together they might sell big chunks of their GSE holdings to force the U.S. to use its emergency authorities to prop up these companies,” Paulson said, referring to the acronym for government sponsored entities. The Chinese declined, he said.

- Russian stocks risk a “temporary correction” as commodity prices fall on concern China will increase interest rates, Goldman Sachs Group Inc.(GS)d. “We see this as no more than a temporary correction, yet we would recommend tactically to diversify with a more defensive exposure,” strategists led by Moscow-based Sergei Arsenyev wrote in a research report. Russia is unlikely to outperform in the “very short term,” he wrote.

- U.S. legislation to impose gasoline sanctions on Iran over its disputed nuclear program won’t succeed in halting fuel supplies, an Oil Ministry official said. “If for any reason any refinery or trader would stop working with us, we can refer to other refineries and traders and receive the amount of gasoline needed,” said Hojatollah Ghanimifard, vice president for investment affairs at the National Iranian Oil Co.


Wall Street Journal:

- Delinquencies in general continued to rise in December among home loans made between 2004 and 2007, said Standard & Poor's Ratings Services, and especially for prime-rated jumbo and subprime loans.

- Google Inc.(GOOG) Chief Executive Eric Schmidt Friday defended his company's recent decision to stop obeying government censorship rules on its Chinese search site. We like what China is doing in terms of growth...we just don't like censorship," Mr. Schmidt said, speaking at the World Economic Forum annual summit. "We hope that will change and we can apply some pressure to make things better for the Chinese people," he said.

- Al Qaeda leader Osama bin Laden has called for the world to boycott American goods and the dollar, blaming the U.S. and other industrialized countries for global warming, according to a new audiotape released Friday. In the tape, broadcast in part on Al Jazeera television, Mr. bin Laden warned of the dangers of climate change and said the way to stop it is to bring "the wheels of the American economy" to a halt. He blamed Western industrialized nations for hunger, desertification and floods across the globe, and called for "drastic solutions" to global warming instead of "solutions that partially reduce the effect of climate change."

- AutoNation Inc. Chairman and Chief Executive Officer Mike Jackson, America’s No. 1 car salesman, has a few things to say about the government’s approach to “green cars.” Many Americans believe they can cut their reliance on foreign oil and still have cheap gasoline. “These are mutually exclusive concepts,” Jackson said in a speech Thursday to a gathering of federal regulators, electric vehicle advocates and others at the Washington Auto Show. The government wants auto makers to sell car and truck fleets that average 35 miles per gallon when gasoline is under $3 a gallon, which is like telling a shop owner who sells donuts and broccoli “you have to sell 50% broccoli — and we’re reducing the price of donuts,” he said. The government’s effort to promote 85% ethanol as an alternative to gasoline? “It’s a joke,” he said. Electric cars? “The cost is completely out of whack.” Jackson’s goal in being impolitic is to persuade the Obama administration and Congress that America needs to gradually phase in higher gas taxes to spur demand for the green vehicles Washington wants. To make higher pump prices palatable, the government could give consumers their money back at the end of the year, he said. It’s a proposal he makes often, and to little avail. Jackson’s worry is that without higher gas prices AutoNation will get stuck trying to move fleets of cars with expensive fuel-saving technology that customers don’t want. “It’s going to be a train wreck,” he said.

- Lenny Dykstra’s California mansion, a palatial estate once owned by hockey legend Wayne Gretzky, is on the market for $14.9 million. Dykstra, a former baseball player-turned-financial whiz, is now in bankruptcy, and the trustee overseeing his Chapter 7 case is selling off his personal belongings and real estate for the benefit of his creditors.


CNBC:

- The U.S. economy grew at a faster-than-expected 5.7 percent pace in the fourth quarter, the quickest in more than six years, as businesses made less-aggressive cuts to inventories and stepped up spending.

- A senior U.S. Federal Reserve official warned Friday that the uncertain path of interest rates poses risks for banks inattentive to the match of durations among their assets and liabilities.


NY Times:

- Where Clinton Turned Right, Obama Plowed Ahead. When President Bill Clinton faced a Republican uprising and a nation that turned deeply skeptical about his agenda, he used the 1996 State of the Union address to declare that “the era of big government is over.” That move to the middle — arguably more rhetoric than reality — stopped Newt Gingrich’s Republican Revolution in its tracks. So why did President Barack Obama go a different route on Wednesday night, giving little ground and declaring that the problem was not his agenda but a deficit of trust in government and of pragmatism?


NY Post:

- Call them the friends of Lloyd Blankfein. Months before the government negotiated a cushy deal in which the hobbled American International Group(AIG) paid several banks top dollar for esoteric securities that had collapsed in value, a top AIG official got himself a sweet deal on a mortgage from Blankfein's firm, Goldman Sachs(GS). Rodney O. Martin, chief operating officer of AIG's life insurance unit, and his wife, Deborah, got a 30-year, $4 million loan from Goldman's bank to buy an apartment at 15 Central Park West, which Blankfein calls home. Under the terms of the mortgage, the Martins were charged a 4.8 percent interest rate, and were required to make interest-only payments for the first 10 years. The interest rate was about two percentage points less than the average rate at the time. The loan came just before several banks, including Goldman, received billions from AIG to settle derivatives contracts under a plan sanctioned by the Federal Reserve Bank of New York. The revelations of the payments, including Goldman's $13 billion payday, were kept quiet until the end of 2008, when they triggered a public outcry because billions in taxpayer funds had already been shelled out to prevent AIG from collapsing. The news about the Martins' mortgage deal, which was first reported by Gawker.com, is likely to raise fresh questions about AIG's payments to Goldman, and whether the mortgage is somehow connected to those payments.


The Business Insider:

- The China housing bubble isn't just for major cities.The southern tropical island of Hainan, previously known for beauty pagents and prostitution, was set on fire by speculation that the government was developing an international tourist resort, according to China Daily.

- Such is the perilous state of Toyota's reputation right now that even its most loyal Japanese fans are beginning to question the company's quality:


Detroit Free Press:

- The Christmas Day bombing attempt aboard Northwest Flight 253 touched off a series of blunders that deprived emergency ground crews of critical information and exposed travelers in the McNamara Terminal to danger if another bomb or accomplice had been on board, according to aviation experts and records obtained by the Free Press. The flight from Amsterdam, Netherlands, with nearly 300 people aboard, taxied right to Gate A24 instead of going to an isolated area where baggage and passengers could be screened for explosives -- a move several terrorism security experts called highly inappropriate. Despite crew and passengers having subdued a suspect who tried to ignite explosives in his underwear, Northwest pilots radioed air traffic control only about a disturbance -- a man with firecrackers, records show. Airport police and fire report obtained by the Free Press also show:

The Detroit News:

- The United Auto Workers said Thursday it would not drop a grievance against Ford Motor Co. about restoring merit pay increases and retirement fund contributions for salaried workers, despite having profit-sharing restored for union workers. "They're two separate issues," said UAW Vice President Bob King, head of the union's national Ford division. "We gave up a long laundry list of benefits. None of that is being restored." Ford stood by its decision. "We agree that they're not linked," said Ford spokesman Mark Truby. "But we don't believe that we violated the contract."


LATimes:

- Talk about a party-pooper: California's wine industry saw its shipments fall in 2009 -- for the first time in 16 years.


Rassmussen:

- The Rasmussen Reports daily Presidential Tracking Poll for Friday shows that 25% of the nation's voters Strongly Approve of the way that Barack Obama is performing his role as President. Forty-two percent (42%) Strongly Disapprove giving Obama a Presidential Approval Index rating of -17 (see trends).


Politico:

- Nearly 100 allegations of senatorial misconduct were made in 2009, and 13 preliminary investigations over potential breaches of Senate ethics rules were launched, according to a report issued Friday by the Senate Select Committee on Ethics. The committee says after it launched the preliminary inquiries, it dismissed eight of the ethics complaints, and issued one letter of admonition, suggesting that the secretive panel is now investigating four separate incidents involving members of the Senate or their staff. The committee, which is evenly divided between three Republicans and three Democrats and chaired by Sen. Barbara Boxer (D-Calif.), released Friday’s annual report to comply with a requirement under a 2007 transparency law.


CNN:

- Saudi’s Al-Jasser Says Dollar Peg Has Worked Well. (video)


zerohedge:

- Pensions Look to Leverage Up? The problem with this strategy is what happens when all the pension parrots start doing it? Who is overseeing systemic risk of public pension funds investing in hedge funds, private equity, and now leveraging their fixed income portfolios? I hope someone at the Fed is also "thinking through all ramifications" of this strategy because before you know it, leverage in bonds is about to grow exponentially, posing a new set of macro risks for the global financial system.


Reuters:

- Sovereign credit risk has grown most sharply for Greece, Portugal and France since September because of investor sales of various government debt, according to a report by Credit Derivatives Research on Friday.


Il Sole 24 Ore:

- Governments in the Euro region are ready to bail out Greece, as the country struggles to tackle the European Union’s biggest budget deficit, citing “European sources.” The bailout plan may be implemented by June. There may be risks for the euro without external help to Greece.


Business Recorder:

- Beep, beep! Beep, beep! The insurance premium on Pakistan’s sovereign bond has suddenly started blinking on the screens of international and local bond watchers. According to CMA - a London-based credit information provider - Pakistan was fourth on the list of high default probabilities, a level unachieved in many months. Fancily called the Credit Default Swap (CDS), the premium shot up by more than 70 basis points in a matter of two days, from 763.26 bps on Tuesday to 835.20 bps on Thursdays early trade. The move, which comes after seven months of virtually stagnant behavior, reflects changing investor perceptions about Pakistan’s economy. Is it corruption, political bickering or sub-optimal efforts to curb terrorism? One can be too sure as it is hard to assign weight to each argument. But whatever the reason maybe, foreign investors are showing signs of being short on Pakistan - which means that something is cooking.

Bear Radar

Style Underperformer:
Large-Cap Growth (-.81%)

Sector Underperformers:
Disk Drives (-5.0%), Coal (-4.84%) and Computer Hardware (-3.58%)

Stocks Falling on Unusual Volume:

TSRA, PEGA, CY, SWC, QSII, AAPL, THRX, IDXX, DLLR, UBS, CPSI, EDMC, THRX, QCOM, SNDK, MSFT, ISCA, TSRA, HUBG, MXIM, DLLR, CTXS, STX, FMCN, KLAC, OPLK, CYMI, PUK, ARG, OFG, BSY, FII, NWL, WL, AVY and LZ


Stocks With Unusual Put Option Activity:
1) MBI 2) MOT 3) GCI 4) VMC 5) PCU

Bull Radar

Style Outperformer:
Small-Cap Value (+.43%)

Sector Outperformers:
Oil Service (+1.51%), Retail (+1.38%) and Steel (+1.07%)

Stocks Rising on Unusual Volume:
MDR, FTI, NFX, CETV, WMT, TWX, COHR, VSEA, EPAY, WBSN, TTEK, COLM, ACXM, ABAX, ARBA, THOR, DRIV, AMZN, VPRT, CYBS, SCSC, ASIA, NFLX, LCAPA, MEOH, EPAY, ALGN, CYOU, LFL, RDK, ALV, IBN and CYT


Stocks With Unusual Call Option Activity:
1) USU 2) SIRI 3) HNZ 4) STJ 5) TSM

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Friday Watch

Late-Night Headlines
Bloomberg:

- House Speaker Nancy Pelosi signaled a readiness to use to a parliamentary maneuver to circumvent Republican opposition in the Senate to passing health-care legislation, providing House Democrats can revise the bill. Using the so-called budget-reconciliation process would enable Senate Democrats to approve legislation with a simple 51- vote majority instead of the 60-vote threshold leaders need to override Republican efforts to block the legislation. “We must pass health-care reform,” Pelosi told reporters. Under the plan being considered by lawmakers, the House would pass legislation the Senate approved on Dec. 24, so it wouldn’t have to go back to the Senate for another vote. The two chambers would also pass a separate reconciliation measure containing changes to the bill that could be approved by a majority, as long as the revisions relate to spending and taxes. House and Senate Democrats have been at an impasse over the legislation, differing on issues from federal funding for abortion to how to pay for the most-sweeping changes to the nation’s medical system in four decades. President Barack Obama’s appeal last night to pass the legislation in his State of the Union address “was a very powerful statement that will be helpful to us,” said Pelosi, a California Democrat. Congress could pass other items overhauling health care “on the side” as additional pieces of legislation “which may not fit into a bigger plan,” Pelosi said. “That does not mean it’s a substitute for doing a comprehensive” measure, she said. “We will move on any front we can,” she said. Asked whether budget reconciliation is the most viable way for Congress to “tweak” the Senate legislation, Pelosi said: “We are not talking about minor tweaks.” “We’re going to move forward on health care,” Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid told reporters. “The question is at this stage, procedurally, how do we get where we need to go?”

- American International Group Inc.(AIG), the bailed-out insurer whose borrowing through a U.S. commercial paper program was set to expire this month, increased its draw on a Federal Reserve credit line by the most since October. AIG owes $25.8 billion on the line, about $2.4 billion more than last week, according to Fed data released today. The draw has increased for six straight weeks. The company said in November that it may borrow additional funds from its five-year Fed credit line to make payments on maturing commercial paper. “This helps to highlight the risks we’re exposed to as citizens standing behind AIG,” said Bill Bergman, an analyst at Morningstar Inc. in Chicago.

- Treasury Secretary Timothy F. Geithner was “simply not doing his job” in his last weeks as president of the Federal Reserve Bank of New York, Representative Darrell Issa said today. By withdrawing from day-to-day matters at the New York Fed in late November of 2008 without formalizing the arrangement in a signed document, Geithner left it unclear who was in charge, Issa said in a Bloomberg Radio interview. “We are saddened by that,” said Issa, a California Republican. “If there had been a notice of recusal, people would have looked to the vice president of the Fed and would have looked to him every day.” Geithner helped oversee the September 2008 bailout of American International Group Inc. and authorized the payment of billions of dollars to the insurer’s trading partners. Lawmakers are investigating the New York Fed’s attempts to limit disclosure about the payments, and Geithner told a House panel yesterday that he knew nothing about those efforts because he withdrew after his Nov. 24, 2008, nomination to Treasury. “In retrospect, I wish I’d known, frankly,” Geithner said yesterday. “But after Nov. 24, I appropriately removed myself from decisions about a whole range of policy issues and the Fed was dealing with that.” He took the Treasury post in January of last year. Issa, the ranking Republican on the House Oversight and Government Reform Committee, has called the rescue of AIG, which swelled to $182.3 billion, a “backdoor bailout” of financial firms because banks were fully reimbursed for contracts they had with the insurer backing mortgage-linked investments. The hearing yesterday was called after Issa released e- mails earlier this month that indicated the New York Fed asked AIG to keep data from the public about the bank payments. As AIG headed toward reporting the biggest loss in U.S. corporate history, financial firms including Goldman Sachs Group Inc. and France’s Societe Generale SA were made whole on $62.1 billion in declining real-estate linked assets.

- The idea of secret banking cabals that control the country and global economy are a given among conspiracy theorists who stockpile ammo, bottled water and peanut butter. After this week’s congressional hearing into the bailout of American International Group Inc., you have to wonder if those folks are crazy after all. Wednesday’s hearing described a secretive group deploying billions of dollars to favored banks, operating with little oversight by the public or elected officials. We’re talking about the Federal Reserve Bank of New York, whose role as the most influential part of the federal-reserve system -- apart from the matter of AIG’s bailout -- deserves further congressional scrutiny. The New York Fed is in the hot seat for its decision in November 2008 to buy out, for about $30 billion, insurance contracts AIG sold on toxic debt securities to banks, including Goldman Sachs Group Inc., Merrill Lynch & Co., Societe Generale and Deutsche Bank AG, among others. That decision, critics say, amounted to a back-door bailout for the banks, which received 100 cents on the dollar for contracts that would have been worth far less had AIG been allowed to fail. The hearing revealed some of the inner workings of the New York Fed and the outsized role it plays in banking. This insight is especially valuable given that the New York Fed is a quasi-governmental institution that isn’t subject to citizen intrusions such as freedom of information requests, unlike the Federal Reserve. This impenetrability comes in handy since the bank is the preferred vehicle for many of the Fed’s bailout programs. It’s as though the New York Fed was a black-ops outfit for the nation’s central bank. As Representative Marcy Kaptur told Geithner at the hearing: “A lot of people think that the president of the New York Fed works for the U.S. government. But in fact you work for the private banks that elected you.” And yet the New York Fed played an integral role in the government’s bailout of banks, often receiving surprisingly free rein to act as it saw fit. Consider AIG. Let’s take Geithner at his word that a failure to resolve the insurer’s default swaps would have led to financial Armageddon. Given the stakes, you might think Geithner would have coordinated actions with then-Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson. Yet Paulson testified that he wasn’t in the loop. “I had no involvement at all, in the payment to the counterparties, no involvement whatsoever,” Paulson said. Fed Chairman Bernanke also wasn’t involved. In a written response to questions from Representative Darrell Issa, Bernanke said he “was not directly involved in the negotiations” with AIG’s counterparty banks. You have to wonder then who really was in charge of our nation’s financial future if AIG posed as grave a threat as Geithner claimed. Questions about the New York Fed’s accountability grew after Geithner on Nov. 24, 2008, was named by then-President- elect Barack Obama to be Treasury Secretary. Geither said he recused himself from the bank’s day-to-day activities, even though he never actually signed a formal letter of recusal. That left issues related to disclosures about the deal in the hands of the bank’s lawyers and staff, rather than a top executive. Those staffers didn’t want details of the swaps purchase to become public. That the New York Fed, a quasi-governmental body, was able to push around the SEC, an executive-branch agency, deserves a congressional hearing all by itself. Later, when it became clear information would be disclosed, New York Fed legal group staffer James Bergin e-mailed colleagues saying: “I have to think this train is probably going to leave the station soon and we need to focus our efforts on explaining the story as best we can. There were too many people involved in the deals -- too many counterparties, too many lawyers and advisors, too many people from AIG -- to keep a determined Congress from the information.” Think of the enormity of that statement. A staffer at a body with little public accountability and that exists to serve bankers is lamenting the inability to keep Congress in the dark. When unelected and unaccountable agencies pick banking winners while trying to end-run Congress, even as taxpayers are forced to lend, spend and guarantee about $8 trillion to prop up the financial system, our collective blood should boil. (very good article)

- Emerging market equity funds posted the first net outflows in 12 weeks on concern that China will take further steps to curb inflation and the global economic recovery will slow, according to EPFR Global. Funds investing in developing-nation equities lost $608.5 million overall in the week ended Jan. 27, EPFR Managing Director Brad Durham said.

- Samsung Electronics Co., Asia’s biggest maker of semiconductors, flat screens and mobile phones, posted a profit from a year-earlier loss after prices increased and demand for televisions rose.

- The U.S. “takes seriously” a report that North Korea has detained a second American in the past month, a State Department spokesman said. North Korea is questioning a U.S. citizen who it said was caught trespassing over its border with China on Jan. 25, the official Korea Central News Agency said yesterday. The communist country last month said it detained an American, identified by U.S. officials as Robert Park, for illegally entering from China. “We’re operating on the assumption that it’s entirely possible that we have a second American citizen detained in North Korea in addition to Robert Park,” State Department spokesman Philip J. Crowley told reporters yesterday in Washington. “It’s obviously something we take seriously.”

- President Barack Obama will propose tripling loan guarantees for nuclear-power plants to more than $54 billion in his budget Feb. 1, according to two people familiar with the Energy Department plan. The loan guarantee is part of an effort to bolster nuclear- power production after Obama called for doing so in his State of the Union address yesterday. Tomorrow, the Energy Department plans to announce formation of a panel to find a solution to storing the waste generated by nuclear plants.


Wall Street Journal:

- Haiti Aid Efforts Go Awry in the 'Convoy to Nowhere'.

- Bank of New York Mellon Corp. is in final-stage discussions to acquire a unit of PNC Financial Services Group Inc. for close to $2.5 billion, said people familiar with the matter.

- Billionaire Ronald Burkle is angling to take a controlling stake in Barneys New York, people familiar with the situation said, a bet that the company and battered luxury retail sector have seen the worst of the recession.

- Corporations facing criminal prosecution could face reduced penalties if they meet standards for tackling white-collar crime at their companies, under changes proposed by the U.S. Sentencing Commission.


CNNMoney.com:

- Oil bigs to Obama: Get real. The CEO of Saudi Aramco, the national oil company of Saudi Arabia, lashed out at the Obama administration Thursday, lamenting the oversupply of “rhetoric” from major oil-consuming nations regarding energy independence. Without naming the U.S. president directly, Khalid Al Falih couldn’t have been clearer who he was referring to. He called pervasive talk from nations that want to wean themselves from an addiction to foreign oil, a common trope in U.S. environmental circles, “unachievable and misleading to the public.” Al Falih anchored an extraordinary collection of representatives of major oil producers at a morning session at the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland. Chaired by consultant and prizewinning author Daniel Yergin, the panel provided a heavy dose of reality into a debate often dominated in Western media and policy circles by a hopeful yearning for alternative energy. Some highlights:


Business Insider:

- CHART OF THE DAY: Google(GOOG) Revenues Reach $1.34 Million Per Employee.


Business Week:

- U.S. Recovery Depends on Jobs at Small Businesses. The latest job-market news is bleak. The U.S. unemployment rate in December stood at 9.7 percent, close to the highest level since April 1983. There are 15.3 million people out of work, with job seekers outnumbering job openings by more than 6-to-1. This labor-market horror story plays out on a daily basis in households across the U.S., with thousands of people joining the ranks of the unemployed and the number of new hires hitting historic lows. What can be done to turn the tide and get U.S. employers to create jobs and start hiring again? The answer lies in this country’s strongest job-creation engine: small business.


Politico:

- In the end, Thursday’s vote on Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke’s nomination to a second term proved a bit anticlimactic given the drama of the previous week. But while the Senate handily approved his nomination, 70-30, Bernanke still drew a record-breaking level of opposition, four years after he skated through the Senate. And the Obama administration can’t feel entirely relieved that its nominee survived the rocky debate, since the distress and anger that fueled such a surge in anti-Bernanke feeling are unlikely to dissipate anytime soon. Bernanke’s opponents Thursday were disappointed with the final tally but still claimed a victory of sorts in getting the administration’s attention.


Rasmussen Reports:

- The Rasmussen Reports daily Presidential Tracking Poll for Thursday shows that 25% of the nation's voters Strongly Approve of the way that Barack Obama is performing his role as President. Forty-two percent (42%) Strongly Disapprove giving Obama a Presidential Approval Index rating of -17 (see trends).


Real Clear Politics:

- Faux Contrition. Obama Blames the Public.


NYDailyNews.com:

- The White House ordered the Justice Department on Thursday night to consider other places to try the 9/11 terror suspects after a wave of opposition to holding the trial in lower Manhattan. The dramatic turnabout came hours after Mayor Bloomberg said he would "prefer that they did it elsewhere" and then spoke to Attorney General Eric Holder.


Washington Post:

- The United States pledged Thursday to cut its greenhouse gas emissions by 17 percent by 2020 from 2005 levels under an international climate agreement, though it made its commitment contingent on passing legislation at home. The Obama administration submitted its much-anticipated reduction target to the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change Secretariat under the Copenhagen Accord, a non-binding deal brokered by the United States last month at the U.N.-sponsored climate talks. Under the deal President Obama helped secure in Copenhagen, major emitters of greenhouse gases are expected to "inscribe" their reduction targets by Jan. 31. The commitment states that the United States will cut its emissions "in the range of 17 percent, in conformity with anticipated U.S. energy and climate legislation, recognizing that the final target will be reported to the Secretariat in light of enacted legislation." It remains unclear if Congress will pass a comprehensive climate bill this year.


Morningstar:

- Vanguard has taken another step toward offering an "absolute return" fund, more than two years after Morningstar first reported that the family was experimenting with a hedge fund.


SeekingAlpha:

- The law of supply and demand is killing the secondary hedge fund market. Prices paid for hedge funds on the secondary market fell to an all-time low in December, with sellers getting less than 80 cents on the dollar, according to Hedgebay Trading Corp., the largest secondary hedge fund market provider. The firm said that investors seeking to dump illiquid assets were responsible for the decline; in November, buyers were paying more than 86% of net asset value on the secondary market.

AP:

- FACT CHECK: Obama and a toothless commission.


OpenSecrets.org:

- JP Morgan Chase & Co(JPM) is one of the nation’s leading financial services firms, offering commercial and consumer banking and credit services, securities brokerage and financial consulting. Like the rest of the finance sector, the company hit hard financial times in 2008 and received billions of dollars in taxpayer money to re-gain its footing. Through its subsidiary Chase Bank, the company has traditionally been one of the top consumer credit card issuers in the country. As expected, the firm has lobbied heavily on legislation that would affect the nation’s financial industry, including bankruptcy reform and banking deregulation. In 2002, federal investigators launched a probe into the firm’s relationship with former energy giant Enron. Prior to the energy firm’s collapse, JP Morgan Chase had been one of the company’s largest financial backers.


Reuters:

- The narrowest measure of Japan's consumer inflation fell at the fastest pace on record in December, opening the door for more government pressure on the Bank of Japan to fight deflation and support the economy. Finance Minister Naoto Kan will likely call for the BOJ and the government to work together when he addresses parliament later on Friday. Prime Minister Yukio Hatoyama is also due to deliver a policy speech. The so-called "core-core" consumer price index, which strips out the effect of volatile food and energy costs, fell 1.2 percent last month from a year earlier after a 1.0 percent drop in November, data showed. It was the biggest since drop since the series began in 1970 and will likely worry policymakers who fear a return to recession ahead of elections in the summer.

- U.S. flash memory maker SanDisk Corp (SNDK) posted better-than-expected results, but shares sank after the company issued an outlook that failed to meet investors' expectations.

- Network equipment maker Juniper Networks (JNPR) reported surprisingly strong quarterly results, as customers like AT&T Inc (T) boosted infrastructure spending after a year of budget cuts. Juniper also forecast further improvement throughout 2010 and gave an outlook for the current quarter that was on the stronger side of analysts' forecasts.

- Amazon.com Inc (AMZN) blew past Wall Street profit estimates in its closely watched holiday quarter and forecast revenue for early 2010 that topped Wall Street expectations.

- Microsoft Corp (MSFT) posted a bigger-than-expected 60 percent jump in quarterly profit, helped by strong sales of Windows 7, and said it expected business technology spending to recover this year.


Financial Times:

- A team from Goldman Sachs(GS) was in Athens on Thursday shepherding representatives of Paulson, the US hedge fund, around meetings with local bankers, economists and analysts. The client visit, the second to Athens this month arranged by the US investment bank, highlights a deepening involvement with Greece’s socialist government as it desperately tries to shore up the public finances and avoid default – and comes after the Financial Times reported this week that the bank was mooting a controversial debt deal with China. Goldman has not been given an official mandate by the government, but it is playing a large role in the rescue effort. Last year it took George Papaconstantinou, the finance minister, on his first roadshow to London and Frankfurt, along with Deutsche Bank. Earlier this week the bank was one of the joint-lead managers on Greece’s sale of an €8bn (£7bn, $11bn) government bond. In the past, Greek governments made a point of sharing out advisory work among investment banks, mainly for privatization projects. Morgan Stanley, Credit Suisse, Deutsche Bank and UBS won mandates as well as Goldman and JPMorgan. That has changed since the new government took over. “Goldman pretty much has taken a leading role on advising Greece at the moment,” said a Greek economic consultant. “Their competitive advantage is that they are smart guys and come up with good ideas. That certainly helps in a crisis like now,” the consultant said. These officials told the FT that, through several meetings between very senior Goldman staff and top Greek politicians, including George Papandreou, the prime minister, Goldman promoted a Greek bond sale to Beijing. The bank also suggested the sale of equity in National Bank of Greece to Chinese financial institutions, the three people said. According to separate officials in China, the institutions were Bank of China, the country’s third largest commercial lender by assets, and China Investment Corp, China’s sovereign wealth fund. Mr Papaconstantinou confirmed earlier this week to the FT that he would in the next few weeks go on an investors’ roadshow to Beijing, Shanghai and Hong Kong in order to generate interest in Greek government bonds. It is expected that as with the previous European trip, Goldman would be taking a leading role in organizing this roadshow, according to investment circles in Greece. Goldman’s main source of income in Greece is from the Hellenic republic’s borrowing operation, to which it has access as one of 15 Greek and foreign banks that act as market-makers. “They’re very active in the bond swaps market, which is extremely lucrative,” said the fund manager. It also regularly advises NBG, the country’s biggest commercial lender.

- JPMorgan Chase(JPM) is launching a global business aimed at selling loans and commercial banking services to multinational corporations, pitting the US bank against Citigroup and HSBC. The creation of a global corporate banking unit, which has not been announced, will see JPMorgan invest substantial resources and hire hundreds of bankers in an effort to win a bigger slice of international business. People close to the situation said that the new business, which will sell products ranging from loans and commodities trading to cash management services, would initially focus on economies such as China, India and Brazil. The move by JPMorgan is emblematic of the changes in global banking following the turmoil and could open up a market that has traditionally been dominated by Citi and HSBC. JPMorgan executives said that the launch was aimed at reducing reliance on the slow- growing US economy and taking advantage of a weakened Citi. “We are doing this now for a couple of reasons . . . to balance our growth and increase the portion of our revenues that comes from outside the US and from emerging markets in particular; and because, after the crisis, a number of our competitors are challenged.”


Telegraph:

- Germany has triggered a near-panic flight from southern European debt markets by warning that there will be no EU bail-outs, even though it fears the region's economic crisis has turned dangerous and could prove "fatal" for the entire eurozone.


South China Morning Post:

- China's plans to build railway networks throughout the country may face financing problems because of the government's efforts to tighten lending, citing a professor at the Economic and Planning Research Institute of the Ministry of Railways. Rail lines to the western parts of the country may find it too hard to obtain bank loans, Weng Zhensong said. Rail projects, part of China's four trillion yuan stimulus package, may be targeted as the government tries to limit lending, which has been blamed for creating asset bubbles, the report said.


Shanghai Securities News:

- China is expected to raise the deposit reserve requirement ratio after the Lunar New Year holidays to curb surging liquidity.


Evening Recommendations

Citigroup:

- Reiterated Buy on (IRM), target $45.

- Reiterated Buy on (M), added to Top Picks Live list, target $30.

- Reiterated Buy on (MMM), target $92.

- Reiterated Sell on (CP), target $44.

- Reiterated Buy on (AVT), target $33.

- Reiterated Buy on (MXIM), target $26.

- Reiterated Sell on (COLM), target $36.

- Reiterated Buy on (FORM), target $30.

- Reiterated Buy on (LMT), target $86.


Thomas Weisel:

- Raised (CAH) to Overweight, target $43.


Night Trading
Asian indices are -1.75% to -.50% on avg.

Asia Ex-Japan Inv Grade CDS Index 108.50 +1.50 basis points.
S&P 500 futures -.30%.
NASDAQ 100 futures -.18%.


Morning Preview
BNO Breaking Global News of Note

Google Top Stories

Bloomberg Breaking News

Yahoo Most Popular Biz Stories

MarketWatch News Viewer

Asian Financial News

European Financial News

Latin American Financial News

MarketWatch Pre-market Commentary

U.S. Equity Preview

TradeTheNews Morning Report

Briefing.com In Play

SeekingAlpha Market Currents

Briefing.com Bond Ticker

US AM Market Call
NASDAQ 100 Pre-Market Indicator/Heat Map
Pre-market Stock Quote/Chart
WSJ Intl Markets Performance
Commodity Futures
IBD New America
Economic Preview/Calendar
Earnings Calendar

Conference Calendar

Who’s Speaking?
Upgrades/Downgrades

Politico Headlines
Rasmussen Reports Polling


Earnings of Note
Company/Estimate
- (CVX)/1.69

- (HON)/.90

- (ACI)/.16

- (MAT)/.68

- (IDXX)/.45

- (AVY)/.67

- (FO)/.51

- (PCU)/.32


Economic Releases

8:30 am EST

- Advance 4Q GDP is estimated to rise +4.7% versus a +2.2% gain in 3Q.

- Advance 4Q Personal Consumption is estimated to rise +1.8% versus a +2.8% gain in 3Q.

- Advance 4Q GDP Price Index is estimated to rise +1.3% versus a +.4% gain in 3Q.

- Advance 4Q Core PCE is estimated to rise +1.3% versus a +1.2% increase in 3Q.

- The 4Q Employment Cost Index is estimated to rise +.4% versus a +.4% gain in 3Q.


9:45 am EST

- Chicago Purchasing Manager for January is estimated to fall to 57.2 versus a 58.7 reading in December.


9:55 am EST

- Final Univ. of Mich. Confidence is estimated to rise to 73.0 versus a prior estimate of 72.8.


Upcoming Splits

- None of note


Other Potential Market Movers
- The Fed's Kohn speaking, NAPM-Milwaukee, Bloomberg FCI Monthly and the (DMND) analyst meeting
could also impact trading today.


BOTTOM LINE: Asian indices are lower, weighed down by commodity and technology stocks in the region. I expect US stocks to open modestly lower and to rally into the afternoon, finishing mixed. The Portfolio is 75% net long heading into the day.

Thursday, January 28, 2010

Stocks Finish Lower, Weighed Down by Tech, Transportation, Education, Construction and Alt Energy Shares

Evening Review
BNO Breaking Global News of Note

Google Top Stories

Bloomberg Breaking News

Yahoo Most Popular Biz Stories

MarketWatch News Viewer

Briefing.com In Play

SeekingAlpha Market Currents

WSJ Today’s Markets
Today’s Movers
StockCharts Market Performance Summary

WSJ Data Center

Sector Performance

ETF Performance

Morningstar Style Performance
Commodity Futures
S&P 500 Gallery View

Timely Economic Charts

Most Recent Guru Stock Picks
CNN PM Market Call

After-hours Stock Commentary

After-hours Movers

After-hours Stock Quote
After-hours Stock Chart