Wednesday, December 01, 2010

Thursday Watch


Evening Headlines

Bloomberg:

  • Trichet 'Held Hostage' as Markets Pressure ECB to Intensify Crisis Fight. The last time Jean-Claude Trichet refused to bow to market pressure, he was forced into a U-turn. This time the stakes may be even higher. With the euro zone’s sovereign debt crisis now threatening to engulf Spain, its fourth-largest economy, investors are again looking for the President of the European Central Bank to do something to stop it, such as delaying the withdrawal of unlimited liquidity support for banks and significantly ramping up its bond purchases. The risk is that the ECB becomes a bail- out tool for politicians -- damaging its independence -- the very scenario Trichet wanted to avoid when he was pressed into the unprecedented step of buying government debt in May.
  • Libor Measure Shows Bank Stresses Reach Highest Since June: Credit Markets. Derivatives traders are the most concerned since June that European leaders will fail to address the crisis engulfing the region’s single currency, causing losses for financial companies. Contracts used to bet on the future premium banks will charge each other for dollar loans in London over the federal funds rate almost doubled in November. The so-called FRA/OIS spread soared to 42.75 basis points, before easing back to 39.25 today, UBS AG data show. The measure shows banks are still wary of lending to each other, even as investors hedge their bets after European Central Bank President Jean-Claude Trichet signaled policymakers may step up their response to the region’s debt crisis when they meet tomorrow. The ECB said earlier this year that European banks’ ability to sell bonds may be hampered as governments seek to finance fiscal deficits amassed in part to finance a bailout of the banking industry. “You come back inexorably to the link between sovereigns and financials,” said Matteo Regesta, an interest-rate strategist in London at BNP Paribas SA, the world’s biggest bank by assets. “Financial companies have issues with non-performing loans, fueling the idea they might need government help, which puts pressure on the sovereign, which the banks are also exposed to.” The gains in the FRA/OIS spread in recent weeks signal the market’s expectation that the London interbank offered rate, or Libor, will increase in coming months, Bank of America Merrill Lynch strategists led by Jeffrey Rosenberg in New York wrote in a Nov. 30 note to clients. The premium European banks pay in the currency swaps market to borrow in dollars has almost doubled in the past three weeks, reaching the highest level since May yesterday. The cost to protect against losses on their bonds jumped to a 20-month high before paring the gain today.
  • Shipments along the nation's highways continue to rise for U.S. trucking companies, another sign the economic expansion is gaining strength. The Cass Shipments Index, developed by trucker payment-service company Cass Information Systems Inc., jumped 15% in November from a year earlier. Compared with the prior month, the gauge rose 2.8% after a drop in October.
  • U.S. Commodities: Wheat Jumps as 'Panic Brewing' on Supplies. Wheat prices jumped the most in seven weeks as excessive rainfall threatened to reduce grain quality and delay the harvest in Australia, the world’s fourth-largest exporter. Wheat futures for March delivery jumped 49.5 cents, or 7.2 percent, to settle at $7.40 a bushel on the Chicago Board of Trade, the biggest gain for a most-active contract since Oct. 8. Egypt, the biggest importer, said today it bought 220,000 metric tons in a tender from the U.S. “There’s a little bit of a panic brewing, and I think the Egyptian tender is a testament that end-users are short high- quality wheat,” said Austin Damiani, a floor broker at the Minneapolis Grain Exchange for Frontier Futures Inc.
  • PineBridge Plans $480 Million CLO in First Since AIG Spinoff. PineBridge Investments is in the market with a collateralized loan obligation targeted at about $480 million, according to three people familiar with the discussions. It is the first CLO from the manager since it completed its separation from American International Group Inc. in March. PineBridge will manage the fund that is being created from a group of loans held by a separate investor, said the people, who declined to be identified because the terms are private. The market for CLOs is beginning to open with $2.6 billion of deals backed by widely syndicated loans completed this year. The market had $91.1 billion of issuance at its peak in 2007, according to Morgan Stanley data.
  • UN Rules Out Extending Kyoto CO2 Limits This Year, Hurting Carbon Market. The United Nations envoy leading climate talks ruled out extending greenhouse gas limits in the Kyoto Protocol this year, leaving in place doubts about the future of a $2.7 billion a year part of the carbon market.
  • Taxpayer Risk 'Impossible' to Know for Some Fed Programs. The Federal Reserve exposed U.S. taxpayers to risks that can’t be quantified based on information it made public today about the collateral posted by recipients of about $885 billion in emergency loans.
  • Goldman's(GS) Emergency Fed Loans Topped $24 Billion in Crisis. Goldman Sachs Group Inc., which rebounded from the financial crisis to post record profit last year, was a regular borrower from two emergency Federal Reserve programs in 2008 and early 2009, new data show. The firm borrowed from the Fed’s Term Securities Lending Facility most weeks from March 2008 through April 2009, data released by the Fed today show. Two units of the New York-based firm borrowed as much as $24.2 billion from the Fed’s Primary Dealer Credit Facility in the weeks after Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc.’s bankruptcy in September 2008, the data show. Chief Executive Officer Lloyd Blankfein, 56, was quoted by Vanity Fair last year as saying the company might have survived the credit crisis without government help. The firm’s president,Gary Cohn, was more definitive, according to the magazine: “I think we would not have failed,” he was quoted as saying. “We had cash.”
  • Galaxy, Melco Lead Casino Operators Higher After Macau Revenue Surges 42%.

Wall Street Journal:
  • Signs Point to Extending All Tax Cuts Temporarily. Republicans and Democrats Wednesday sat down to negotiate a compromise on extending Bush-era income tax cuts—an effort that could be the first step toward a deal this month that many strategists in both parties believe will temporarily extend current tax rates for all income levels.
  • Hedge Funds Tapped Rescue Program. Hedge funds and investors whose bearish trades on housing helped them profit amid the credit crisis were among those that benefited from a U.S. government emergency rescue program to kick-start lending, according to Federal Reserve data released Wednesday. That program, known as the Term Asset-Backed Securities Loan Facility, or TALF, and established during the financial crisis, provided low-cost loans from the Federal Reserve to investors buying bonds backed by student, auto and commercial-property loans and other assets. The program, which lasted from March 2009 until June 2010, was aimed at helping banks move loans off their books by repackaging them into bonds and selling them. Funds managed or backed by Magnetar Capital, Tricadia Capital and FrontPoint Partners, which made large profits from the downturn in the U.S. housing market, were among those who obtained low-cost loans from the Fed to buy securities during the ensuing credit crisis, according to the Fed data.
  • Amazon(AMZN) Poised to Make a Major Strategic Investment in LivingSocial to Counter Groupoogle Threat. With the red-hot acquisition dance between Google and Groupon sucking up all the attention, it’s easy once again to ignore the No. 2 player in the fast-growing social buying space–LivingSocial.
  • Citadel, Getco Joust Over Flash Trading in Options Markets. An ongoing debate over the future of so-called flash orders is pitting two of the most powerful U.S. financial firms on opposite sides, with Citadel LLC and Getco LLC continuing a rich history of clashes among Chicago's trading elite. The dispute revolves around regulators' proposed ban on flash trades in U.S. stock and options markets. The practice gives some market participants the chance to act on unfilled orders for stocks or options before they are routed on to another exchange to be filled.
  • SEC Goes After Fraud by Local Hedge Funds. The San Francisco office of the Securities and Exchange Commission is seeking to crack down on illegal conduct by hedge funds and corporate bribery, activity that got pushed aside as regulators grappled with Ponzi schemes and subprime mortgage-related probes during the recent financial crisis. The shift in focus is reverberating among Bay Area technology companies and financial-services firms.
  • Merck(MRK) to Buy Biotech Company Developing Diabetes Drug. Merck & Co. is expected to announce Thursday a deal to buy a closely held biotechnology company in the early stages of developing a new diabetes treatment, according to a person familiar with the matter.
  • Spain, Italy Seek Action. Nations Seen at Risk of Contagion Press for a Central Bank Move, Officials Say. Spain and Italy, the countries that with Portugal appear most at risk from being enveloped by the euro zone's deepening debt turmoil, are leading an effort to spur more decisive action from the European Central Bank in order to prevent the crisis from spreading further.
  • Deficit Plan Wins Backers. Bipartisan Support Adds Momentum Despite Sharp Criticism From Left and Right.
  • IMF Expects to Double Its Lending Capacity. The International Monetary Fund expects to double its lending capacity to $450 billion over the next few months, giving it additional firepower to deal with the sovereign-debt crisis engulfing Europe, according to IMF officials and documents.
Marketwatch.com:
Business Insider:
Zero Hedge:
  • Meet The 35 Foreign Banks That Got Bailed Out By The Fed. One may be forgiven to believe that via its FX liquidity swap lines the Fed only bailed out foreign Central Banks, which in turn took the money and funded their own banks. It turns out that is only half the story: we now know the Fed also acted in a secondary bail out capacity, providing over $350 billion in short term funding exclusively to 35 foreign banks, of which the biggest beneficiaries were UBS, Dexia and BNP.
  • 30 Weeks of Consecutive Equity Fund Outflows. (graph)
  • Why China's Leading Indicators Are A Big Flashing Warning Light To Albert Edwards. As usual, Soc Gen's Albert Edwards does not pull any punches: "Once again, investors see China plays as the only investment game in town. Dylan and I remain convinced we are witnessing a bubble of epic proportions which will burst – catching investors as unawares as the bursting of the Asian bubbles of the mid-1990s."
NY Times:
  • Terror-Linked Arrests in Spain and Thailand. The police in Spain and Thailand arrested 10 people suspected of operating a counterfeiting network that provided fake European passports to terrorist groups linked to Al Qaeda in order to smooth their entry into Western countries, the Spanish Interior Ministry said Wednesday. Seven people — six Pakistanis and one Nigerian — were arrested in Barcelona in raids late on Tuesday and early on Wednesday, and three more — two Pakistanis and one Thai — were arrested in Bangkok in the same period, the ministry said in a statement. One of the Pakistanis arrested in Bangkok, a 42-year-old named Muhammad Athar Butt, known as Tony, directed the forging operation from Thailand, according to a Spanish security official. Mr. Butt was also in charge of cells in Brussels and London, the security official said, speaking on condition of anonymity because the official was talking about a current investigation.
  • Obesity Surgery May Become Option for Many More. An advisory committee to the Food and Drug Administration will consider on Friday a request by Allergan(AGN), the pharmaceutical company, to significantly lower how obese someone must be to qualify for surgery using the company’s Lap-Band device, which restricts intake to the stomach.
Boston Globe:
  • Bank of America's(BAC) Finucane: WikiLeaks Risks Limited. Even if Bank of America is the next target of WikiLeaks, the nonprofit group that recently published online thousands of sensitive US diplomatic cables, it will cause only limited damage, one of the bank's top executives said in Boston today.
  • Harvard Law Students Sue Over Airport Body Scans. Two Harvard Law School students are suing the Transportation Security Administration, claiming that the agency's full-body scanners and enhanced pat-downs are unconstitutional. The scans, which show images of airline passengers' naked bodies, and the pat-downs, which include touching genital areas, violate Fourth Amendment rights against unreasonable searches and seizures, according to the complaint, which was filed in federal court on Monday.
Politico:
  • Boehner Excoriates Democrats. Incoming House Speaker John Boehner threw away the niceties that appeared in the wake of his meeting with President Barack Obama, and lambasted Democrats for bringing a bill to the floor that would extend just the lower- and middle-bracket tax rates. “I don’t know what my colleagues across the aisle didn’t hear during the election,” Boehner said Wednesday evening in the Ohio Clock Corridor outside the Senate door. “The American people spoke pretty loudly. They said stop all the looming tax hikes and to cut spending". And while we had a good meeting at the White House yesterday about how to resolve the issue of stopping all of the tax hikes, the House leader is going to go down this path of gerrymandering the process so members only have one option, and that’s to vote on only providing some tax relief for the American people.” Boehner also accused House Democrats of playing “political games.”
Reuters:
  • Finisar(FNSR) Q2 Tops Market, Sees Strong Q3. Network equipment maker Finisar Corp reported second-quarter results above market expectations on strong demand for closed networking products, and forecast its third fiscal quarter above estimates, sending its shares up 6 percent.
Financial Times:
  • Investors in sovereign debt involved in bailouts should incur some losses, Otmar Issing, a former member of the ECB, wrote. "If a permanent rescue mechanism is established, we should also have a restructuring regime that involves losses for private investors," Otmar said. "Default must be a credible threat - otherwise investors will have a strong incentive to buy bonds offering higher interest rates without taking into account the associated risks," he said.
  • A 25 billion-euro ($33 billion) contingency fund for Ireland's banks, agreed as part of the bailout for the country, makes its lenders better equipped for stressed conditions than previously required by the Irish regulator and other bodies. While the Irish regulator had estimated the banks would need 15 billion euros at most, the extra 10 billion euros were set aside as a "backpocket" safety net, citing government officials.
Telegraph:
  • Spain and Ireland Turn to Privatization. Spain and Ireland are set to launch large-scale privatisation programmes as they fight to preserve market faith in their turnaround plans. The Spanish government is looking at auctioning stakes in its national lottery operator and airports, while Ireland will look at privatisations in its electricity and gas sectors as part of a joint European Union and IMF bail-out package agreed on Sunday. News of the privatisation plans came as it emerged that the eurozone bail-out fund will next month begin issuing debt on behalf of embattled member states. Any bonds sold would be the first issued in the name of all currency pact members.
Tokyo Shimbun:
  • North Korea, which shelled a South Korean island last month, may be planning an attack on the mainland within the year. North Korea may attack Gyeonggi province, surrounding Seoul, citing a person who quoted an official from the communist nation's espionage agency.
Asahi:
  • Japanese Finance Minister Yoshihiko Noda will seek a 10% reduction in public works spending for the next fiscal year. The government allocated 5.7 trillion yen for public works spending this fiscal year, down 20% from last year.
China Daily:
  • China should moderately tighten monetary policy by utilizing interest rates and reserve requirements, Guo Tianyong, head of the China Banking Research Center at the Central Univ. of Finance and Economics, wrote in a commentary.
Apple Daily:
  • Li & Fund Ltd.'s Victor Fung expects the price of Chinese exports to rise by a range of 10% to 15% next year because of an average wage increase of about 30%, citing the company's chairman.
China Business News:
  • China will shift focus to "stabilizing growth" next year, from "ensuring growth" as it has said this year, at the government's central economic work conference to be held next week, citing government advisers. The Asian nation will lower next year's M2 target to 15% from this year's 17% and cut its new loan target to 7 trillion yuan or lower, the report said.
Evening Recommendations
  • None of note
Night Trading
  • Asian equity indices are +.75% to +2.0% on average.
  • Asia Ex-Japan Investment Grade CDS Index 110.0 -13.0 basis points.
  • Asia Pacific Sovereign CDS Index 110.0 -8.0 basis points.
  • S&P 500 futures -.02%
  • NASDAQ 100 futures +.01%.
Morning Preview Links

Earnings of Note
Company/Estimate
  • (TOL)/-.07
  • (DLM)/.34
  • (KR)/.31
  • (NOVL)/.07
  • (PVH)/1.43
  • (PAY)/.36
  • (ULTA)/.21
Economic Releases
8:30 am EST
  • Initial Jobless Claims for last week are estimated to rise to 424K versus 407K the prior week.
  • Continuing Claims are estimated to rise to 4200K versus 4182K prior.
10:00 am EST
  • Pending Home Sales for October are estimated to fall -1.0% versus a -1.8% decline in September.
Upcoming Splits
  • None of note
Other Potential Market Movers
  • The Fed's Bullard speaking, Fed's Plosser speaking, Fed's Duke speaking, ICSC November chain store sales, weekly EIA natural gas inventory report, (FMC) analyst meeting, (DTV) analyst meeting, CSFB Aerospace/Defense Conference and the CSFB Tech Conference could also impact trading today.
BOTTOM LINE: Asian indices are higher, boosted by technology and commodity shares in the region. I expect US stocks to open mixed and to rally into the afternoon, finishing modestly higher. The Portfolio is 100% net long heading into the day.

Stocks Surging into Final Hour on Less Euro Debt Angst, Diminishing Economic Fear, Seasonal Strength, Short-Covering


Broad Market Tone:

  • Advance/Decline Line: Substantially Higher
  • Sector Performance: Almost Every Sector Rising
  • Volume: Slightly Above Average
  • Market Leading Stocks: Performing In Line
Equity Investor Angst:
  • VIX 21.17 -10.07%
  • ISE Sentiment Index 145.0 +42.16%
  • Total Put/Call .82 -6.79%
  • NYSE Arms .26 -70.48%
Credit Investor Angst:
  • North American Investment Grade CDS Index 96.25 bps -2.68%
  • European Financial Sector CDS Index 138.10 bps -1.65%
  • Western Europe Sovereign Debt CDS Index 193.50 bps -.85%
  • Emerging Market CDS Index 231.95 bps -4.01%
  • 2-Year Swap Spread 27.0 -2 bps
  • TED Spread 15.0 unch.
Economic Gauges:
  • 3-Month T-Bill Yield .15% unch.
  • Yield Curve 244.0 +9 bps
  • China Import Iron Ore Spot $167.80/Metric Tonne unch.
  • Citi US Economic Surprise Index +21.70 -.7 point
  • 10-Year TIPS Spread 2.16% +7 basis points
Overseas Futures:
  • Nikkei Futures: Indicating +197 open in Japan
  • DAX Futures: Indicating +15 open in Germany
Portfolio:
  • Higher: On gains in my Biotech, Medical, Retail, Ag and Technology long positions
  • Disclosed Trades: Covered all of my (IWM)/(QQQQ) hedges, covered some of my (EEM) short, added back to my (MOS) long
  • Market Exposure: Moved to 100% Net Long
BOTTOM LINE: Today's overall market action is very bullish as the S&P 500 trades substantially higher despite ongoing eurozone debt concerns and China inflation worries. On the positive side, Homebuilding, Semi, Software, Coal, Energy, Oil Service, Steel, Gaming, Construction and Defense shares are especially strong, rising more than 2.75%. Cyclical shares are outperforming. (BAC), which has been a big drag on (XLF), is rebounding 3% to session highs. Copper is rising +2.93%, lumber is jumping +2.31% and the S&P GSCI Ag Spot Index is surging +4.23%. The US Scrap Steel Index is rising another +2.93%. The Spain sovereign cds is plunging -12.64% to 318.56 bps, the Italy sovereign cds is dropping -13.7% to 231.05 bps, the Portugal sovereign cds is falling -12.18% to 474.30 bps and the Ireland sovereign cds is falling -7.76% to 563.37 bps. On the negative side, Education and REIT shares are underperforming. The Greece sovereign cds is rising +.64% to 980.48 bps. The 10-year yield is surging +17 bps to 2.97%. The broad market continues to remain resilient, with mild pullbacks on negative news and huge jumps on good news. Headlines out of Europe tomorrow will dominate trading again. If eurozone debt angst falls again, global equities should build on today's rally tomorrow. I expect US stocks to trade mixed-to-higher into the close from current levels on falling eurozone sovereign debt angst, declining economic fear, seasonal strength, investment manager performance angst, short-covering, bargain-hunting and technical buying.

Today's Headlines


Bloomberg:

  • Companies in U.S. Added 93,000 Jobs in November, ADP Says. Companies in the U.S. boosted payrolls more than forecast in November, propelled by increased hiring at small businesses, data from a private report showed today. Employment increased by 93,000, the most since November 2007, after a revised 82,000 rise in October that was almost double the initial estimate, according to figures from ADP Employer Services. The median projection of 40 economists surveyed by Bloomberg News called for a 70,000 gain last month. Small firms added more workers than at any time since the recession began in December 2007. “There’s just a feeling that maybe we’ve turned a corner” in the labor market, Joel Prakken, chairman of Macroeconomic Advisers LLC, which produces the figures with ADP, said in a conference call with reporters. “It looks to me as if hiring is beginning to pick up. I do expect these employment numbers to get firmer” in 2011, he said.
  • Italy, Spain Lead Drop in Debt Risk on ECB Bond Buying Bets. Italy and Spain led a decline in the cost of insuring against losses on European government debt on speculation the European Central Bank will boost bond purchases to calm markets. Credit-default swaps on Belgium, Portugal and Ireland also fell from record high levels, helping to push down the region’s benchmark index of sovereign swaps from an all-time high. A gauge of subordinated bank debt risk dropped from a 20-month peak. Investors are hedging bets bonds will fall after ECB President Jean-Claude Trichet signaled policymakers may step up their response to the region’s debt crisis when they meet tomorrow. The ECB bought Irish and Portuguese government bonds today, according to traders with knowledge of the transactions. Credit-default swaps on Italy tumbled 41.5 basis points to 226.5, and Spain decreased 46 to 318, according to data provider CMA. Belgium declined 13 basis points to 192, Greece dropped 36.5 basis points to 928.5, Ireland was down 48 at 558, while Portugal was 63 lower at 479. The Markit iTraxx SovX Western Europe Index of swaps on 15 governments declined 12 to 189. The Markit iTraxx Financial Index linked to the senior debt of 25 banks and insurers fell 10.5 basis points to 161 and the subordinated index dropped 27 to 284.5, according to JPMorgan Chase & Co. Contracts on the Markit iTraxx Crossover Index of 50 companies with mostly high-yield credit ratings declined 25 basis points to 501. The Markit iTraxx Europe Index of 125 companies with investment-grade ratings decreased 5.5 basis points to 112, JPMorgan prices show.
  • Fed Says U.S. Economy Gains Strength in 10 Out of 12 Regions. The Federal Reserve said the economy gained strength across much of the U.S. as hiring improved, manufacturing expanded and retailers anticipated a stronger holiday shopping season. Five Fed banks, including Boston and San Francisco, said the economy grew “at a slight to modest” rate, while five others, including New York and Chicago, reported a “somewhat stronger pace of economic activity.” Conditions were reported as “mixed” in the Philadelphia and St. Louis regions.
  • Employers in U.S. Announce Most Job Cuts in Eight Months, Challenger Says. Employers in the U.S. announced plans in November to cut 48,711 jobs, the most in eight months, as government agencies trimmed payrolls. Compared with the same month last year, planned firings dropped 3.3 percent, according to Chicago-based Challenger, Gray & Christmas Inc. This month’s downsizing marks the smallest year-over-year decline since May 2009 when job cuts increased by 7.4 percent from a year earlier.
  • U.S. Manufacturing Expands for 16th Straight Month. Manufacturing in the U.S. expanded for a 16th consecutive month in November, a sign the world’s largest economy is gaining traction as the year draws to a close. The Institute for Supply Management’s factory index was little changed at 56.6 after 56.9 in October, the Tempe, Arizona-based group said today. “Businesses are starting to feel better about the outlook and so they’re willing to spend more on investment as well as to hire,” said Stephen Stanley, chief economist at Pierpont Securities LLC in Stamford, Connecticut. “We had strong growth early in the year, a little bit of a hiccup in the middle and now things are starting to come back again.” The ISM’s U.S. new orders index eased to 56.6 from 58.9, while the production index fell to 55, the lowest level since June 2009, from 62.7. The employment gauge was little changed at 57.5 from 57.7, and the index of export orders dropped to 57 from 60.5. The measure of orders waiting to be filled held at 46 and the index of prices paid fell to 69.5 from 71. The inventory index increased to 56.7 from 53.9, while a gauge of customer stockpiles rose to 45.5 from 44.
  • Fed Names Recipients of $3.3 Trillion in Aid During Crisis. The Federal Reserve, under orders from Congress, today named the counterparties of about 21,000 transactions from $3.3 trillion in aid provided to stem the worst financial panic since the Great Depression. Bank of America Corp.(BAC) and Wells Fargo & Co.(WFC) were among the biggest borrowers from one program, the Term Auction Facility, with as much as $45 billion apiece. Some aid went to U.S. units of foreign institutions, including Switzerland’s UBS AG, France’s Societe Generale and Germany’s Dresdner Bank AG.
  • Fannie, Freddie Spar With Regulators on Foreclosures. Federal banking regulators said they are pushing lenders to suspend foreclosure proceedings while distressed borrowers seek new mortgages. Acting Comptroller of the Currency John Walsh said in testimony prepared for a congressional hearing today that his agency is directing national bank servicers to suspend foreclosures for borrowers actively seeking to qualify for loan modifications.
  • Commodities Climb to Two-Week High on 'Positive' Global Economic Reports. Commodities jumped to a two-week high as higher-than-estimated job growth in the U.S. private sector and expanding Chinese and European manufacturing bolstered optimism in the global economy. The Reuters/Jefferies CRB Index of 19 raw materials jumped 1.7 percent to 306.63 at 11:45 a.m. New York time, the highest level since Nov. 12. Grains and industrial prices led the rally. Wheat soared as much as 7.9 percent, and cotton rose more than 3 percent.
  • Carry Trade Losses Rise to Most in Two Years Amid Europe Sovereign Crisis. Foreign-exchange losses from carry trades climbed to the highest level in more than two years as hedge funds and other large speculators unwound bets that the euro will strengthen amid Europe’s sovereign-debt crisis. Royal Bank of Scotland Plc’s index for carry trades, whereby investors tap cash where borrowing costs are low to invest in higher rates elsewhere, fell 9.7 percent in November, the biggest drop since October 2008.
  • U.K. Manufacturing Expands at Fastest Pace in 16 Years.
  • European Banks Dominated Use of Fed's Commercial Paper Program. The U.S. subsidiaries of European financial institutions, led by Zurich-based UBS AG and Brussels- based Dexia SA were among the largest users of a government program to provide emergency short-term funding to U.S. companies and banks during the credit crisis. Six European banks were among the top 11 companies that sold the most debt overall to the the Commercial Paper Funding Facility. They sold a combined $274.1 billion, according to data made public today by the U.S. central bank. UBS sold $74.5 billion, the most among all borrowers. The largest U.S.-based user was insurer American International Group, selling $60.2 billion. UBS’s figure of $74.5 billion represents the company’s total sales over the life of the program. The bank’s CPFF borrowings peaked at $37.2 billion, an amount the firm rolled over, or re-sold at maturity, once. Other companies rolled over debt in the program as well.
  • iPhone is Most Desired Smartphone in U.S., Nielsen Says.
  • GM(GM), Ford(F) U.S. Sales Rise as SUV, Truck Demand Increases. General Motors Co., Ford Motor Co. and Chrysler Group LLC all reported improved sales in November as demand for pickups and sport-utility vehicles pushed the industry toward matching its fastest sales pace of the year. GM’s deliveries in the month climbed 11 percent to 168,739, the Detroit-based company said today in a statement. Sales of its Chevrolet Equinox and GMC Terrain SUVs gained 60 percent. Ford’s sales rose 20 percent to 147,338, fueled by a 55 percent boost in sales of the Edge SUV. Chrysler and Nissan Motor Co. both reported light-truck gains as they boosted results.

Wall Street Journal:
  • IBM Claims Breakthrough in Laser-Based Chips. A race to transform computers with laser-based communications is accelerating, with International Business Machines Corp. the latest to claim breakthroughs in chips that send data at blazing speeds using pulses of light.
  • Glow From Solar Factories Fails to Match Michigan Town's Hopes.
  • Erdogan Vents Fury at Cable Claims. Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan of Turkey suggested Wednesday the U.S should fire diplomats who reported claims in leaked State Department cables that he and his family are corrupt, and said he planned to take legal action against them. In a sometimes furious televised address at the start of an investment conference in Ankara, Mr. Erdogan said, "My friends in the judiciary and we are working to do what is necessary about these diplomats. We spoke to the U.S. They did apologize, but it is not enough. The U.S. should do what is necessary about these diplomats."
  • ECB, Goldman(GS), GE(GE) Sought Help From the Fed.
CNBC:
Business Insider:
Zero Hedge:
FrontPageMag.com:
PCWorld:
Politico:
  • House Climate Panel to Be Axed. House Republicans will scrap the committee set up by Speaker Nancy Pelosi to investigate global warming, the panel’s top Republican announced Wednesday. Rep. Jim Sensenbrenner (R-Wis.) made official what many had already expected — the GOP majority will axe the Select Committee on Energy Independence and Global Warming, which Pelosi created in 2007.
  • Obama Reverses on Offshore Drilling. The Obama administration will reverse its decision and not allow drilling off the Atlantic and Pacific coastlines and the eastern Gulf of Mexico for at least another seven years, sources have confirmed to POLITICO.
USA Today:
Reuters:
  • L-3(LLL) CEO Says Considers Acquisitions, Buybacks. L-3 Communications Holdings Inc Chief Executive Michael Strianese said on Wednesday his company is still actively looking for acquisitions but will also consider ensuring shareholder value through share buybacks.
  • FCC Chief Backs Some Rationing of Internet Traffic. Internet service providers would be allowed to ration web traffic on their networks under a strategy unveiled by the top U.S. communications regulator that no longer focuses solely on open access. Federal Communications Commission Chairman Julius Genachowski proposed banning the blocking of lawful traffic but allowing Internet providers to manage network congestion and charge consumers based on Internet usage.
  • Fed's Bullard: Europe a Wake-Up Call for U.S. The debt situation in Europe is a "wake-up call" for the United States to get its long-term fiscal situation under control, a top Federal Reserve official said on Wednesday.
IrishTimes.com:
  • Concern on Debt Contagion Deepens. Global concern about the debt crisis rocking the euro zone mounted today, with Washington sending a top US Treasury envoy to Europe and G20 officials discussing the turmoil in a conference call. A day after investors pushed the risk premiums on Spanish and Italian government debt to new highs, the bond spreads of countries on Europe's southern periphery narrowed and the euro steadied on speculation that the European Central Bank could unveil new anti-crisis steps at a meeting tomorrow. But calmer markets failed to remove deep worries about contagion in the 16-country euro region that has pushed European policymakers onto the defensive and forced them to search for new ways to stabilise their 12-year-old currency project.
CBCNews:
  • CBC Pushes 'Anti-American Melodrama': WikiLeaks. U.S. diplomats in Ottawa wrote to Washington that the CBC pushes "insidious negative popular stereotyping" with "anti-American melodrama" in its entertainment TV programs, according to documents to be released by the website WikiLeaks.

Bear Radar


Style Underperformer:

  • Mid-Cap Value (+1.84%)
Sector Underperformers:
  • 1) Education -.06% 2) REITs +.55% 3) Oil Tankers +.93%
Stocks Falling on Unusual Volume:
  • IGTE, UTI, SCMR, XXIA, JOSB, LPNT, CPRT, MOTR, PRXL, SAFM, UTI and OCR
Stocks With Unusual Put Option Activity:
  • 1) OREX 2) GM 3) XOP 4) CTRP 5) MOT
Stocks With Most Negative News Mentions:
  • 1) LPNT 2) PEP 3) UNFI 4) STSA 5) PCAR

Bull Radar


Style Outperformer:

  • Small-Cap Growth (+2.12%)
Sector Outperformers:
  • 1) Semis +3.75% 2) Coal +3.39% 3) Homebuilders +2.70%
Stocks Rising on Unusual Volume:
  • BLKB, CBEY, ANSS, SI, SWC, TI, PHG, REP, HES, EURX, OVTI, RUSHA, PEET, ECPG, ZEUS, DECK, TZOO, WYNN, AFCE, ENOC, MSG, DTSI, APKT, LSTR, PANL, MRCY, GGAL, SAPE, MLHR, IYK, RLI, DBV, EWQ, ISI, EWI, EWK, KCE, DGT, XES and PZI
Stocks With Unusual Call Option Activity:
  • 1) TIF 2) GT 3) STD 4) GM 5) WHR
Stocks With Most Positive News Mentions:
  • 1) KR 2) DE 3) CNX 4) AYE 5) ESS

Wednesday Watch


Evening Headlines

Bloomberg:

  • Corporate Spreads Show Strain, Swaps Soar, Returns Dwindle: Credit Markets. The failure of European leaders to contain the region’s debt crisis with a bailout of Ireland has driven relative borrowing costs in the global corporate bond market to a 12-week high. Investors demand an extra 1.77 percentage points in yield to own company bonds instead of government debt, the most since Sept. 8, Bank of America Merrill Lynch index data show. The premium European banks pay in the currency swaps market to borrow in dollars more than doubled in the past three weeks to the highest level since May as the cost to protect against losses on their bonds jumped to a 20-month high. Global debt markets are showing signs of strain amid concern a sell-off in euro-region bond markets will force leaders to bail out more nations, impose losses on creditors and cause the global economy to slow. Company bonds lost 1.04 percent in November, the worst performance since losing 4.44 percent in October 2008, Bank of America Merrill Lynch’s Global Broad Market Corporate index shows. “There’s definitely more fear in the market than we had a couple of weeks ago,” said Eric Stein, a money manager who helps oversee $54.2 billion in fixed-income assets at Eaton Vance Management in Boston. “We need a real sustainable solution. These kind of ad hoc Band-Aid measures aren’t really going to do anything to help Europe over the long term and investors are more and more realizing that.” In London, the Markit iTraxx Europe Index of 125 companies with investment-grade ratings rose 3.5 basis points to 117, the highest since Sept. 23, Markit prices show. In emerging markets, relative yields rose 11 basis points to 273 basis points, the widest since Oct. 4 on a closing basis, according to JPMorgan Chase & Co. index data. Spreads have widened 31 basis points since the end of October. Concern that Spain will fail to close Europe’s third- highest deficit has driven up financing costs for the nation’s lenders. Relative yields on euro-denominated Spanish bank bonds rose 141 basis points to 385 basis points in November -- the biggest monthly jump on record, according to data compiled by Bank of America Corp. Swaps on Spain jumped 13 basis points yesterday to a record 364 on a closing basis, according to CMA. Contracts on Italy, Portugal and Ireland also jumped to records. Signs of strain are showing up in the interest-rate swaps market. The difference between the rate to exchange floating-for fixed-interest payments for two years and the comparable- maturity Treasury yield, known as the swap spread, widened 3.98 basis points to 28.13 basis points, the most since July. The European crisis also is causing a surge in the premium European banks pay to borrow in dollars in the swaps market. The price of two-year cross-currency basis swaps between euros and dollars reached minus 50.6 basis points yesterday, the largest effective premium for dollar borrowing in swaps since May, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. The gap has widened from minus 30.3 basis points on Nov. 22. “People perceive credit risk much higher in European counterparties,” Douglas Borthwick, head of foreign-exchange trading at Stamford, Connecticut-based Faros Trading LLC, said in an interview. The increase in swap rates is “extremely aggressive, and what that means is that essentially over the last three or four days, credit departments have gone around saying we need to adjust your credit with local names,” he said.
  • Contagion May Force EU to Expand Arsenal to Fight Debt Crisis. Investors’ no-confidence vote in the aid package for Ireland may force European policy makers to expand their arsenal to fight the debt crisis threatening to tear the euro apart. Options outlined by economists at Societe Generale SA and Barclays Capital include: Boosting the 750 billion-euro ($975 billion) temporary rescue fund or turning it into an asset- buying program; cutting interest rates on bailout loans; issuing joint bonds for the 16 euro nations or flooding the economy with cash from the European Central Bank. All would be unprecedented, and none of Europe’s political leaders -- dominated by German Chancellor Angela Merkel -- has indicated the steps are being considered. Earlier this year, they struggled to cobble together the measures that investors and economists now say are proving inadequate to safeguard the euro and keep speculators at bay.
  • European Contagion Spreads to Region's Core as Belgian Bond Yields Surge. Europe’s sovereign crisis is spreading to the heart of the 16-nation bloc as investors question Belgium’s ability to cut the euro region’s third- highest debt load, overshadowing its economic performance. The extra yield investors demand to hold Belgian 10-year bonds instead of benchmark German bunds of similar maturity widened to 139 basis points at 5.10 p.m. yesterday in Brussels, the most since at least 1993. The cost of insuring Belgian government bonds rose to a record for a second day, according to CMA prices of credit-default swaps. The European Union’s 85 billion-euro ($111 billion) rescue package for Ireland has failed to quell market turmoil as investors shift their focus from peripheral states to countries such as Belgium, whose capital is home to the EU’s political institutions. “Belgium has moved to the foreground as investors ask themselves ‘who’s next?’ to ask for help,” said Carsten Brzeski, an economist at ING Groep NV in Brussels and a former European Commission official. Six months after the Greek rescue exposed flaws in the euro’s makeup and fueled doubts whether 16 countries belong in the same currency union, investors remain unconvinced. In Belgium, seven political parties involved in coalition talks are still sparring over whether to grant more fiscal autonomy for the country’s regions. Its public debt is approaching 100 percent of gross domestic product and 65 billion euros of bonds and bills are due to mature next year, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.
  • Hedge Funds Short Clean Power as Goldman Reduces Stake in Superconductor. Hedge funds increased short selling in U.S. renewable energy stocks to the highest level in a year, boosting bets against First Solar Inc. and Tesla Motors Inc. as government support for low-polluting technologies faltered. Seventeen percent of the freely traded shares of the 35 U.S. stocks in the WilderHill New Energy Index are sold short, compared with 16 percent in October and 15 percent in August, data compiled by Bloomberg show. That’s almost four times the 4.4 percent short ratio of the Standard & Poor’s 500 index. In the run-up to this week’s global climate talks in Mexico, short sellers targeted makers of wind turbines, solar panels and electric cars whose sales also were undermined by cash-strapped European governments cutting subsidies. Goldman Sachs Group Inc. and Deutsche Bank AG trimmed long positions in renewable-energy shares in the third quarter, filings show.
  • Guidepoint Subpoenaed by Massachusetts Officials Over Hedge Fund Relation. Guidepoint Global LLC, a research firm that links investors with experts, was subpoenaed by Massachusetts Secretary of the Commonwealth William F. Galvin in connection with its relationship to a hedge fund in the state.
  • Nevada Rating Outlook Cut to Negative by Moody's as Gaming Revenues Fall. Nevada’s outlook was lowered to negative from stable by Moody’s Investors Service, citing a $3 billion budget gap and an unexpected decline in the gaming industry, “a sector that was previously believed to be recession proof.”
  • Citigroup(C) Said to Discuss Hiring Former White House Budget Director Orszag. Citigroup Inc. , recovering from its $45 billion bailout in 2008, is in advanced talks to hire former White House Budget Director Peter Orszag, people with knowledge of the matter said. Orszag, 41, may take a job in the New York-based firm’s investment-banking division, the people said, declining to be identified because the discussions are private. Orszag, an economist trained at Princeton University and the London School of Economics, helped shape U.S. economic stimulus during the financial crisis and overhaul the health- care system. The youngest member of President Barack Obama’s cabinet, he spent 18 months as White House budget director, stepping down in July. He previously served as economic adviser to President Bill Clinton and was a staff member of Clinton’s Council of Economic Advisers. Orszag’s tenure at the Clinton White House overlapped with Citigroup’s former executive-committee chairman, Robert Rubin, who served as Treasury secretary from 1995 to 1999. In 2006, when Rubin, 72, helped to found an economic research group at the Brookings Institution called the Hamilton Project, Orszag was named its first director. Obama, then a senator from Illinois, spoke at the project’s unveiling.
  • U.S. Treasury Envoy to Visit Spain as Bonds, Portugal Show Contagion Risk. The U.S. Treasury Department said its top international official will visit Madrid, as Spanish and Italian bond spreads rose to euro-era records and Standard & Poor’s said it may cut Portugal’s debt ratings. Lael Brainard, the undersecretary for international affairs, will meet this week with senior government officials in Madrid, Berlin and Paris to “discuss economic developments in Europe as well as our longer-term work to advance our shared agenda on strong and sustainable global growth,” the Treasury said in a statement yesterday.

Wall Street Journal:
  • LME: Trader Holds Up to 80% of Exchange Copper Stocks. Up to 80% of London Metal Exchange's copper stocks are held by a single trader, according to the exchange's daily warrant banding report. The dominant position holder owns between 50% and 80% of the 355,750 metric tons currently held in LME listed warehouses. This amounts to more than 177,875 metric tons of copper, worth about $1.5 billion. "That's a big market, it's not too easy to get that kind of material, that much tonnage," said a U.S.-based physical metal trader. It is unusual for one trader to hold such a large amount of exchange-warehoused stocks as it gives the participant greater control over the amount of copper available to fill futures contracts. With more than half the stock held by one participant, physical traders may find it difficult to borrow metal stored in a particular location and may help lift premiums for key storage hubs. The dominant holder is raising the cost of copper for prompt delivery compared to metal delivered three-months out. Cash copper is trading at a $60 per metric ton surcharge to metal for three-month delivery. The surcharge was just $40 a few days ago, but has increased as the dominant position emerged, traders said. Copper traders have been bracing for a metal supply squeeze since October, when three separate companies announced plans for physical copper exchange-traded funds. These funds would let investors trade shares listed on a stock exchange and backed by LME grade metal held by the trust. The three trusts include the 61,800 metric ton J.P. Morgan Physical Copper Trust, 121,200 metric ton Blackrock iShares Copper Trust and an as-yet-unspecified sized product from ETF Securities. While both Blackrock and ETF Securities plan to back their products with LME warrants, J.P. Morgan's trust will house the copper off the exchange and is thus a less likely candidate. However, any one of the three trusts could potentially hold the dominant warrant position, traders said. "I just can't see why anyone other than an ETF would want something like that," said a U.S. based physical trader.
  • Plans for New EU 'Stress Tests' Spur Squabbling. European officials are planning a new round of bank "stress tests" designed to be more rigorous than last summer's widely criticized exams, but the effort is already beset by squabbling and the possibility that the test results won't become public. While some European leaders are pushing for next year's tests to be broader and more transparent than last summer's exercise, the agency that will oversee the tests says it might opt to not publicly disclose the results.
  • Some U.S. Money Funds Exposed to European Banks. Some of the largest U.S. money-market funds hold billions of dollars in securities issued by Spanish and Italian banks, highlighting the risk that further deterioration in Europe could have broad impact. Many European banks have long been dependent on investors for funding because their deposit base is too small relative to their loans outstanding. U.S. money-market funds have been a major source of that cash. Money-market funds in the U.S. hold about $400 billion of their $2.8 trillion in assets in foreign banks, according to J.P. Morgan.
  • Google(GOOG) Set to Launch E-Book Venture. Google Inc. is in the final stages of launching its long-awaited e-book retailing venture, Google Editions, a move that could shake up the way digital books are sold. The long-delayed venture—Google executives had said they hoped to launch this summer—recently has cleared several technical and legal hurdles, people close to the company say. It is set to debut in the U.S. by the end of the year and internationally in the first quarter of next year, said Scott Dougall, a Google product management director.
  • Comcast(CMCSA) Disputes Level 3's(LVLT) Accusations. Comcast Corp. defended its move to ask Level 3 Communications Inc. to pay for delivering more Internet traffic across its network in a letter to the Federal Communications Committee, rebutting Level 3's charge that it was erecting a "toll" to its network.
  • Why the Spending Stimulus Failed by Michael J. Boskin. New economic research shows why lower tax rates do far more to spur growth.
  • In Iraq, a Very Busy Iran. U.S. Cables Depict Tehran's Extensive Efforts to Further Its Interests Next Door.
CNBC:
  • US SEC Pushed for Quick End to BofA, Merrill Probe.
  • China Manufacturing Activity Jumps to 7-Month High. China's factories revved up production in November, but a big jump in input prices also pointed to more inflationary pressure in the pipeline and a need for more monetary tightening. The official purchasing managers' index (PMI) rose to a seven-month high of 55.2 in November from 54.7 in October, the China Federation of Logistics and Purchasing said on Wednesday. The reading compared with the median forecast of 54.7 in a Reuters poll of 11 economists. While a rise in output and export orders helped power the rise, the biggest increase came in the sub-index for input prices, which climbed to 73.5 from 69.9 a month earlier. "The main problem for the economy is still inflation," said Jun Ma, China economist at Deutsche Bank in Hong Kong.
Business Insider:
Zero Hedge:
  • Without Much Fanfare, The HSKAX Is Back To August 2007 "Quant Implosion" Levels. (graph) While everyone knows that it was two and a half decades of imbecilic monetary policy courtesy of the Monstro [sic] that caused the credit bubble, few things were as much of a direct proximal cause of the market crash as the August 2007 quant collapse. And few indices tracked the obliteration of the M/N quant landscape that followed as well as the HSKAX (below). Well, after two years of painful grinding (for the market neutrals), the HSKAX is back to the same level to which it plunged in that week in early August 2007.
IBD:
CNN Money:
  • Oil Execs: Drilling Ban Will Hurt for Years. Drilling activity in the Gulf of Mexico will remain light in the years ahead, despite the fact that the ban on drilling there has been lifted, according to a survey of oil executives released Tuesday. Nearly 70% of industry executives expect drilling activity in the Gulf to remain below 2009 levels until at least 2012, according to a survey by BDO, a Chicago-based accounting and consulting firm. Some say it will never return to 2009 levels.
Real Clear Politics:
Reuters:
  • 'Flash Crash' Fixes Delayed at U.S. SEC - Sources. U.S. securities regulators are having trouble crafting permanent rules to prevent future stock market flash crashes because fixes are so complicated and rule makers are overburdened from financial reform, sources said on Tuesday.
  • OmniVision(OVTI) Sees Strong Q3, Shares Rise. OmniVision Technologies Inc forecast a strong third quarter as it expects to gain from the demand for smartphones and its new image sensors, sending its shares up 5 percent in extended trade.
Financial Times:
  • Bank of America(BAC), JPMorgan(JPM) and other banks may be required to buy back more mortgages that failed to meet underwriting standards, citing an interview with Dominic Frederico, CEO of Assured Guaranty Ltd. "This saga of mortgage dislocation has a lot more chapters to play," Frederico said. "I think we're at the tip of the iceberg."
Telegraph:
  • Portugal Banks Face 'Intolerable' Risk Unless Austerity Measures Are Implemented. Failure to consolidate the public finances will put the country's banks in danger, the Bank of Portugal said in a report, which followed Prime Minister Jose Socrates last week pushing through an austerity budget. The Portuguese government says no bail-out is needed, but markets are already pointing the finger at the country as the next to follow Greece and Ireland in requesting a rescue package. "The risk will become intolerable if we do not see the implementation of measures that consolidate public finances in a credible and sustainable way," the central bank said.
The Guardian:
  • WikiLeaks: Interpol Issues Wanted Notice for Julian Assange. WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange facing growing legal problems around world. The WikiLeaks founder, Julian Assange, is tonight facing growing legal problems around the world, with the US announcing that it was investigating whether he had violated its espionage laws. Assange's details were also added to Interpol's worldwide wanted list. Dated 30 November, the entry reads: "sex crimes" and says the warrant has been issued by the international public prosecution office in Gothenburg, Sweden. "If you have any information contact your national or local police." It reads: "Wanted: Assange, Julian Paul," and gives his birthplace as Townsville, Australia.
Les Echos:
  • France currently deserves its AAA credit rating and the outlook on the rating is stable, Standard & Poor's President Deven Sharma said in an interview. Every rating can change with new circumstances, he said, when asked if France could lose the rating.
Evening Recommendations
Citigroup:
  • Rated (DSW) Buy, target $45.
  • Rated (ANF) Buy, target $57.
  • Rated (GPS) Sell, target $20.
  • Rated (URBN) Sell, target $32.
  • Rated (ROST) Sell, target $60.
  • Rated (AEO) Buy, target $21.
  • Rated (CHS) Buy, target $16.
Susquehanna:
  • Rated (VMW) Positive, target $100.
  • Rated (INFA) Positive, target $50.
  • Rated (CPWR) Positive, target $13.
  • Rated (RHT) Positive, target $52.
  • Rated (CRM) Positive, target $175.
  • Rated (TIBX) Positive, target $25.
Night Trading
  • Asian equity indices are -.25% to +1.0% on average.
  • Asia Ex-Japan Investment Grade CDS Index 123.0 +5.0 basis points.
  • Asia Pacific Sovereign CDS Index 118.0 +4.5 basis points.
  • S&P 500 futures +.23%
  • NASDAQ 100 futures +.21%.
Morning Preview Links

Earnings of Note
Company/Estimate
  • (JOSB)/.50
  • (SCMR)/-.06
  • (CHRS)/-.08
  • (ZUMZ)/.37
  • (FNSR)/.36
  • (PSS)/.51
  • (ARO)/.66
  • (JAS)/1.07
  • (RUE)/.27
  • (SNPS)/.39
Economic Releases
8:15 am EST
  • The ADP Employment Change for November is estimated at 70K versus 43K in October.
8:30 am EST
  • Final 3Q Non-Farm Productivity is estimated to rise +2.3% versus a prior estimate of a +1.9% gain.
  • Final 3Q Unit Labor Costs are estimated to fall -.2% versus a prior estimate of a -.1% decline.
10:00 am EST
  • ISM Manufacturing for November is estimated to fall to 56.5 versus 56.9 in October.
  • ISM Prices Paid for November is estimated at 71.0 versus 71.0 in October.
  • Construction Spending for October is estimated to fall -.3% versus a +.5% gain in September.
10:30 am EST
  • Bloomberg consensus estimates call for a weekly crude oil inventory drawdown of -1,150,000 barrels versus a +1,029,000 barrel gain the prior week. Gasoline supplies are estimated to rise by +300,000 barrels versus a +1,913,000 barrel gain the prior week. Distillate inventories are expected to fall by -1,100,000 barrels versus a -541,000 barrel decline the prior week. Finally, Refinery Utilization is expected to rise +.4% versus a +1.5% gain the prior week.
2:00 pm EST
  • Fed's Beige Book.
Afternoon:
  • Total Vehicle Sales for November are estimated to fall to 12.1M versus 12.25M in October.
Upcoming Splits
  • None of note
Other Potential Market Movers
  • The Fed's Yellen speaking, Fed's Tarullo speaking, Fed's Fish speaking, Challenger Job Cuts Report for November, weekly MBA Mortgage Applications report, (TAP) analyst meeting, (XEL) investor meeting and the Piper Jaffray Healthcare Conference, CSFB Tech Conference, Jefferies Energy Conference, CSFB Aerospace/Defense Conference and the Citi Basic Materials Conference could also impact trading today.
BOTTOM LINE: Asian indices are mostly higher, boosted by technology and automaker shares in the region. I expect US stocks to open modestly higher and to weaken into the afternoon, finishing mixed. The Portfolio is 75% net long heading into the day.