Wednesday, March 31, 2010

Stocks Lower into Final Hour on Tax Hike Fears, Profit-Taking, More Shorting, Rising Sovereign Debt Angst


Broad Market Tone:

  • Advance/Decline Line: Slightly Lower
  • Sector Performance: Most Declining
  • Volume: Slightly Below Average
  • Market Leading Stocks: Performing In Line
Equity Investor Angst:
  • VIX 17.60 +2.74%
  • ISE Sentiment Index 124.0 unch.
  • Total Put/Call .88 +3.53%
  • NYSE Arms 1.21 -18.54%
Credit Investor Angst:
  • North American Investment Grade CDS Index 87.73 bps +1.68%
  • European Financial Sector CDS Index 74.67 bps +1.68%
  • Western Europe Sovereign Debt CDS Index 79.67 bps +4.46%
  • Emerging Market CDS Index 231.70 bps +.87%
  • 2-Year Swap Spread 17.0 bps +2.0 bps
  • TED Spread 14.0 -1 bp
Economic Gauges:
  • 3-Month T-Bill Yield .15% +1 bp
  • Yield Curve 282.0 bps +1 bp
  • China Import Iron Ore Spot $155.0/Metric Tonne +.91%
  • Citi US Economic Surprise Index +33.80 -2.1 points
  • 10-Year TIPS Spread 2.26% +4 bps
Overseas Futures:
  • Nikkei Futures: Indicating +41 open in Japan
  • DAX Futures: Indicating +5 open in Germany
Portfolio:
  • Slightly Lower: On losses in my Retail and Tech long positions
  • Disclosed Trades: None
  • Market Exposure: 75% Net Long
BOTTOM LINE: Today's overall market action is mildly bearish as stocks move to session lows into the final hour. On the positive side, Oil Service, Gold, Energy and Airline stocks are especially strong, rising .5%+. (XLF) is outperforming today. The 10-year yield is pulling back -3 bps on the ADP report. On the negative side, Education, Retail, Homebuilding, Hospital, I-Bank, Networking, Defense, Internet and Oil Tanker shares are falling .75%+ on the day. The S&P GSCI Ag Spot Index is falling another -3.44% today and has plunged -19.2% since January 6th, which is a red flag for other commodities. The Citi Asia Economic Surprise Index is falling -17.4% today to +43.70, which is below its 200-day moving average for the first time during this recovery. The US sovereign cds is rising +10.0% to 38.50 bps and the Greece sovereign cds continues to move back up, rising another +2.1%. I suspect we could see further equity weakness tomorrow morning. I expect US stocks to trade mixed-to-lower into the close from current levels on profit-taking, more shorting, tax hike fears and rising sovereign debt angst.

Bear Radar


Style Underperformer:

  • Large-Cap Growth (-.09%)
Sector Underperformers:
  • Education (-.94%), Homebuilding (-.87%) and Hospitals (-.78%)
Stocks Falling on Unusual Volume:
  • MWE, F, HEAT, LINC, APWR, AUTC, CEPH, BUCY and CAGC
Stocks With Unusual Put Option Activity:
  • 1) NOV 2) NBR 3) THC 4) LO 5) DCTH

Bull Radar


Style Outperformer:

  • Small-Cap Growth (+.32%)
Sector Outperformers:
  • Oil Service (+1.25%), Gold (+1.20%) and Banks (+.50%)
Stocks Rising on Unusual Volume:
  • STL, CDE, BVN, HDB, ESV, NFX, RIG, SWC, IVN, GEOY, ISIS, KMGB, SYNA, NWPX, GIVN, JOSB, DRIV, JDSU, WPPGY, PPDI, VSEA, RCRC, AMSC, GPOR, GMCR and MTG
Stocks With Unusual Call Option Activity:
  • 1) UBS 2) SWC 3) MTG 4) MOT 5) F

Wednesday Watch


Evening Headlines

Bloomberg:
  • Fed's Fisher Says U.S. Can't Ignore Effect of Deficit on Yields. Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas President Richard Fisher said the U.S. can’t ignore the effect of the growing federal deficit on Treasury yields and the outlook of investors. “Even under the most optimistic of scenarios, large deficits will be run for as far as the eye can see,” Fisher said in the text of a speech today in Tucson, Arizona. “The markets, fearing the consequences of runaway deficit financing, have bid up longer-term nominal rates, resulting in a yield curve that is now historically steep.” Still, “we cannot turn a blind eye to the effect that growing government indebtedness has on investors’ confidence and Treasury yields,” said the bank president, 61, who has led the Dallas Fed since 2005 and doesn’t vote on the Federal Open Market Committee again until 2011. The Fed shouldn’t step in to buy Treasuries just to hold longer-term rates down, which would create the perception that policy makers are “monetizing the debt,” he said. “The good news is that we are beginning to see some rays of sunshine emerge from the leftover clouds of the frightful storm we have just experienced,” Fisher said. Even so, “the skies are far from clear,” with too many unemployed workers and a “precarious” housing situation, he said. The budget deficit reached a record $1.4 trillion for the fiscal year that ended Sept. 30 amid falling tax revenue from the recession, a bailout of the banking and auto industries, and the $787 billion economic stimulus package. The Obama administration in February projected the shortfall would widen to $1.6 trillion this year.
  • Britain's soaring interest bill is forecast to exceed 10% of revenue in four years, the most since Margaret thatcher was prime minister, an analysis of Treasury documents by the Institute for Fiscal Studies shows. Moody's Investors Service said this month that Aaa-rated sovereigns with financing costs at 10% or more of revenue exceed the bounds of "debt affordability." The IFS says Treasury figures indicate the ratio will reach 10.6% by March 2015. The projections underline the pressure on whichever party wins this year's election to reduce the budget deficit.
  • G-8 Has 'Serious Doubts' About Iran Nuclear Program. Group of Eight foreign ministers said actions by Iran have deepened “serious doubts” about the peaceful nature of the country’s nuclear program, and they are prepared to take “strong steps” to show resolve on the issue. The G-8 foreign ministers, in a statement released today following a meeting in Gatineau, Quebec, urged Iran “in the strongest possible terms” to cooperate fully with relevant resolutions of the United Nations Security Council and the International Atomic Energy Agency. “Ministers agreed to remain open to dialogue, and also reaffirmed the need to take appropriate and strong steps to demonstrate international resolve to uphold the international nuclear non-proliferation regime and persuade Iran to build greater international confidence in the peaceful nature of its nuclear program,” according to the statement. The statement fell short of calling for sanctions against Iran.
  • China May Shun US Treasuries, Sending Yields to 4.5%, SocGen Says. China may curb purchases of U.S. Treasuries this year as its first trade deficit in 17 years leaves it with fewer dollars to invest, causing yields to climb, according to Societe Generale SA. Maguire’s call clashes with the view of JPMorgan Chase & Co. and Barclays Capital analysts, who say it’s too early to conclude that China will run a sustained trade deficit. The debate highlights the potential vulnerability of U.S. borrowing costs to any shift in trade patterns for China, the biggest foreign holder of American government debt.
  • Ford(F) Said to Plan Hybrid Lincoln to Bolster Last Luxury Line. Ford Motor Co. plans to expand the Lincoln luxury line by adding a hybrid model based on its top- selling Fusion sedan, two people familiar with the matter said. The hybrid Lincoln MKZ will be unveiled tomorrow at the New York auto show, said the people, who asked not to be identified because Dearborn, Michigan-based Ford hasn’t announced the details.
  • Chavez Cash Crunch Looms on Oil, Morgan Stanley Says. Venezuela’s government may face a cash crunch as early as this year as oil production slumps amid stable prices, Morgan Stanley said today in a report. The country, which depends on crude for 94 percent of export revenue, has seen output plunge to 2.2 million barrels a day from 3.7 million in 1997, according to Morgan Stanley. Venezuela now faces the risk that oil prices won’t rise enough in coming years to offset declines in production, forcing it to use savings to fund spending, the report said. “Venezuela may be hard pressed to avoid its day of reckoning,” analysts Giuliana Pardelli and Daniel Volberg said. “If we assume that oil prices remain in the $80-$85 per barrel range, such a level is likely to be insufficient to offset the decline in production.” Investors bet that oil prices will stay close to $90 a barrel through 2015, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. Venezuela’s international reserves fell to a 10-month low March 29 after the central bank transferred $5 billion to President Hugo Chavez’s off-budget development fund. Cash is also being used up as investors pull out of the country and a drop in manufacturing increases reliance on imports bought with dollars, Morgan Stanley said.
  • Obama's Health Beast Squashes State Experiments: Amity Shlaes. State attorneys general are filing lawsuits seeking to prove President Barack Obama’s health-care plan is unconstitutional. The litigation takes the spotlight away from something else about the states that matters. It is that states can be laboratories where the country experiments to ascertain which mix of taxes, incentives and public administration works best when it comes to health care. Obamacare threatens such experiments by superseding them. In doing so, the new federal program deprives the country not only of the experiments themselves but also of evidence that might cast doubt on the promises of the new legislation. In few states is the change as dramatic as in Indiana.
Wall Street Journal:
  • Year's First CMBS Deal Arrives. The first commercial-mortgage-bond deal of the year is expected to be marketed to investors this week, according to sources familiar with the transaction. The offer is seen as a sign of investors' willingness to tolerate risk, despite the deteriorating fundamentals of commercial real estate, as long as a deal is accompanied by adequate protection and conservative underwriting. Royal Bank of Scotland Group, through its real-estate advisory business, will offer a $500 million security backed by existing loans that were refinanced and underwritten to stricter guidelines, the sources said.
  • Trader's 'Nice Little Kiss' Tests Reach of Regulators. A series of phone calls between a Deutsche Bank AG bond salesman and a hedge-fund trader has landed the two men at the center of a courtroom test of how far federal regulators can go in pursuing insider trading.
  • BP(BP) Begins Big Push to Revive Iraq's Oil. BP PLC Tuesday awarded $500 million in contracts to drill wells in Iraq's giant Rumaila oil field, the first step in a mammoth initiative by foreign oil companies to revive the country's energy industry. If successful, the effort at Rumaila and several other fields near Basra could be one of the largest expansions of crude-oil production ever achieved anywhere. Increased Iraq production could be the difference between a well-supplied global market with oil steadily trading below today's $82 a barrel and a tight oil market with triple-digit prices, struggling to meet rising Asian demand. "It could change the map of oil," says Paolo Scaroni, chief executive of Italy's Eni SpA, which is preparing to begin work on the giant Zubair field. The new drilling contracts are the beginning of a long effort by a dozen of the world's largest oil companies to revive Iraq's decrepit oil infrastructure and turn it into a rival of Saudi Arabia for world's biggest crude exporter, industry officials say. Iraqi officials say they plan to add 10 million barrels a day of oil production capacity by 2017. Iraq has an estimated 115 billion barrels of crude-oil reserves. At current prices, that is valued at $9.5 trillion. The bottom line is that the lure of working in Iraq—with its plentiful oil—is too great for most big oil companies to ignore. "It makes commercial sense for us to increase production as quickly as we can," said Toby Odone, a BP spokesman. BP and the South Oil Co. let contracts to drill 49 wells to Weatherford International Ltd.; a partnership between Schlumberger Ltd. and the state-run Iraqi Drilling Co.; and China's Daqing Oil Field Company Ltd., said Abdul Mahdy al-Ameedi, a senior official in the oil ministry. He said BP plans to increase production at Rumaila from 1.07 million barrels a day to 1.23 million barrels within 12 months. These contracts are the first of what is expected to be a wave of oil-field-service related work let by BP, Exxon, Royal Dutch Shell PLC, Eni, Lukoil OAO and China National Petroleum Corp. over the next few months. The companies have been awarded contracts to increase production at separate fields. Energy analysts at Sanford C. Bernstein recently wrote that developing seven major Iraq fields, including Rumaila and Zubair, would require $102 billion in investment. The development of so many enormous projects—most clustered within 50 miles of each other—will create an enormous demand for workers, engineers and drilling rigs. It will also require the construction of a giant infrastructure build out, including roads, ports, oil export facilities and water plants. Even a few million barrels a day of crude oil production capacity could have an enormous impact. The growth of Iraqi oil production and exports will play a "decisive role in shaping global oil markets," says Fatih Birol, chief economist of the Paris-based International Energy Agency, a watchdog for industrialized nations.
  • Russia Boosts Security as Capital Mourns. Prime Minister Vladimir Putin vowed to "drag out of the sewer" those behind twin bombings that killed 39 people Monday in Moscow's subway, as officials pledged to stiffen penalties for terrorists and tighten security.
BusinessWeek.com:
  • U.K. Climate Science 'Damaged' by Leaked E-Mails, Lawmakers Say. Britain’s global warming scientists damaged their reputation by “unacceptable” withholding of data in response to freedom of information requests, said a panel of lawmakers who probed the so-called climategate scandal. Parliament’s Science and Technology Committee said the University of East Anglia’s “culture of non-disclosure” in relation to its climate research may have broken freedom of information laws by failing to publish data sought by critics of global warming theory. “What was reprehensible is that this area of science is of such global importance economically and politically that there was not a culture of releasing all the data and methodology as a matter of course,” panel Chairman Phil Willis said in London before the report was released today. “That is how things should be in the future.” The e-mails from the university’s Climatic Research Unit allowed global warming skeptics, including U.S. Senator James Inhofe, a Republican from Oklahoma, to question data making the case that humans are causing worldwide increases in the temperature. “The disclosure of CRU e-mails has damaged the reputation of U.K. climate science and, as views on global warming have become polarized, any deviation from the highest scientific standards will be pounced on,” the committee wrote. The lawmakers also said that because a general election is due by June, they didn’t have enough time to hold an in-depth enquiry. They cleared Phil Jones, head of the school’s Climatic Research Unit, of wrongdoing, saying he acted “in line with common practice,” in not publishing all his methods and computer codes. Jones stepped aside from his post in December pending completion of an investigation. In one e-mail, he wrote of deleting files rather than handing data to skeptics. The lawmakers cleared Jones of dishonesty in one of the most widely-cited e-mails, in which he discussed a “trick” to hide the decline in one temperature record. Graham Stringer, one of the four members of the panel who attended the hearings and a lawmaker from the ruling Labour Party, voted against that conclusion. He argued that not enough evidence had been heard. The school said it welcomed the lawmakers’ “largely positive” report.
  • Nissan Prices U.S. Leaf Battery Car to Challenge Prius Hybrid. Nissan Motor Co., aiming to be the biggest seller of electric cars, said its battery-powered Leaf will cost $25,280.
CNBC:
Business Insider:
  • Because Companies Said Obamacare Will Hit Them, Henry Waxman Is Launching A War On Accounting. Accounting basics: when a company experiences what accountants call "a material adverse impact" on its expected future earnings, and those changes affect an item that is already on the balance sheet, the company is required to record the negative impact--"to take the charge against earnings"--as soon as it knows that the change is reasonably likely to occur. This makes good accounting sense. The asset on the balance sheet is now less valuable, so you should record a charge. Otherwise, you'd be misleading investors. Obviously, Waxman is incensed because this seems to put the lie to the promise that if you like your current plan, nothing will change. But this was never true. Medicare Advantage beneficiaries are basically going to see their generous benefits slashed, retiree drug benefits suddenly cost more and may now be discontinued, and ultimately, more than a few employers will almost certainly find it cheaper to shut down their plans. If Congress didn't want those things to happen, it should have passed a different law. If Congress thinks that it made the right tradeoffs--or at least, justifiable choices--then our Congressmen should step up and accept responsibility for what they've done. At the very least, I think we can ask that they refrain from trying to force companies to join them in denying reality by threatening congressional investigation of any company who dares to notify investors that this thing is going to cost them money.
Chicago Tribune:
  • Taking a Hatchet to Moderate Government. Go ahead, attack promoters of moderate government. Paint them as flakes, kooks and goons. Call them unhinged and unglued. Toxic, mean-spirited, shrill and dangerous. othing would please us more than your persisting in mislabeling or misunderstanding — the effect is the same — what angers the majority of Americans. Convince yourself that dissenters to your engorgement of government are doing it because they are racists and bigots. Don't give anyone credit for objecting to where you're leading the country because your path is misdirected. Please, please, continue your crusade to alienate more and more honest and worried Americans who see great danger in the extreme expansion that government has undergone in the last few years. You've already done a great job of dividing the country, but don't stop now. Seventy-eight percent, including 82 percent of independents, think government spending is out of control. Eighty-one percent are fed up with the growing deficit and 73 percent with government spending. Sure, deride the poll because it came from Fox News; ignore the clarity of American anger.
Politico:
  • Now the Real Healthcare Fight Begins. Many liberals are euphoric about Congress passing health care reform. When President Barack Obama signed the most ambitious social legislation since President Lyndon B. Johnson's Great Society, the tide seemed to have turned for the Democrats. But this is not the end of the political struggle. Just the start of a new chapter. While outright repeal of health care reform — as many conservatives demand — seems unlikely, there is no guarantee this reform will stick. Future Congresses could erode or undercut the law. For there is a long history of major social legislation coming under attack post-enactment. New legislation, whether misunderstood or poorly designed, often can take several years to gain solid public support. Political sustainability is not automatic. One of the Democrats’ most embarrassing moments involved the Medicare Catastrophic Coverage Act of 1988, which Congress repealed 16 months after adoption. The reform was the biggest expansion of Medicare since its creation in 1965. It earned some of the same praise we hear today for Obama's health care reform.
Reuters:
  • CME(CME) Working With Fannie, Freddie on Swaps. CME Group Inc. is working with mortgage lending giants Fannie Mae (FNM) and Freddie Mac (FRE) to design a clearing facility for the $414 trillion global market for interest-rate swaps. "We have been working with them to help structure our cleared interest rate swap offering," CME CEO Craig Donohue said on Tuesday at the Reuters Global Exchanges and Trading Summit in New York. Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, which were seized by the U.S. government in September 2008, will start moving their swaps to centralized clearing within months, their regulator said earlier in March. Their combined $3 trillion portfolio makes them the biggest swaps holders in the U.S. "That's a big opportunity for us," said Donohue said, who added the exchange operator is also working with a broad range of other market participants.
Financial Times:
  • Climate for Flotations Continues to Improve. International equity issuance in the first quarter rose to the highest level in two years as the market for stock market flotations continued to thaw and investor and corporate sentiment was soothed by improving economic data. While deals in the US raised the largest amount globally ($27.4bn), a series of big deals from Asia reiterated the region’s recent prominence in both initial public offerings and secondary issuance. Chinese exchanges led the way for initial public offerings. Shenzhen stock market listings raised $6.7bn while Shanghai came in second for the quarter, raising $6bn, meaning China won a 47 per cent market share of the global IPO market.
Chosun Ilbo:
  • U.S. and South Korean intelligence officials have detected the return of North Korean submarines near the site where a South Korean naval ship sank last week. The submarines had moved elsewhere before the incident and are now back at their usual location close to where the 1,200-ton Cheonan sank, citing a South Korean intelligence official.
Yonhap News Agency:
  • Pentagon Remains Cautious on S. Korean Warship's Sinking. The United States Tuesday remained cautious about the cause of the sinking of a South Korean warship in waters near North Korea last week. "I don't think there's a way to determine that at this point, given that the boat in question, I think, is submerged," Geoff Morrell, Pentagon spokesman, told reporters. "I think they have some more work to do to determine that."
Evening Recommendations
Citigroup:
  • Reiterated Sell on (LRCX), target $27.
  • Reiterated Buy on (AAPL), target $300. Our checks suggest that iPhone will become available on Verizon's(VZ) network in either 4CQ10 or 1CQ11. Assuming we are correct about a Verizon iPhone during this time period, our CY11 iPhone unit estimates of 40M seems conservative. In fact, our CY11 estimate is below the current CY10 iPhone build plan. Net, net, we see potential for FY11 earnings estimates to move meaningfully higher.
Night Trading
  • Asian indices are -.25% to +.25% on average.
  • Asia Ex-Japan Investment Grade CDS Index 96.5 +.5 basis point.
  • S&P 500 futures -.05%
  • NASDAQ 100 futures -.11%
Morning Preview Links

Earnings of Note
Company/Estimate
  • (MOS)/.60
  • (RECN)/.02
  • (GPN)/.53
  • (BLUD)/.27
  • (RAD)/-.19
  • (AYI)/.39
  • (MU)/.24
  • (RIMM)/1.28
Economic Releases
8:15 AM EST
  • The ADP Employment Change for March is estimated at +40K versus -20K in February.
9:45 AM EST
  • Chicago Purchasing Manager for March is estimated to fall to 61.0 versus a reading of 62.6 in February.
10:00 AM EST
  • Factory Orders for February are estimated to rise +.5% versus a +1.7% gain in January.
10:30 AM EST
  • Bloomberg consensus estimates call for a weekly crude oil inventory build of +2,500,000 barrels versus a +7,245,000 barrel increase the prior week. Gasoline inventories are expected to fall by -1,850,000 barrels versus a -2,715,000 barrel decline the prior week. Distillate supplies are estimated to fall by -1,375,000 barrels versus a -2,422,000 barrel decline the prior week. Finally, Refinery Utilization is expected to rise +.2% versus a +.56% gain the prior week.
Upcoming Splits
  • None of note
Other Potential Market Movers
  • The Fed's Lockhart speaking, Fed's Duke speaking, weekly MBA mortgage applications report, Bloomberg FCI Monthly and the NAPM-Milwaukee report could also impact trading today.
BOTTOM LINE: Asian indices are mostly lower, weighed down by financial and commodity shares 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.

Tuesday, March 30, 2010

Stocks Slightly Higher into Final Hour on Short-Covering, Less Economic Fear


Broad Market Tone:

  • Advance/Decline Line: Slightly Higher
  • Sector Performance: Mixed
  • Volume: Slightly Below Average
  • Market Leading Stocks: Outperforming
Equity Investor Angst:
  • VIX 17.30 -1.65%
  • ISE Sentiment Index 124.0.0 -24.39%
  • Total Put/Call .84 +1.20%
  • NYSE Arms 1.41 +36.57%
Credit Investor Angst:
  • North American Investment Grade CDS Index 86.28 bps +.27%
  • European Financial Sector CDS Index 73.09 bps -.95%
  • Western Europe Sovereign Debt CDS Index 76.10 bps +2.48%
  • Emerging Market CDS Index 226.41 bps -3.0%
  • 2-Year Swap Spread 15.0 bps -1.0 bp
  • TED Spread 15.0 -2 bps
Economic Gauges:
  • 3-Month T-Bill Yield .14% +2 bps
  • Yield Curve 281.0 bps -2 bps
  • China Import Iron Ore Spot $153.60/Metric Tonne +1.39%
  • Citi US Economic Surprise Index +35.90 +1.4 points
  • 10-Year TIPS Spread 2.22% -1 bp
Overseas Futures:
  • Nikkei Futures: Indicating +43 open in Japan
  • DAX Futures: Indicating +21 open in Germany
Portfolio:
  • Slightly Higher: On gains in my Retail, Medical and Tech long positions
  • Disclosed Trades: Added slightly to (GOOG) long, took profits in another long
  • Market Exposure: 75% Net Long
BOTTOM LINE: Today's overall market action is mildly bullish as stocks move slightly higher after the bears again failed to gain meaningful traction this morning despite rising sovereign debt angst. On the positive side, HMO, Wireless, Semi, Software, Internet, Oil Service and Alt Energy stocks are especially strong, rising .5%+. The 10-year TIPS spread is slightly lower and the 10-year yield is stable again today. US scrap steel prices have surged another 15.4% over the last five days. Weekly retail sales rose +3.6% this week versus a +3.4% gain the prior week and up from a +1.8% increase during the last week of February. On the negative side, Airline, Homebuilding, Disk Drive, Gold and Coal shares are falling .75%+ on the day. (XLF) is underperforming again and hovering just off session lows. The Greece sovereign debt cds is surging another +4.3% today, which is beginning to pressure the euro again. We could see some early morning weakness tomorrow on a sell-the-news reaction to the ADP jobs report and quarter-end profit-taking. I expect US stocks to trade mixed-to-higher into the close from current levels on short-covering and less economic fear.

Today's Headlines


Bloomberg:

  • Greece Leads Rise in Sovereign Credit Risk as Bonds Struggle. Greece led a rise in the cost of credit-default swaps on sovereign debt as a poor reception for the country’s new bonds triggered concern that Europe’s most indebted nations could struggle to fund their budget deficits. Contracts on Greek government debt climbed 20 basis points to 335.5 in London, the highest in more than a week, according to CMA DataVision. Swaps on Spain, Portugal, Italy and Ireland also climbed and the Markit iTraxx SovX Western Europe Index of contracts on 15 governments rose 3.5 basis points to 82, the widest level in a month. Greece’s new 5 billion euros ($6.7 billion) of seven-year bonds fell after the European country with the biggest budget deficit failed to offer investors a premium over existing debt. Bondholders are concerned the country may struggle to borrow the 30 billion euros it needs, part of the more than 2 trillion euros that countries in the region have to raise this year. “The Greek debt crisis is far from over,” said Tim Brunne, a credit strategist at UniCredit SpA in Munich. “The fundamental problems are still the same.” Contracts on Spain increased 3.5 basis points to 114, Portugal widened 6 basis points to 141 and Italy gained 4 basis points to 113. Ireland widened 4 basis point to 138.
  • Downtown New York Towers Empty as Best Market Falters. Downtown Manhattan, where demand for office space began to surge three years after the 9/11 terrorist attacks, is about to lose its spot as the best- performing U.S. market. Vacancies may exceed 14 percent of the area’s 87 million square feet by late 2011, empty space that’s equivalent to four Empire State Buildings and the highest rate since 1997, according to property broker Cushman & Wakefield Inc. That doesn’t include the 4.4 million square feet of offices in two towers now under construction at the World Trade Center site. Those are scheduled for completion in 2013. “The amount of space that’s potentially going to come to the market will increase availabilities and put pressure on pricing,” said Kenneth McCarthy, Cushman’s head of New York- area research. “It will be quite awhile before it can be absorbed.”
  • Fed's Evans Says Jobless May Exceed 9% at Year-End. Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago President Charles Evans said the U.S. jobless rate may remain higher than 9 percent at the end of this year, underscoring the potential need to keep interest rates low into 2011. The unemployment rate may be “nine and a quarter” at the end of 2010, and higher than 7 percent at the end of 2011, Evans said in an interview with Bloomberg Television today in Hong Kong. A government report this week may show the rate was 9.7 percent in March, according to the median forecast in a Bloomberg News survey.
  • Prime Brokerages Should Give Clients Daily Reports. Prime Brokerages Should Give Clients Daily Reports. Investment firms must give hedge- fund clients daily reports on how their money is being held and if it has been reinvested, a U.K. regulator said in proposals responding to the collapse of Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc. Around 35 U.K. prime brokerages will be able to invest a maximum of 20 percent of client deposits in their group’s bank accounts and will have to give clients daily updates on whether their money has been re-used as collateral for loans, under the proposals published today by the Financial Services Authority.
  • Ireland's 'Worst Fears Surpassed' as Banks Need $42.7 Billion. Ireland’s banks may need at least 31.8 billion euros ($42.7 billion) in new capital after a real- estate slump left them crippled by mounting bad loans. The fundraising requirement was announced after the National Asset Management Agency, the country’s so-called bad bank, said it will apply an average discount of 47 percent on the first block of loans it is taking over from lenders and the country’s financial regulator set new capital targets. The discount compares with the government’s initial 30 percent estimate. “Our worst fears have been surpassed,” Finance Minister Brian Lenihan said in the parliament in Dublin today. “The detailed information that has emerged from the banks in the course of the process is truly shocking.”

Wall Street Journal:
  • Best Buy(BBY) Announces First U.K. Store. U.S.-based Best Buy Co., the world's biggest consumer-electronics company, said Monday it will open its first U.K. store in May--a move that ups competition in the retailing of computers, home-entertainment and audio systems. The 50,000-square-foot flagship megastore in Thurrock, East London, will be the first of five so-called big-box stores Best Buy plans open in the U.K. this year.
  • Obama Steps Up Confrontation. White House Seeks to Rally Supporters With Aggressive Tone Against Opponents.
BusinessWeek:
  • Hedge Fund Group Spent $1.1 Million Lobbying in 4Q. A trade group representing hedge funds spent nearly $1.1 million in the fourth quarter lobbying federal officials on proposed financial regulations, including a measure that would require hedge funds to register with the Securities and Exchange Commission. The $1.08 million that the Managed Funds Association spent on lobbying in the latest quarter was about double the $520,000 it spent in the period a year earlier. The group's lobbying total for the latest quarter also tops the $910,000 it spent the previous quarter.
CNBC:
Business Insider:
  • Goldman(GS): CDS Traders Getting Aggressive On U.S. Banks. Goldman's Equity, Credit, and Options Market Monitor, part of their cross-product research platform argues that the fixed income market, via credit default swaps, is pushing a bullish case for U.S. financial stocks. Thus they're part of the recent excitement over U.S. banks from Wall St.:
  • Your Health Insurer's Next Move: Tell You To Take A Hike To A Mexican Hospital. The Medical Tourism Association predicts increased use of international treatment among insurers, as expanded coverage pushes up costs. "Companies could not bear the cost of health insurance as it is, and they certainly won't be able to once cost skyrockets," said association CEO John Edelheit. Indeed, major insurers like Aetna have already launched medical tourism pilot programs, so they can cover you while also saving a buck.
  • OPEC Dying To Convince The World It Can Still Maintain $80 Oil. OPEC member states' compliance with production quota's has fallen to a dismal 54%, something Secretary-General Abdalla El-Badri isn't too happy with. At the same time, its traditional power structure with Saudi Arabia as undisputed production king is under attack by the rise of Iraqi oil production potential. Now, to make matters even more uncertain for the cartel, the non-OPEC world is increasing its production relatively quickly as well. According to OPEC's latest March report, even though their production levels remain well below mid-2008 levels, total world supply is already back up there. (shown below) Thus non-members are becoming more significant, Iraq wants to let loose production, and even many OPEC members aren't even listening to the quotas from central command.
cnet news:
CNNMoney:
Lloyd's List:
  • Shanghai Slowdown Sees Profits Drop. CHINA’s largest port operator, Shanghai International Port (Group), succumbed to an 18.6% decrease in net profit last year to Yuan3.7bn ($553m) from Yuan4.7bn in 2008, as a result of substantial declines in container throughput.
  • UN Climate Change Group to Debate Levy on Shipping. SHIPPING could face a further challenge regarding its contribution to climate change as the UN-sponsored Advisory Group on Climate Change Financing holds its first meeting in London tomorrow, co-chaired by British Prime Minister Gordon Brown and his Ethiopian counterpart Meles Zenawi.
Rasmussen Reports:
  • National Sales Tax Still Unpopular. A new Rasmussen Reports national telephone survey finds that 37% of voters nationwide favor a national sales tax if the money is used to pay for health care for all Americans, but 51% oppose that idea. These findings are unchanged from December. Take health care out of the equation, however, and opposition to a national sales tax on all goods and services is higher. Only 22% favor a national sales tax as a way for the government to raise more money, while 60% are opposed.
Real Clear Politics:
USA Today:
  • Health Care Law Too Costly, Most Say. Nearly two-thirds of Americans say the health care overhaul signed into law last week costs too much and expands the government's role in health care too far, a USA TODAY/Gallup Poll finds, underscoring an uphill selling job ahead for President Obama and congressional Democrats. Those surveyed are inclined to fear that the massive legislation will increase their costs and hurt the quality of health care their families receive. The risk for them is that continued opposition will fuel calls for repeal and dog Democrats in November's congressional elections. The bill was enacted without a single Republican vote. Obama's approval rating was 47%-50% — the first time his disapproval rating has hit 50%. In the survey:
Reuters:
  • Majority of Germans Against Aid for Greece - Poll. More than two-thirds of Germans oppose their country's participation in any EU aid package for debt-ridden Greece, a poll taken just before last week's euro zone agreement on a last-resort financial safety net showed. The Forsa survey for Stern magazine, conducted on March 24 and 25 and released on Tuesday, highlighted the risks for Chancellor Angela Merkel if a rescue becomes necessary. Some 68 percent of Germans said they were against aid and only 28 percent thought Berlin should help Greece.
  • Consensus for Financial Regulations Fading: IMF. An international drive to impose new regulations in the wake of the financial crisis is fading and global cooperation is diminishing, the managing director of the International Monetary Fund said on Tuesday. Dominique Strauss-Kahn said world powers had worked well during the height of the crisis in 2008 and 2009, but as the immediate danger passed so did the will to re-write cross border regulations." One of the lessons of the crisis is that facing global challenges we need to have global answers," Strauss-Kahn told the Romanian parliament during a flying visit to Bucharest." This lesson is about to be lost," he said.
  • Gold Slips, Market Eyes Currencies. Gold slipped in afternoon trade on Tuesday, coming under pressure after the euro surrendered earlier gains against the dollar on worries about euro zone fiscal health. The dollar rose against the euro on renewed worries about the ability of Greece and other euro zone countries to fund their deficits. " Activity is mostly to do with the dollar, there is a lot of concern about the euro zone," said Andrey Kryuchenkov, analyst at VTB capital. "However, we still anticipate fairly anemic retail demand for the remainder of the year." "Clearly, a pullback in prices tempted some retail investors to return to the market, which was also reflected in improved sales of gold coins, VTB Capital said. "However, we still anticipate fairly anemic retail demand for the remainder of the year."
  • Invesco Aim Picks Credit Card Stocks to Ride Recovery.
  • FACTBOX - US Health Overhaul to Hit Corporate Profits.
  • US Weekly Gasoline Demand Falls 1.3% - Mastercard.
  • Economist Johnson Urges Breakup of Big Banks. America's big banks must be broken up and their risk-taking curtailed or the world's richest economy will face another massive financial crisis, former IMF chief economist Simon Johnson says in a new book. In "13 Bankers, The Wall Street Takeover and the Next Financial Meltdown," published on Tuesday, Johnson and his co-author James Kwak describe Wall Street as an oligarchy holding the country hostage to its risk-taking. "The crisis exacerbated the problem by allowing the largest banks to get bigger at precisely the moment that the government should have been doing everything in its power to make them smaller," Johnson told Reuters in an interview."The process of saving them ... has allowed them to build themselves up so that their balance sheets are now bigger than they were before the crisis. That doesn't make any sense, the too big to fail problem has become worse."The notion certain banks are too big to fail is the central perception lawmakers in Washington must overcome if they are to undertake meaningful reform, said Johnson, who believes reforms now before Congress will not address systemic problems.Specifically, he says the six biggest banks -- Citigroup (C.N), JP Morgan Chase (JPM.N), Morgan Stanley (MS.N), Goldman Sachs (GS.N), Wells Fargo (WFC.N) and Bank of America (BAC.N) -- should all be cut down to size, Johnson says."We should make them all smaller and safer so that if somebody does fail ... we can let them go through some sort of bankruptcy," he said.
Financial Times:
  • China Invited to Join IEA as Oil Demand Shifts. The head of the International Energy Agency, the developed world’s energy watchdog, has called for China to join the agency and warned that the institution risked losing relevance as energy demand shifted eastward away from its current members. Nobuo Tanaka, executive director of the IEA, told the Financial Times: “Our relevance is under question because half of the energy consumption already is in non-Organisation of Economic Cooperation and Development countries. And for oil it is soon coming that the majority of consumption is happening in non-OECD countries.”
Handelsblatt:
  • The U.S. will likely widen corruption investigations into European companies, citing Aaron Marcu, a NY-based partner with Freshfields Bruckhaus Deringer. U.S. authorities are investigating 111 cases under the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act, a record level.
Die Zeit:
  • White House economic adviser Lawrence Summers said inflation isn't a threat to the U.S. because the economy is growing below its capacity and many people are without a job, citing an interview. That's curbing wage and price pressures, Summers said. Generous liquidity provisions at the height of the financial crisis would only lead to inflation "if we were to see excessive credit supply," he said. However, "the money the government spends or supplies as loans doesn't even balance out the sum of what's disappearing in the deleveraging of companies and people."
DigiTimes:
  • TSMC, UMC Set to Raise Prices, Sources Say. Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company (TSMC) plans to raise its prices by 2-6%, whereas United Microelectronics Corporation (UMC) is also mulling a 1-2% price hike, according to industry sources. The price increases may occur in the second quarter of 2010 at the earliest.

Bear Radar


Style Underperformer:

  • Large-Cap Value (-.43%)
Sector Underperformers:
  • Airlines (-1.28%), Disk Drives (-1.26%) and Gold (-1.06%)
Stocks Falling on Unusual Volume:
  • MXWL, CHU, PHI, MYGN, EHTH, CNQR, CALM, CATM, TNDM, SAFM, CEPH, AUTC, RICK, ITRI, STX, NWPX, NEOG, GRMN, JAZZ, OXM and NRT
Stocks With Unusual Put Option Activity:
  • 1) DAL 2) YGE 3) MU 4) BHP 5) CHL

Bull Radar


Style Outperformer:

  • Large-Cap Growth (-.09%)
Sector Outperformers:
  • HMOs (+.18%), Papers (+.14%) and Foods (+.05%)
Stocks Rising on Unusual Volume:
  • DHR, AFFY, LMIA, PRXL, HAYN, RDWR, KMGB, MBLX, WLK and MMM
Stocks With Unusual Call Option Activity:
  • 1) IPI 2) ARM 3) TMO 4) MTL 5) ONXX

Tuesday Watch


Evening Headlines

Bloomberg:
  • California Treasurer Asks Six Banks for Swap Details. California’s treasurer asked six investment banks that underwrite the state’s bonds to explain why they also market credit-default swaps on them, saying such contracts may cost taxpayers by exaggerating credit risk. Treasurer Bill Lockyer asked JPMorgan Chase & Co.(JPM), Bank of America(BAC) Merrill Lynch, Barclays Plc(BCS), Citigroup Inc.(C), Goldman Sachs Group Inc.(GS) and Morgan Stanley(MS) to detail the extent to which they market the insurance contracts and to explain how trading in them affects the interest cost on the state’s general-obligation bonds, according to letters he released today. The cost of California 5-year credit-default swaps has risen 28 percent since Oct. 26 to $204,000 to protect $10 million of bonds, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. California sold $5.9 billion of taxable and tax-exempt general- obligation bonds this month. “Lockyer’s concerned about the general effect on our bond prices,” said Tom Dresslar, a spokesman for Lockyer. “It’s taxpayer money at stake. They have a right to know.”
  • China Missed Chance for Open Rio Trial, Rudd Says. executives in secret, Australian Prime Minister China “missed an opportunity” to be transparent and give companies more confidence by hearing charges of industrial espionage against four Rio Tinto GroupKevin Rudd said. China had the chance “to demonstrate to the world at large transparency that would be consistent with its emerging global role,” Rudd said in Melbourne today. There are “serious unanswered questions” about the conviction of Stern Hu, the Australian executive who led Rio’s iron ore unit in China.
  • Ford(F) Credit Risk Drops to Almost Three-Year Low on Volvo Deal. An indicator of Ford Motor Co.’s credit risk fell to the lowest in almost three years as the automaker agreed to sell its Volvo Cars unit to China’s Zhejiang Geely Holding Co. for $1.8 billion. Credit-default swaps on Dearborn, Michigan-based Ford dropped 23 basis points to 515 basis points, the lowest since June 2007, according to CMA DataVision.
  • Japan's Factory Output Falls for First Time in a Year. Japan’s industrial production retreated in February, snapping an 11-month winning streak that helped to secure a recovery from the country’s worst postwar recession. Factory output declined 0.9 percent from January, when it rose 2.7 percent, the most in eight months, the Trade Ministry said today in Tokyo. The median estimate of 24 economists surveyed by Bloomberg News was for a 0.5 percent drop.
  • Moscow Metro Attacks Saddle Medvedev With Putin's War on Terror. The Moscow metro terror attacks that killed at least 38 people yesterday show Russian President Dmitry Medvedev is no closer to uprooting homegrown terrorism than his predecessor, Prime Minister Vladimir Putin. The dual bombings linked to Islamist terrorists in the North Caucasus region were the deadliest in the capital since 2004, when Russia grappled with the aftermath of two wars in Chechnya. “This is perhaps more serious for Putin than for Medvedev, as Putin gained popularity by fighting terrorism,” said Nikolai Petrov, an analyst at the Carnegie Moscow Center. “The terrorists understand that the closer we get to the 2014 winter Olympics, the more painful this is for the government.”
  • Danaher(DHR) Boosts First-Quarter Forecast; Shares Rise. Danaher Corp., the maker of Craftsman tools, increased its first-quarter profit forecast, pushing shares higher in after-hours trading in New York. Profit will be 90 cents or more, the Washington-based company said today in a statement. The company previously anticipated earnings at or above the high end of a range of 77 cents to 82 cents. The average estimate of 15 analysts surveyed by Bloomberg was 83 cents. Chief Executive Officer Lawrence Culp said Dec. 16 that “modest sequential end-market improvements across Danaher” were encouraging. Danaher rose $2.88, or 3.7 percent, to $80.25 at 4:49 p.m.
  • SEC Quizzes Wall Street About Lehman-Like Accounting. The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission is questioning Wall Street firms about whether they employed accounting strategies like those Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc. was accused of using to hide leverage. The SEC wants finance chiefs at about two dozen firms to say whether they used repurchase agreements to move assets off their balance sheets in the past three years and how they accounted for them, according to a letter released today. The letter also asks if dealings are concentrated with specific counterparties or countries. The SEC intends to make the responses public after the review, spokesman John Nester said. “We are looking at the Lehman activities very, very carefully,” SEC Chairman Mary Schapiro said today in a CNBC interview. The agency plans to review “every major financial institution very thoroughly” in coming weeks, she said.
  • Saudi Arabia's Al-Naimi Awaits Recovery Before Boosting Output. Saudi Arabian oil Minister Ali Al- Naimi said the nation could boost output by as much as 4.5 million barrels-a day once demand recovers from recession. The world’s largest oil producer is “waiting” for usage to rise after increasing capacity to 12 million barrels a day, Al-Naimi told reporters today in Cancun, Mexico, where he’s attending an oil conference. Prices in the $70-a-barrel to $80- a-barrel range are “as close to perfect as possible,” he said. OPEC plans to add 12 million barrels to its daily production capacity by 2015, equal to Saudi Arabia’s capacity. The gains would exceed the expected growth in demand, according to the International Energy Agency.
  • OPEC, IEA, IEF To Unveil Measure to Combat Oil-Price Volatility. OPEC, the International Energy Agency and the International Energy Forum will announce a “joint action plan” this week to combat oil-market volatility, IEA Executive Director Nobuo Tanaka said. The plan will tackle “volatility of the price and other issues like the outlook of the energy market,” he told reporters today before the biennial IEF ministerial meeting that starts tomorrow in Cancun, Mexico. “We’ll have closer dialogue with our organizations and we’ll see what we can do.” The accord involves pooling expertise and sharing data to improve transparency, two people with direct knowledge of the plan said.
Wall Street Journal:
  • New iPhone Could End AT&T's(T) U.S. Monopoly. Apple Inc.(AAPL) is developing a new iPhone to debut this summer and also appears to be working on a model for U.S. mobile phone operator Verizon Wireless, say people briefed on the matter. While Apple has unveiled a new iPhone every June or July since launching the product in 2007, the new model with CDMA capability, the cellular technology used by Verizon, is notable because Apple and AT&T Inc. have long had an exclusive relationship with the iPhone. That has given AT&T a competitive edge over other carriers including Verizon for the last three years. The people briefed on the matter said one of the new iPhones is being manufactured by Taiwanese contract manufacturer Hon Hai Precision Industry Co., which produced Apple's previous iPhones. The model that has CDMA capability, used by Verizon Wireless, is being manufactured by Pegatron Technology Corp., the contract manufacturing subsidiary of Taiwan's ASUSTeK Computer Inc., said these people. One person familiar with the situation said Pegatron is scheduled to start mass producing the CDMA iPhones in September, but it was unclear when Apple might make the model available.
  • GE(GE) Faces Hurdles in the Oil Patch. General Electric Co. aims to double the revenue of its oil-services business to $15 billion in the next four years, but its ambitions for the growing unit face hurdles. GE, which has long prided itself on being No. 1 or No. 2 in its markets, is a middleweight in the oil patch. Industry leaders, such as Schlumberger Ltd.(SLB) and Baker Hughes Inc.(BHI), are rapidly consolidating, signing multibillion-dollar acquisition deals to gain scale and land large contracts. By contrast, GE executives, including Chief Executive Jeffrey Immelt, say they think GE Oil & Gas can grow from within by focusing on niche products and markets where its larger rivals aren't a factor. On its Web site, the unit says it provides equipment and services "across all segments of the global oil and gas industry." But what GE has assembled so far, through a series of small acquisitions over the past 15 years, is a loosely related collection of specialties in growth areas such as drilling equipment and compressors. Analysts are doubtful GE Oil & Gas can achieve enough heft without acquisitions to be a major player in the industry.
  • The Tax Police and the Health-Care Mandate. Americans of modest means may soon get a lesson in the power of the IRS.
BusinessWeek.com:
  • Moody's, S&P Win Dismissal of Investors' Fraud Suit. Moody’s Investors Service Inc., Standard & Poor’s and Fitch Ratings won dismissal of a negligence and fraud lawsuit by two California investors who lost money on highly rated bonds. U.S. Magistrate Judge Dale A. Drozd in Sacramento threw out the case in a ruling filed today, saying the investors’ complaint wasn’t specific enough about the alleged fraud. He said they could refile the lawsuit within 30 days if they can include more detail, such as misleading statements by the companies.
CNBC:
  • Half of Commercial Mortgages to Be Underwater. By the end of 2010, about half of all commercial real estate mortgages will be underwater, said Elizabeth Warren, chairperson of the TARP Congressional Oversight Panel, in a wide-ranging interview on Monday. “They are [mostly] concentrated in the mid-sized banks,” Warren told CNBC. “We now have 2,988 banks—mostly midsized, that have these dangerous concentrations in commercial real estate lending."
IBD:
NY Times:
  • CNN Fails to Stop Fall in Ratings. CNN continued what has become a precipitous decline in ratings for its prime-time programs in the first quarter of 2010, with its main hosts losing almost half their viewers in a year. The trend in news ratings for the first three months of this year is all up for one network, the Fox News Channel, which enjoyed its best quarter ever in ratings, and down for both MSNBC and CNN. CNN had a slightly worse quarter in the fourth quarter of 2009, but the last three months have included compelling news events, like the earthquake in Haiti and the battle over health care, and CNN, which emphasizes its hard news coverage, was apparently unable to benefit. The losses at CNN continued a pattern in place for much of the last year, as the network trailed its competitors in every prime-time hour. (CNN still easily beats MSNBC in the daytime hours, but those are less lucrative in advertising money, and both networks are far behind Fox News at all hours.) Fox News, which had its biggest year in 2009, continues to add viewers. Greta Van Susteren’s show was up 25 percent from a year earlier. Bill O’Reilly, whose show commands the biggest audience in prime time with 3.65 million viewers, was up 28 percent, and Glenn Beck was up 50 percent from a year earlier.
  • Companies Push to Repeal Provision of Health Law. An association representing 300 large corporations urged President Obama and Congress on Monday to repeal a provision of the health care overhaul that prompted AT&T, Caterpillar and other companies to announce substantial charges for the current quarter. The association, the American Benefits Council, said the provision — which reduces the tax deductions for companies with drug coverage for their retired employees — would deal a significant blow to corporate profits and would discourage companies from hiring more workers. AT&T announced last week that it was taking a $1 billion charge because of the provision. Deere & Company announced a $150 million charge, Caterpillar a $100 million charge, and 3M a $90 million charge. Many companies said they were taking these charges now, before the current quarter ended, to comply with accounting rules. James A. Klein, the president of the American Benefits Council, called the provision “a serious mistake that is having negative and unintended consequences.” In a telephone news conference on Monday, Mr. Klein cited a study by Towers Watson, a consulting firm, saying the loss of the deduction would cost companies $14 billion in future years. “Particularly in this economic environment, it makes no sense to impose this type of a hit on companies’ financial statements,” Mr. Klein said. The provision takes effect in 2013, but accounting rules require companies to take immediate charges equal to the current value of any known hit to future profits. About 6.3 million retirees — an estimated two-thirds of them from the private sector — are covered by employer drug plans. Mr. Klein cited a study by the Moran Company, a health care consulting group, estimating that as a result of the legislation, drug coverage would be altered for 1.5 million to 2 million retirees. Many companies, he said, will stop providing drug coverage to retirees and will instead push them into Medicare Part D, causing the government to pay for their coverage. Henry A. Waxman, a California Democrat who is chairman of the House Energy and Commerce Committee, criticized the charges by the companies, asserting that the health reform would save companies more money than it cost them. Mr. Waxman sent AT&T, Caterpillar and Deere a sharp letter, questioning the charges and saying he wanted top officials from those companies to testify at an April 21 hearing he has scheduled on the issue. Responding to such criticism, Mr. Klein said: “These announcements are required under accounting rules, and we should all expect more of such announcements in coming days and weeks. We’re very troubled that these announcements have been challenged by officials in Obama administration and Congress.” Gerry Shea, the A.F.L.-C.I.O.’s chief strategist on health care, stopped short of calling for a repeal of the provision. “We’re very concerned about the disruption that could be caused because of this, with people being pushed out of employer plans,” he said. “With all the changes we’re looking at because of the new health legislation, we feel you don’t need this.” Mr. Klein argued that the provision would undercut Mr. Obama’s job creation plans. “If companies are going to take a hit like this on their financial statements that will certainly hurt their ability to borrow in the marketplace and make the type of investments that will retain and create jobs,” he said.
  • State Debt Woes Grow Too Big to Camouflage. California, New York and other states are showing many of the same signs of debt overload that recently took Greece to the brink — budgets that will not balance, accounting that masks debt, the use of derivatives to plug holes, and armies of retired public workers who are counting on benefits that are proving harder and harder to pay. And states are responding in sometimes desperate ways, raising concerns that they, too, could face a debt crisis.
  • Spurt of Home Buying as End of Tax Credit Looms. After several disastrous months for home sales across the country, when volume dropped by 23 percent, the pace appears to be picking up again.
Forbes:
Mobile Business Briefing:
  • US Hedge Fund to Build Wholesale LTE Network. US hedge fund Harbinger Capital Partners has announced plans to build a new nationwide LTE network using terrestrial spectrum owned by satellite networks. The New York-based firm filed its plans with US regulators on Friday after earlier being given approval to acquire SkyTerra, a leading North American satellite network operator. The new network will be an open access platform but current regulations restrict usage by large incumbent operators, which means the network could emerge as a serious competitor to LTE networks from the likes of AT&T and Verizon Wireless. “The company intends to be a wholesale only, data only network operator, providing a competitively-priced 4G option, including network, operations and spectrum,” Harbinger said in its filing.
LA Times:
  • California Lawmakers Are the Highest Paid in the Nation, Survey Finds. California state lawmakers remain the highest paid in the nation by far, according to a survey by a state panel that is considering a 10% reduction in their salary. Despite an 18% pay cut last year, the $95,291 salary of California lawmakers is still higher than the $79,650 paid to their counterparts in Michigan, the $79,500 that goes to legislators in New York and the $78,315 salary in Pennsylvania, according to the survey conducted by the California Citizens Compensation Commission.
Politico:
  • Q Poll: 4% Favor Tax Hikes to Slash Deficit. Quinnipiac is out with a new poll on voter preferences to attack the deficit and reports — surprise, surprise — that very few people want to have their taxes hiked. Four percent (!) favor income tax increases as the sole way of plugging the gap, estimated well north of $1 trillion this year. But 42 percent would tolerate some hikes if they were coupled with spending cuts; 49 percent favor spending cuts only. An overwhelming majority believe the middle class will get fleeced either way. The conventional wisdom on the deficit is that it's fodder for C-SPAN but a nonissue in November. The sheer magnitude of the debt now could alter that logic.
  • Barack Obama Struggles to Capitalize in Polls. Democrats who held out hopes that President Barack Obama’s health reform win would mean a quick boost to the party’s political fortunes are getting a reality check – a reminder that it takes more than one good week to shake up a year of sliding polls. Obama and his health reform plan did get a bump in several surveys immediately after the House vote eight days ago – but the numbers in some of those polls flattened out, showing how difficult it will be for Obama to capitalize on reform, even after his top legislative goal cleared Congress. “It helped a little bit, but I think it’s within the margin of error,” said Peter Brown of the Quinnipiac Poll, which recorded a slight drop in disapproval of Obama after the bill passed. “The Democrats said the American people will grow to love this. We’ll find out. At this point, they’re not exactly jumping up and down.” The most prominent political prognosticator who predicted a post-reform bump for Obama was President Bill Clinton – who told reporters last year that Obama would add 10 points to his approval rating “the minute health reform passed.” But Obama’s approval in the Gallup daily tracking poll stands at 48 percent – near his all-time low of 46 percent in the three-day rolling average.
USA Today:
  • Gov't to Give $600 Million in Housing Aid to 5 States. The Obama administration unveiled Monday $600 million in financial aid for five more states with high unemployment that have been slammed by the housing bust.The funding is for North Carolina, Ohio, Oregon, South Carolina and Rhode Island.
Reuters:
  • KKR, CVC Teamed Up for Interactive Data - Sources. Private equity firms Kohlberg Kravis Roberts & Co (KKR.AS) and CVC have teamed up to bid for Interactive Data Corp (IDC.N), adding to other private equity teams that have formed in recent weeks as an auction for the financial market data provider progresses, two sources familiar with the matter said.
  • Obama: Healthcare Will Need Adjustments to Cut Costs. President Barack Obama said on Monday that a U.S. healthcare overhaul is a "critical first step" but that adjustments will be needed in the new law to further reduce costs. Critics of the ten-year, $940 billion overhaul have complained the revamp does not go far enough in reducing healthcare costs. Obama, in an NBC News interview to air on Tuesday on the "Today" show, said adjustments will be needed to the law. "I think it is a critical first step in making a healthcare system that works for all Americans. It is not going to be the only thing. We are still going to have adjustments that have to be made to further reduce costs," he said.
Financial Times:
  • Business Chiefs Fear Impact of Debt Crisis. European business leaders are becoming worried that the debt problems of countries such as Greece and Portugal will weaken already sluggish growth, putting Europe further behind Asia and the US. Greece and Portugal are insignificant markets for most large European groups in terms of sales but, in a series of interviews with the Financial Times, some of Europe’s leading executives expressed worries about the broader economic impact. Bodo Uebber, chief financial officer of Daimler, the German carmaker, is one of the most pessimistic: “Is there a direct risk [to Daimler]? No . . . It is the European financial system that feels the impact. That is the biggest risk when you look at the revenues and profits of Daimler.” Perhaps the biggest worry centres on the consequences of most countries suffering from large budget deficits, with cuts in public spending looking inevitable across the continent. Larry Rosen, finance director of Deutsche Post, said: “One of the biggest problems is that in Europe there will be more austerity measures that will depress growth.” Rupert Stadler, chief executive of Audi, the German carmaker, agreed: “The budget figures show that many countries in Europe, and the US, are completely over-indebted. It is clear that this will have consequences for the economy.” He added: “The potential for economic setbacks is still existing. We can see what is happening in Greece and we don’t know what this will mean for the future of the euro.”
21 Century Business Herald:
  • China's finance ministry may require banks to set aside more of their risk-weighted assets as reserves. The Ministry of Finance is soliciting banks' feedback on raising the general reserve requirement to 1.5% of their new risk-weighted assets, up from the current 1%, the report said.
  • The Industrial & Commercial Bank Ltd. and China Construction Bank Co. reduced their discounts on mortgage rates, forcing borrowers to pay more in down payments for their home loans.
Evening Recommendations
Citigroup:
  • Reiterated Buy on (AVT), target $37.
  • Reiterated Buy on (CELG), raised target to $72.
  • Rated (BF/B) Buy, target $67.
Night Trading
  • Asian indices are -.25% to +.50% on average.
  • Asia Ex-Japan Investment Grade CDS Index 96.0 unch.
  • S&P 500 futures -.03%
  • NASDAQ 100 futures +.06%
Morning Preview Links

Earnings of Note
Company/Estimate
  • (FUL)/.28
  • (CHRS)/-.13
  • (LDK)/.12
Economic Releases
9:00 AM EST
  • The S&P/CaseShiller Home Price Index for January is estimated to fall to 145.0 versus a reading of 145.9 in December.
10:00 AM EST
  • Consumer Confidence for March is estimated to rise to 51.0 versus a reading of 446.0 in February.
Upcoming Splits
  • None of note
Other Potential Market Movers
  • The Fed's Evans speaking, Fed's Fisher speaking, (AMAT) analyst day, (F) analyst meeting, (GRS) analyst day, ABC Consumer Confidence reading, weekly retail sales reports and the weekly API energy inventory report could also impact trading today.
BOTTOM LINE: Asian indices are mostly higher, boosted by technology and commodity 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.

Monday, March 29, 2010

Stocks Higher into Final Hour on Commodity Stock Optimism, Less Economic Fear, Short-Covering


Broad Market Tone:

  • Advance/Decline Line: Slightly Higher
  • Sector Performance: Most Rising
  • Volume: Below Average
  • Market Leading Stocks: Performing In Line
Equity Investor Angst:
  • VIX 17.97 +1.13%
  • ISE Sentiment Index 156.0 +36.84%
  • Total Put/Call .85 -7.61%
  • NYSE Arms 1.07 +55.33%
Credit Investor Angst:
  • North American Investment Grade CDS Index 86.05 bps -.56%
  • European Financial Sector CDS Index 73.46 bps +.74%
  • Western Europe Sovereign Debt CDS Index 74.34 bps -1.01%
  • Emerging Market CDS Index 233.67 bps +.01%
  • 2-Year Swap Spread 16.0 bps +2.0 bps
  • TED Spread 17.0 +1 bp
Economic Gauges:
  • 3-Month T-Bill Yield .12% -1 bp
  • Yield Curve 283.0 bps +4 bps
  • China Import Iron Ore Spot $151.50/Metric Tonne +.26%
  • Citi US Economic Surprise Index +34.50 -1.8 points
  • 10-Year TIPS Spread 2.23% -1 bp
Overseas Futures:
  • Nikkei Futures: Indicating +99 open in Japan
  • DAX Futures: Indicating +5 open in Germany
Portfolio:
  • Slightly Higher: On gains in my Biotech, Medical and Tech long positions
  • Disclosed Trades: None
  • Market Exposure: 75% Net Long
BOTTOM LINE: Today's overall market action is mildly bullish as stocks stabilize modestly higher after mid-day selling. On the positive side, Construction, Steel, Gold, Oil Service, Energy and Coal stocks are especially strong, rising +1.5%+. Despite a jump in commodity prices on dollar weakness, the 10-year TIPS spread is slightly lower and the 10-year yield is stable. On the negative side, Homebuilding, Restaurant, Bank, Computer Service and Software shares are lower on the day. Gauges of investor angst are relatively muted again. (XLF) is mildly underperforming. The Greece sovereign debt cds is surging +8.81% today, despite a bounce in the euro. Moreover, the Japan sovereign debt cds is up another +3.6% today and has risen +17.38% over the last 5 days. Given the recent surge in government hiring related to the census and trading holiday on Friday, I suspect the ADP Employment report, released on Wed., will take on added significance. I expect US stocks to trade mixed-to-lower into the close from current levels on profit-taking, tax hike fears, technical selling, rising energy prices and China bubble/trade concerns.

Today's Headlines


Bloomberg:

  • Greece Pays Bond Investors 5 Times Spain Yield Spread. Greece, the European Union’s most indebted member, offered more than five times the yield premium of comparable Spanish debt to lure investors to its first bond sale since a bailout was agreed for the nation. Greece priced the 5 billion euros ($6.7 billion) of seven- year bonds to yield 310 basis points more than the benchmark mid-swap rate, according to a banker involved in the transaction, who declined to be identified before the sale is completed. The bonds’ 6 percent yield equates to 334 basis points more than seven-year German bunds, Europe’s benchmark government securities. That compares with a yield premium, or spread, of 61 basis points for similar-maturity Spanish debt and 114 basis points on Portugal’s government bonds due 2017, according to composite prices on Bloomberg. Italy’s seven-year bonds yield 45 basis points more than bunds, the prices show.
  • FDIC Chairman Shelia Bair said she's troubled that Wall Street hasn't changed in response to the worst financial crisis since the Great Depression. "I'm very concerned that the culture that led to the crisis is still there," Bair said today. "I haven't seen anything change."
  • S. Korean Divers Reach Sunken Warship; No Response. South Korean navy divers today reached a patrol boat that sank off the west coast three days ago near the nation’s disputed border with North Korea, with no sign of the 46 missing crew members. When navy divers knocked on the ship’s stern with hammers, they didn’t hear any response, defense ministry spokesman Won Tae Jae said in a briefing. The 1,200-ton Cheonan sank within hours after an explosion on March 26 split the vessel in two. Commodore Lee Ki Sik of the South Korean Joint Chiefs of Staff told reporters that missing crew members may be trapped inside the sunken ship. Oxygen in the ship’s waterproof cabins would have enabled those trapped to survive for a maximum of 69 hours, Lee said. North Korea today warned the U.S. and South Korea not to “disturb the security and order” in the demilitarized zone. The statement by an unidentified Army spokesman, carried by the Korean Central News Agency, made no reference to the explosion.
  • Oil Rises the Most in Five Weeks as Dollar Weakens Against Euro. Crude oil rose the most in more than five weeks as the dollar fell on European Union plans to help Greece and on signals that economic growth will accelerate. Oil topped $82 a barrel as the greenback dropped following an International Monetary Fund and European Union pledge to help finance Greece’s debt.
  • Birinyi Raises Full-Year S&P 500 Forecast to 1,325. Birinyi Associates Inc. raised its year-end forecast for the Standard & Poor’s 500 Index to 1,325 because of rallies by General Electric Co., Citigroup Inc. and Microsoft Corp.’s shares. The estimate from the research and money-management firm founded by Laszlo Birinyi implies a 14 percent advance from last week’s closing price and a full-year increase of 19 percent.
  • Shoppers Emerging With Best Buy(BBY) Sales Signal Revival. Companies from Saks Inc. to Best Buy Co. are growing more confident that the recent revival of consumer spending is more than just a blip.
  • Apollo(APOL) Quarterly Earnings, Forecast Beat Analysts' Estimates. Apollo Group Inc., owner of the biggest for-profit university in the U.S. by enrollment, reported earnings and forecast third-quarter results that beat analysts’ estimates, as more students signed up for its courses. The company rose the most in three months in Nasdaq trading.
  • U.K.'s AAA Rating, Negative Outlook Affirmed by S&P. Britain had its AAA credit rating affirmed by Standard & Poor’s, which also kept its negative outlook on the nation’s debt on concern the government hasn’t been specific enough about how it will cut the budget deficit. “In the absence of a strong fiscal consolidation plan, the U.K.’s net general government debt burden may approach a level incompatible with a AAA rating,” S&P analysts including Trevor Cullinan wrote in a statement published in London today. “We expect to review the long-term rating and outlook again once medium-term fiscal policy becomes clearer following the 2010 parliamentary elections.”

Wall Street Journal:
  • Nestle Takes a Beating on Social-Media Sites. For nearly two weeks, environmental activists have been using social media to wage war against Nestlé over its purchases of palm oil for use in KitKat candy bars and other products, catching the Swiss food giant off guard. Protesters have posted a negative video on YouTube, deluged Nestlé's Facebook page and peppered Twitter with claims that Nestlé is contributing to destruction of Indonesia's rain forest, potentially exacerbating global warming and endangering orangutans.
  • Dozens Killed in Moscow Subway Explosions. Suicide-bomb blasts that killed 38 people in two Moscow subway stations brought the specter of southern Russia's Muslim insurgency back to the capital Monday, exposing flaws in what the Kremlin has often termed a successful anti-terrorist strategy. Officials said preliminary investigation indicated both blasts were set off by women with links to the country's North Caucasus region. Militants there, largely subdued in Chechnya, have spread into neighboring republics in recent years, seeking to turn them into bases for strikes into the Russian heartland. Monday morning's rush-hour blasts, in subway cars four stations and 40 minutes apart, confronted Muscovites with images of terror their city had not experienced in six years—dazed passengers holding their heads in despair, choking in smoke-filled tunnels, stepping over corpses strewn at their feet.
CNBC:
Business Insider:
  • Basically, Angela Merkel Has Wrecked The EU. Greece bailout or not, the Iron Lady of Germany has killed the European Union in the estimation of The Telegraph's Ambrose Evans-Pritchard. Far from stemming contagion, the deal leaves Club Med exposed. Underlying default risk has risen for Greece, Portugal, Italy and Spain, as well as for Ireland, Slovakia and Malta even if credit markets keep missing the point. The world's top holder of EU debt does understand. Greece is the "tip of the iceberg", said the deputy-governor of China's central bank. "The main concern today, obviously, is Spain and Italy."
AppleInsider:
  • Apple(AAPL) to Build 8-10M iPads in 2010, Begins Shipping Preorders. As Apple began shipping the first iPads to those who first preordered, a new report on Monday said the company plans to ship between 8 million and 10 million devices in the 2010 calendar year. In a new note to investors, analyst Katy Huberty with Morgan Stanley said suppliers for the iPad have currently forecast 2.5 million iPads to be shipped in the first three months of availability, from March to May. In all, Apple will ship between 8 million and 10 million by the end of 2010, suppliers said -- a number much higher than the previous expectation of 5 million.
Rasmussen Reports:
  • One Week Later, 54% Favor Repeal of Health Care Bill. One week after the House of Representatives passed the health care plan proposed by President Obama and congressional Democrats, 54% of the nation's likely voters still favor repealing the new law. The latest Rasmussen Reports national telephone survey shows that 42% oppose repeal.
Politico:
  • Florida Poll Shows Dem Health Woes. A Mason-Dixon poll of Florida voters released over the weekend offers the dose of cold water Democrats may need to temper their expectations on health care's electoral impact. The Miami Herald reports that in a state home to several Democrats who took risky votes on health care — Reps. Allen Boyd, Suzanne Kosmas and Alan Grayson — "Only 34 percent of Florida voters support the new law while 54 percent are against it, according to the poll. Opposition is significantly strong among two crucial blocs: those older than 65 and voters with no party affiliation. Seniors disfavor the bill by a 65-25 percent margin, while independents oppose the law 62-34. The poll, conducted last week, is the first to be taken in Florida since Obama signed the healthcare reform bill into law. It shows that Floridians have a more negative than positive view of Obama by a margin of 15 percentage points. And they oppose his so-called 'cap-and-trade' global warming legislation as well as the new health care law."
  • Man Arrested for Cantor Death Threat. Federal authorities have arrested a Philadelphia man and charged him with threatening to kill House Minority Whip Eric Cantor (R-Va.) and his family. Norman Leboon will be charged with two federal counts: threatening to kill Cantor and interfere with his federal duties, and posting video online containing such threats. He is scheduled to appear in federal district court in Philadelphia on Monday afternoon. The arrest is the most serious in a string of threats of violence against lawmakers in wake of the divisive health care vote. At least 10 Democrats along with a handful of Republicans, including Cantor, reported threats of violence during the past week.
Real Clear Politics:
  • Planting the Seeds of Disaster. When historians recount the momentous events of recent weeks, they will note a curious coincidence. On March 15, Moody's Investors Service -- the bond rating agency -- published a paper warning that the exploding U.S. government debt could cause a downgrade of Treasury bonds. Just six days later, the House of Representatives passed President Obama's health care legislation costing $900 billion or so over a decade and worsening an already-bleak budget outlook. Should the United States someday suffer a budget crisis, it will be hard not to conclude that Obama and his allies sowed the seeds, because they ignored conspicuous warnings.
Financial Times:
  • US Poised to Set Tone for Smartphone Boom. Sales of smartphones in the US such as the iPhone, BlackBerry and Motorola Droid will overtake sales of older-generation “feature phones” by the end of next year, according to the Nielson research company. Smartphone sales in the US will climb steadily over the next 18 months and account for just under 50 per cent of total sales by the autumn of next year, predicts a new report prepared by Roger Entner, who is in charge of Nielson’s telecom practice. “We are just at the beginning of a new wireless era where smartphones will become the standard device consumers will use to connect to friends, the internet and the world at large,” he said. At the end of last year only 21 per cent of American wireless subscribers were using a smartphone compared with 19 per cent in the previous quarter and just 14 per cent at the end of 2008. “If we combine these intentional data points with falling prices and increasing capabilities of these devices along with a explosion of applications, for devices, we are seeing the beginning of a groundswell. This increase will be so rapid that by the end of 2011 Nielsen expects more smartphones in the US market than feature phones,” he said.
CBCnews:
  • H1N1 Pandemic Call to be Reviewed. A group of outside experts will scrutinize the World Health Organization's response to the swine flu outbreak and will likely examine whether the term "pandemic" was appropriate for what turned out to be a mild disease, the World Health Organization said Monday. The review starting later this month will be conducted by around 30 scientists and public health officials, and their initial findings will be presented to member states by WHO director general Margaret Chan in May, a senior official told reporters in Geneva.