Tuesday, December 18, 2012

Wednesday Watch

Evening Headlines 
Bloomberg: 
  • Spain $185 Billion Refinancing Tests Rajoy’s Bank Cleanup Effort. A rush by recession-hit Spanish businessmen and consumers to restructure their loans will test Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy’s pledge of a “definitive” cleanup of the nation’s crisis-hit banks. Spain’s banks have refinanced about 140 billion euros ($185 billion) of loans outside the country’s crippled real estate industry, according to Oliver Wyman, a consulting firm that did a stress test of Spanish lenders. Bad loans surged to a record 11.2 percent of total lending, the Bank of Spain said yesterday. 
  • Less Profit in Sight as Maersk Overcapacity Hits Growth: Freight. European container-shipping operators such as A.P. Moeller-Maersk A/S may benefit little from higher volumes next year as carrier lines battle to remain profitable amid overcapacity and weak demand. Global lines will ship the equivalent of 168 million 20- foot containers, an increase of 6.6 percent from 2012, according to London-based shipping-services company Clarkson Plc. (CKN) Traffic on mainline Asia-Europe routes will lag global growth, rising 4 percent to 21 million 20-foot boxes as low European consumer demand limits orders. Economic weakness caused by the debt crisis in Europe, which accounts for more than a third of global trade, is putting pressure on earnings at shipping lines such as Copenhagen-based Maersk Line, the world’s largest, and CMA CGM SA. Further clouding the outlook, industry capacity will grow 7.5 percent next year, Clarkson says, undermining efforts to boost profit on Asia-Europe routes as earlier rate rises struggle to take hold.
  • Axa Downgraded by S&P on Investments, European Economy. Axa SA (CS), France’s largest insurer, was downgraded by Standard & Poor’s as the economic slump in Europe weighs on results. The insurer’s credit rating was cut to A- from A as “unfavorable investment market conditions and weak economic prospects are likely to dampen AXA group’s earnings growth,” the ratings firm said yesterday in a statement on the Paris- based company.
  • Japan Exports Slide. Japan’s exports fell for a sixth month in November and the trade deficit swelled, underscoring the challenge that incoming Prime Minister Shinzo Abe faces in reviving growth. Shipments slid 4.1 percent from a year earlier, the Finance Ministry said in Tokyo today. The median forecast of 23 economists was for a 5.5 percent decline. Imports rose 0.8 percent leaving a deficit of 953.4 billion yen ($11.3 billion), the third-largest on record. Exports to China fell 14.5 percent from the previous year as shipments of construction equipment tumbled almost 75 percent and cars dropped 68 percent by value, improving from an 84 percent decline in October. Exports to the European Union dropped 19.9 percent, while those to the U.S. rose 5.3 percent.
  • India Sees Children Dying as $2 Billion Program Proves Defective.
  • How Global Headwinds Are Slowing Indian Growth. India hasn’t been spared the effects of the recession and the recent slowing of global growth. Weak Chinese imports in particular have had a distinctly negative impact on suppliers such as South Korea, Taiwan, Indonesia, Australia and Brazil. In the 2010-2011 fiscal year, India’s trade gap with China jumped to $28 billion, its largest shortfall with a trading partner.
  • Alcoa(AA) May Be Cut to Junk by Moody’s on Lower Aluminum. Alcoa Inc. (AA), the largest U.S. aluminum producer, may have its credit rating cut to junk by Moody’s Investors Service Inc. after the price of the metal slumped. Moody’s placed Alcoa’s Baa3 senior unsecured rating, the lowest investment-grade level, under review for downgrade, the ratings company said today in a statement. The review applies to all of Alcoa’s $8.3 billion of debt, according to the statement. The review “reflects the challenging headwinds” facing the New York-based company, Moody’s said. The recovery in the aluminum industry is “slow and uneven” and the price of the metal will remain at 85 to 95 cents a pound for the next several quarters, it said. 
  • Potash Seen Falling as Asia Wields Purchasing Power: Commodities. China and India are set to negotiate the biggest price cut in three years to buy potash as they break a deadlock in meetings with Russian and North American producers that dominate the $24 billion market for the crop nutrient.
Wall Street Journal:
Fox News:
  • Report on Libya cites State Dept. for security failures, confirms no protest before attack. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton has accepted 29 suggestions to improve embassy security issued as part of a review board's report that faults Clinton's department for security failures and confirms no protest preceded the deadly attack on the U.S. Consulate in Benghazi, Libya. The release of the report, posted Tuesday night on the State Department's website, comes after more than three months of intense debate in Washington over who was behind the attack, what motivated the attacks and why U.S. authorities weren't able to stop the violence, which took the lives of Ambassador Christopher Stevens and three other Americans. Republicans have accused Obama administration officials of giving the American people a series of misleading explanations for the attack from the start. Much of the criticism focused on U.N. Ambassador Susan Rice's comments five days after the Sept. 11 attack that the violence was a "spontaneous" result of protests against an anti-Islam film. Although the motive for the attack remains unclear, the report confirms what quickly became evident -- that the attack was the coordinated work of terrorists. But in many ways, the security failures were of even greater concern, and Clinton vowed Tuesday to address them.
CNBC:
Zero Hedge: 
Business Insider: 
Reuters: 
Telegraph:
Evening Recommendations 
Oppenheimer:
  • Rated (FLS) Outperform, target $175.
Maxim:
  • Rated (BIDU) Sell, target $80.
Night Trading
  • Asian equity indices are -.25% to +1.0% on average.
  • Asia Ex-Japan Investment Grade CDS Index 108.0 -1.0 basis point.
  • Asia Pacific Sovereign CDS Index 84.5 +.5 basis point.
  • FTSE-100 futures +.10%.
  • S&P 500 futures +.03%.
  • NASDAQ 100 futures +.03%.
Morning Preview Links

Earnings of Note

Company/Estimate
  • (GIS)/.79
  • (ATU)/.50
  • (FDX)/1.41
  • (PAYX)/.41
  • (BBBY)/1.02
  • (MLHR)/.39
  • (SCS)/.22
  • (JBL)/.56
  • (NAV)/-1.08  
Economic Releases
 8:30 am EST
  • Housing Starts for November are estimated to fall to 872K versus 894K in October.
  • Building Permits for November are estimated to rise to 875K versus 866K in October.
10:30 am EST 
  • Bloomberg consensus estimates call for a weekly crude oil inventory decline of -1,750,000 barrels versus a +843,000 barrel gain the prior week. Gasoline supplies are estimated to rise by +2,000,000 barrels versus a +5,000,000 barrel gain the prior week. Distillate inventories are estimated to rise by +1,000,000 barrels versus a +2,986,000 barrel gain the prior week. Finally, Refinery Utilization is estimated unch. versus a -.2% decline the prior week.
Upcoming Splits
  • None of note
Other Potential Market Movers
  • The weekly MBA mortgage applications report, 7Y T-Note auction and the (JCI) investor day could also impact trading today.
BOTTOM LINE: Asian indices are mostly higher, boosted by industrial and financial shares in the region. I expect US stocks to open modestly higher and to weaken into the afternoon, finishing mixed. The Portfolio is 50% net long heading into the day.

Stocks Surging into Final Hour on Fiscal Cliff Optimism, Short-Covering, Technical Buying, Tech/Financial Sector Strength

Broad Market Tone:
  • Advance/Decline Line: Higher
  • Sector Performance: Almost Every Sector Rising
  • Volume: Slightly Below Average
  • Market Leading Stocks: Outperforming
Equity Investor Angst:
  • VIX 15.70 -3.92%
  • ISE Sentiment Index 115.0 -30.3%
  • Total Put/Call .84 +.20%
  • NYSE Arms .51 +7.48%
Credit Investor Angst:
  • North American Investment Grade CDS Index 89.20 -2.90%
  • European Financial Sector CDS Index 139.15 -5.45%
  • Western Europe Sovereign Debt CDS Index 109.91 -.45%
  • Emerging Market CDS Index 206.55 -1.72%
  • 2-Year Swap Spread 11.5 -1.0 bp
  • TED Spread 26.75 -2 bps
  • 3-Month EUR/USD Cross-Currency Basis Swap -22.75 +.25 bp
Economic Gauges:
  • 3-Month T-Bill Yield .04% +2 bps
  • Yield Curve 154.0 +2 bps
  • China Import Iron Ore Spot $132.20/Metric Tonne unch.
  • Citi US Economic Surprise Index 47.0 -.4 point
  • 10-Year TIPS Spread 2.50 +2 bps
Overseas Futures:
  • Nikkei Futures: Indicating +132 open in Japan
  • DAX Futures: Indicating +6 open in Germany
Portfolio:
  • Higher: On gains in my retail, tech, medical and biotech sector longs
  • Disclosed Trades: Covered some of my (IWM)/(QQQ) hedges, then added them back
  • Market Exposure: 50% Net Long

Today's Headlines

Bloomberg: 
  • French Health Care for Everyone Means Unwanted Generic Medicine. Anita Manfredi got 18 mud baths, nine massages and 12 spray showers at a spring water spa last month. The French state footed two-thirds of the $1,022 bill. Manfredi isn’t the only lucky recipient. Homeopathic remedies, support tights, taxi rides to the hospital for country dwellers and vaginal-muscle retraining for new moms are among benefits reimbursed by the health-care branch of France’s social security, known as assurance maladie.
  • Investors Are Most Bullish Ever on China Economic Growth. More investors than ever say they are bullish about China’s economic outlook, and more favor European rather than U.S. stocks for the first time in two years, a Bank of America Corp. monthly survey showed. A net 67 percent of money managers, who together oversee $503 billion, predicted that China’s economy will grow at a faster rate next year, the highest reading since the survey data started in 2003. Some 7 percent hold more European stocks than appear in benchmarks, the poll showed.
  • Middle East Oil-Tanker Glut Seen Unchanged in Shipbroker Survey. A surplus of the largest crude oil- tankers available for loading in the Middle East will stay unchanged over the next two weeks, according to a Bloomberg News survey of shipbrokers. There are 20 percent more very large crude carriers for hire over the next 30 days than there are cargoes, according to the median estimate of seven shipbrokers and owners in a Bloomberg News survey today. That’s the same as last week, the data showed. The average surplus of the tankers this year is on course for the lowest since at least 2009, survey data showed. VLCCs are earning $16,860 on the benchmark Middle East-to- Asia voyage, according to the London-based Baltic Exchange. That’s a 2 percent decline since the start of the month and down 40 percent from the November high.
  • Highest-Paid California Trooper Is Chief Banking $484,000. California Highway Patrol division chief Jeff Talbott retired last year as the best-paid officer in the 12 most-populous U.S. states, collecting $483,581 in salary, pension and other compensation. Talbott, 53, received $280,259 for accrued leave and vacation time and took a new job running the public-safety department at a private university in Southern California. He also began collecting an annual pension of $174,888 from the state.
  • Gee Takes Jets as $1.9 Million Payday Roils Ohio StudentsThe Ohio State University President E. Gordon Gee lives in a 9,630-square-foot Tudor Revival mansion that was renovated for him, featuring a great hall, pool, elevator and tennis court. Gee made $1.9 million last year as the highest-paid public university president in the U.S. He also logged $1.7 million in expenses in fiscal 2011, including airfare for trips in private jets, country club dues and fundraising parties at his residence. “He’s overpaid,” said CJ Jones, 19, a junior public affairs major at Ohio State, whose tuition has risen 9.7 percent during her 2 1/2 years at the university, based in Columbus, the state capital. “You should want that job for a sense of Buckeye pride. Why do you have to suck so many resources from our budget? I know kids graduating from OSU with $90,000 in debt, and it’s a public university.”
  • Wells Fargo(WFC) Buys 35% Stake in Hedge-Fund Firm Rock Creek Group. Wells Fargo & Co. (WFC), the biggest U.S. bank by market value, bought a stake in Rock Creek Group LP to provide more hedge-fund offerings to clients amid a push to double the asset-management unit within seven years.
Wall Street Journal:
CNBC:
  • No 'Cliff' Deal by Week's End: GOP Sen. Corker. (video) Senator Bob Corker told CNBC on Tuesday that he does not think a deal to avoid the "fiscal cliff" will be reached by the end of this week. The Tennessee Republican said in an interview on CNBC's "Squawk Box" that he's really surprised by the media's optimism over President Barack Obama's new offer to House Speaker John Boehner, which features concessions on revenue. "We are not close to a deal," Corker said. "I've been trying for three weeks — standing on my head, doing cartwheels — to try to pivot to entitlement reform. This is not a deal here." (Read More: Boehner Proposing a "Plan B" Option)
  • US Policy Gridlock Holding Back Economy? Maybe Not. Washington thinks a resolution of the tense debate over the national debt will unlock a burst of economic growth by lifting uncertainty that has stymied investment. It is a widely held view on Wall Street as well, derived from the glaring signs of weak business confidence over the last year as America struggles to get its fiscal house in order. However, evidence for this belief is far from clear and is an issue of considerable debate, and even some businesses wonder how big a factor uncertainty is.
  • Lindsey: Obama Moves Goal Posts ‘Out of the Ballpark’. President Barack Obama's latest "fiscal cliff" offer does not move the goal posts closer in negotiations with House Speaker John Boehner, it moves them "out of the ballpark," said former Bush administration economic adviser Lawrence Lindsey. "The president campaigned on tax increases for [households] over $250,000 for a total of $970 billion [in new revenue]," Lindsey told CNBC's "Squawk Box" on Tuesday. "So now we're at $1.2 trillion … From what he campaigned on, he's is still moving the goal posts away from a compromise."
  • Trading 'Kill Switch' Coming Soon: NYSE Exec. U.S. regulators and exchanges are getting closer to a framework for a "kill switch" that could be used to shut down trading before software glitches get out of control and wreak havoc on markets, a top exchange official said Tuesday.
  • Why China May Be Facing US-Style Credit Crunch. China, already struggling with a slowing economy, may now be facing the type of credit crunch that helped derail the U.S. economy four years ago. Among the all-too-familiar ingredients: supposedly risk-free—yet high-yield—investments, off-balance-sheet transactions, little if any disclosure and investors who don't ask a lot of questions. All this has one Wall Street analyst warning that China is "a step closer to a potential credit event in the shadow banking sector."
SeekingAlpha:
Reuters: 
  • Fed's Fisher says quantitative easing not very effective. Dallas Federal Reserve President Richard Fisher said Tuesday he had opposed the Fed's recent bond-buying programs because he did not think they are very effective in bringing down the high jobless rate, a top Fed official said on Tuesday. "I don't think it's as effective...as my colleagues do," he told the Gainesville Area Chamber of Commerce.
  • ECB'S Praet says France must cut spending, start reforms. France must cut spending in order to meet its budget deficit target and undertake structural reforms to boost competitiveness, European Central Bank Executive Board Member Peter Praet said on Tuesday. "France has too often resisted change," Praet said in an interview with French daily Le Figaro. "There is a consensus now in France on the need to improve public finances and competitiveness. To do that, structural reform is needed." He also said euro zone countries should not back away from meeting a 3 percent deficit target despite an economic downturn in the bloc.
  • World 2013 growth seen slow, political risks remain-bank groupPolitical risks ranging from turmoil in Italy to potential impediments to euro area reform could hamper the world economy next year, a global banking group warned on Tuesday as it projected another year of sluggish growth. In a somewhat gloomy forecast for 2013, the Institute of International Finance said fiscal policy in the United States and tensions between Japan and China could also weigh, although emerging economies should continue to improve. The bank lobby group said it expected the global economy to grow just 2.7 percent next year, s carcely a pick-up from the modest 2.5 percent it sees for 2012. A year ago, it had predicted world growth of 3.7 percent for 2013.
  • Medicaid, other costs threaten NY state and local budgets-report. Costs for Medicaid, education and employee retirement benefits are threatening to overwhelm state and local government budgets in New York, a report by a national task force issued on Tuesday found. 
  • French banks will know new liquidity ratios in Jan -Noyer. Bank of France Governor Christian Noyer said on Tuesday that French banks will find out in January how liquidity requirements will change under the new banking rules set out in Basel III. "The liquidity ratios were set a bit quickly, they hadn't been calibrated very well and we're finalising the reforms to the ratios," Noyer told BFM radio.  
  • US, Europe may take five years to recover from jobs crisis, UN says. Global economic growth is expected to remain sluggish in the coming year and will be insufficient to pull countries out the unemployment crisis many are facing, the United Nations said in a report on Tuesday. It said under policies now in place it may take at least five years to recover from the job losses in Europe and the United States in the 2008-2009 recession. "A worsening of the euro area crisis, the 'fiscal cliff' in the United States and a hard landing in China could cause a new global recession," said Rob Vos, head of the U.N. Development Policy and Analysis Division. "Each of these risks could cause global output losses of between 1 and 3 percent."
Financial Times:
  • Corporate credit and the lessons of CPDOs. With such substantial leverage, investors should question the sustainability of existing risk spreads if monetary policy fails to sustain current economic growth rates. Commentators, including this one, have previously noted the possible negative consequences of quantitative easing policies and zero bound interest rates.
AFR: 
  • China puts foot down over Huawei. The Chinese government has warned Australia risks jeopardising its role in China’s economic transformation unless it stops discriminating against Chinese companies, including telecommunications equipment manufacturer Huawei. China’s ambassador to Australia, Chen Yuming, said Chinese investment would continue to focus on Australia’s substantial mineral resources. But as the Chinese economy became less reliant on producing exports, there would be a greater emphasis on investments in agriculture and consumer goods. Mr Chen said China did not want to see a repeat of what he said was the “discriminatory’’ decision to ban Huawei from building part of the national broad­band network on security grounds.

Bear Radar

Style Underperformer:
  • Large-Cap Value +.79%
Sector Underperformers:
  • 1) Gold & Silver -2.11% 2) Telecom -.12% 3) HMOs -.37%
Stocks Falling on Unusual Volume:
  • CNH, SA, AUQ, USM, RAI, LO, NG, NRGY, DISH, TBBK, FDS, RGR, SLGN, NRGY, CAB, VCRA, VVI, USM, CNC, WWD, MDP, AXS, LO, BPT, CBD, WRB and AEM
Stocks With Unusual Put Option Activity:
  • 1) HOV 2) BHI 3) XLB 4) JNPR 5) UPS
Stocks With Most Negative News Mentions:
  • 1) KSU 2) TRMB 3) TST 4) AMGN 5) HL
Charts:

Bull Radar

Style Outperformer:
  • Small-Cap Growth +1.26%
Sector Outperformers:
  • 1) Education +2.62% 2) Steel +2.46% 3) Computer Hardware +2.25%
Stocks Rising on Unusual Volume:
  • GDP, LVLT, ARB, TROX, SHFL, GBX, YOKU, CAJ, LOGM, SM, XXIA, PANW, RAX, CAR and FSL
Stocks With Unusual Call Option Activity:
  • 1) HTZ 2) DNR 3) APOL 4) RAX 5) GIS
Stocks With Most Positive News Mentions:
  • 1) CCE 2) NUS 3) NAV 4) ARB 5) CUB
Charts:

Tuesday Watch

Evening Headlines 
Bloomberg: 
  • Obama Offer Raises Tax Increase Threshold to $400,000. President Barack Obama made a new budget offer that would raise taxes by $1.2 trillion and increase tax rates for households earning more than $400,000 a year, up from $250,000, said a person familiar with the talks. Obama’s plan would cut $1.22 trillion in federal spending, including interest savings, said the person, who spoke on condition of anonymity. It would change the inflation measure used to calculate Social Security benefit increases. In his offer, Obama would increase the U.S. debt limit for two years
  • U.S. Banks Lack Liquidity to Withstand Crisis, Study Says. U.S. banks representing more than half the industry’s assets need an additional $840 billion in cash on hand to cover short-term obligations if financial markets seize up again, according to a study. The 11 financial firms surveyed, which have about $9.2 trillion in combined assets, need the funds in cash, Treasury bonds or other liquid assets to cover 30 days of debt costs and other expenses under international capital rules, according to a report released today by the New York-based Clearing House, which represents 18 of the largest lenders. The so-called liquidity coverage ratio, a buffer of banks’ liquid assets regulators require in case markets freeze, improved from 59 percent in the fourth quarter of 2010 to 81 percent in the second quarter of this year, the Clearing House said. Three of 11 companies surveyed have a coverage ratio of 100 percent or more while eight have shortfalls
  • China Home Prices Gain in Majority of Cities as Curbs Stay. China’s new home prices rose in the majority of cities the government tracks in November as property curbs slowed construction, reducing the supply available for sale. Prices climbed in 53 of the 70 cities from the previous month, compared with 35 in October, according to data from the National Bureau of Statistics today. That was the most in 18 months. Prices fell in 10 cities.
  • China to Stick to Property Curbs, Ministry Says. China will stick to its property curb policies, Liao Yonglin, an official from the Ministry of Land and Resources, said at a presser today, according to a transcript on the ministry's website.
  • China Foreign-Investment Declines for 12th Time in 13 Months. Foreign direct investment in China fell for the 12th time in 13 months, suggesting the nation’s economic-growth rebound has yet to attract a fresh influx of capital spending from abroad. Investment dropped 5.4 percent in November from a year earlier to $8.29 billion, the Ministry of Commerce said in Beijing today. FDI inflows in the first 11 months of the year fell 3.6 percent to $100 billion.
  • Copper Falls as Supplies, Budget Impasse Signal Slowing Demand. Copper fell to a one-week low in New York as a jump in stockpiles monitored by the London Metal Exchange and a U.S. budget standoff added to demand concerns. Inventories in warehouses tracked by the LME rose for an eighth session, climbing 9.5 percent to 298,625 metric tons, the most since Sept. 5, 2008, exchange data showed today.
  • Lacker Says Fed Asset Buying Won’t Speed Growth Above 2%. Federal Reserve Bank of Richmond President Jeffrey Lacker predicted the economy will grow 2 percent next year and said the Fed’s stepped up purchases of bonds won’t do much to spur the recovery. “It’s not clear that monetary policy, by itself, can bring about any material improvement in economic growth,” Lacker said today in a speech in Charlotte, North Carolina. “The supply of bank reserves is already large enough to support the economic recovery, and the benefits of further asset purchases are unlikely to be sizeable.
  • General Motors(GM) idles Malibu plant in Kansas for 5 weeks-source. General Motors Co idled the Kansas plant that makes the Chevrolet Malibu on Dec. 3 and will not reopen it until Jan. 7 in an attempt to cut into the hefty supply of the midsize sedan, said a source familiar with the situation. The plant, in Fairfax, Kansas, was to be down for a week-and-a-half beginning December 24 for a normal holiday break. An extra 3-1/2 weeks of no-production days were added to allow GM to work through the oversupply of the Malibu and the Buick LaCrosse, which is also made at the plant.
  • Samsung Wins Order Denying Apple Request for U.S. Sales Ban. Samsung Electronics Co. won a court order rejecting a permanent U.S. sales ban on 26 of its devices sought by Apple Inc. following a jury verdict in August finding infringement of six of the iPhone maker’s patents.
Wall Street Journal: 
  • The Fiscal Cliff: Live Stream.
  • Clues Hint at School Shooter's State of Mind.
  • Struggles Mount for Greeks as Economy Faces Winter. Maria Katri sent her son to live at a charitable home for poor boys after Greece's economy crashed. Now, as Greece slides deeper into depression, the widowed mother is so poor that her teenage daughter, who stills lives at home, is "jealous that her brother is having a better time than her in the institution," Ms. Katri says. The spread of economic hardship is fraying Greece's social fabric and straining its political cohesion as the country enters the harshest winter of its three-year-old debt crisis. Even the tightknit Greek family—an institution that has helped the population to absorb a collapse in employment—is under pressure as household incomes dwindle.
  • Probe Sparks Split on Trades. A regulatory investigation into whether stock exchanges have given unfair advantages to high-speed traders has sparked complaints against the exchanges, fueling a broader debate about how the market operates and is regulated. The Investment Company Institute, trade group for mutual funds, complained in a recent letter to the Securities and Exchange Commission that U.S. stock exchanges "facilitate strategies" for rapid-fire trading firms "that can lead to disorderly markets or that can benefit market participants at the expense of long-term investors." 
  • ECB Chief Defends Austerity Measures. European Central Bank President Mario Draghi urged governments to build on "painful progress" they have made on narrowing budget deficits and overhauling their economies, despite the near-term damage these policies have inflicted on business activity and unemployment. Mr. Draghi's strident defense of fiscal austerity as a means of ensuring economic growth in the long run comes against mounting criticism that these measures are weakening already-fragile countries such as Spain and Portugal, leading to persistently high unemployment and sharp contractions in output.
  • Apple(AAPL) in Talks With Foursquare About Data-Sharing Deal.
  • ObamaCare's Faux Federalism. GOP Governors are smarter than some of their conservative critics. As for conservatives who say running an exchange is a last stand against single-payer medicine, well, all we can say is good luck with that one. ObamaCare was designed to make a Washington-dominated and -paid for system inevitable. Within three or four years the same people who passed ObamaCare will be talking about "solving" ObamaCare's government-created problems with more government. The 26 Governors are merely saying they won't be accomplices.
Fox News:
  • The Cost of Spending: Federal government racking up huge tab. The problem is right now you have a situation in which the government in its overspending ways tries to rationalize it by saying that actually the problem is we're under-taxing the American public,” he said. “It's like your irresponsible brother-in-law runs up his credit cards and goes bust and says the real problem is because you've stopped sending me checks."
CNBC: 
  • Even Without Congress, Obama Could Act to Restrict Guns. Unburdened by re-election worries and empowered by law to act without Congress, U.S. President Barack Obama could take action to improve background checks on gun buyers, ban certain gun imports and bolster oversight of dealers.
Zero Hedge: 
Business Insider:
NY Times:
Reuters: 
  • Obama held talks with Biden, Cabinet members on Newtown response. President Barack Obama held talks on Monday with Vice President Joe Biden and three Cabinet members to look at ways to respond to the Newtown, Connecticut, school shootings, a White House official said.
  • Obama 'cliff' offer is flawed but positive - Boehner aides. Aides to House of Representatives Speaker John Boehner said on Monday the latest White House offer on resolving the fiscal cliff impasse is flawed but moves negotiations in a positive direction. "Any movement away from the unrealistic offers the president has made previously is a step in the right direction, but a proposal that includes $1.3 trillion in revenue for only $930 billion in spending cuts cannot be considered balanced," said Brendan Buck, a Boehner spokesman. "We hope to continue discussions with the president so we can reach an agreement that is truly balanced and begins to solve our spending problem," Buck said.
  • Syria 'genuinely worried' extremists could get chemical weapons. Syria is "genuinely worried" that some countries might equip extremist groups with chemical weapons and then claim they were used by the Syrian government, the country's U.N. envoy said in a letter to U.N. chief Ban Ki-moon and the Security Council. Syria's U.N. Ambassador Bashar Ja'afari also accused the U.S. government of supporting "terrorists" in Syria and waging a campaign that claims Syria could use chemical weapons in the 20-month-old civil war that has killed at least 40,000 people.
  • Boeing(BA) resumes $3.6 bln share repurchase program. Boeing Co said Monday it will raise its dividend 10 percent and resume share repurchases after suspending them in 2009. The Chicago-based aerospace company set a regular quarterly dividend of 48.5 cents per share, payable on March 8, meaning Boeing will not join Wal-Mart Stores Inc and other companies that decided to issue dividends in December to avoid the looming possibility of a tax increase in the new year.
  • Wal-Mart(WMT) affiliate used bribes to open 19 new stores in Mexico: NY Times. Wal-Mart Stores Inc's Mexican affiliate routinely used bribes to open stores in desirable locations, according to a New York Times investigation published Monday, which cites 19 instances of the retail giant paying off local officials.
Telegraph:
  • Major protests expected in Spanish cities. Hundreds of thousands of people are expected to pack the streets of Spanish cities in evening protests against the conservative government's anti-crisis austerity measures.
Evening Recommendations 
  • None of note
Night Trading
  • Asian equity indices are unch. to +.75% on average.
  • Asia Ex-Japan Investment Grade CDS Index 109.0 unch.
  • Asia Pacific Sovereign CDS Index 84.0 -.25 basis point.
  • FTSE-100 futures +.51%.
  • S&P 500 futures +.27%.
  • NASDAQ 100 futures +.33%.
Morning Preview Links

Earnings of Note

Company/Estimate
  • None of note
Economic Releases
 8:30 am EST
  • The 3Q Current Account Deficit is estimated at -$103.0B versus -$117.4B in 2Q.
 10:00 am EST
  • The NAHB Housing Market Index for December is estimated to rise to 47 versus 46 in November.
Upcoming Splits
  • None of note
Other Potential Market Movers
  • The Fed's Fisher speaking, 5Y T-Note auction, weekly retail sales reports, China property price data and the (MED) analyst day could also impact trading today.
BOTTOM LINE: Asian indices are mostly higher, boosted by automaker and financial shares in the region. I expect US stocks to open modestly higher and to weaken into the afternoon, finishing mixed. The Portfolio is 50% net long heading into the day.