Monday, April 02, 2012

Monday Watch


Weekend Headlines
Bloomberg:

  • OECD’s Padoan Sees Euro Area as Biggest Threat to Growth. The euro area remains the biggest threat to global growth as imbalances still need to be addressed, Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development Chief Economist Pier Carlo Padoan said. “The weaknesses of the euro area are still a source of concern,” Padoan said in a Bloomberg Television interview today in Cernobbio, Italy. “We can have a way out in Europe having reforms taking place not only in the debt countries but in all of the countries, including Germany, which should invest and open more.” European finance ministers agreed yesterday in Copenhagen to boost a firewall against the region’s debt crisis by 500 billion euros ($667 billion) on top of the 300 billion euros already committed. Europe is counting on those funds, plus the European Central Bank’s extra lending and bond-buying programs. The decision to increase the firewall “provides time, but more needs to be done, especially by governments in sensitive countries, to carry on the reform programs,” Padoan said.
  • Spain Record Home Price Drop Seen With Bank Pressure: Mortgages. Spanish home prices are poised to fall the most on record this year, leaving one in four homeowners owing more than their properties are worth, as the government forces banks to sell real-estate holdings. Home prices will decline 12 percent to 14 percent, according to research and advisory company R.R. de Acuna & Asociados, after Economy Minister Luis de Guindos in February gave lenders two years to make 50 billion euros ($67 billion) of additional provisions and capital charges for losses linked to real estate. That’s the most since the National Statistics Institute started tracking values in 2007. Standard & Poor’s forecasts borrowers with negative equity may rise to 25 percent this year from 8 percent in 2010, based on an analysis of 800,000 mortgages. “There will be more serious price drops this year because of the government decree,” said Fernando Rodriguez de Acuna Martinez, a partner at the Madrid-based firm. “Banks are now prepared to incur big losses on real estate to shift all they can.”
  • Europe Eyes Bigger IMF War Chest as Firewall Tops $1 Trillion. European governments called for a bigger global financial emergency fund after engineering a firewall to fight the region’s debt crisis that tops the symbolic $1 trillion mark. Euro-area finance ministers decided yesterday that 500 billion euros ($667 billion) in fresh money would go along with 300 billion euros already committed to create an 800 billion- euro defense against the two-year-old turmoil. Europe is counting on those sums, plus the European Central Bank’s extra lending and bond-buying programs, to demonstrate that it is on the road back to stability and encourage Group of 20 economies to bulk up the International Monetary Fund’s anti- crisis coffers at an April 19-20 meeting. “Europe is aware of its responsibility for the international economy,” German Finance Minister Wolfgang Schaeuble told reporters today after a two-day meeting of European finance officials in Copenhagen. “If the IMF takes precautions to prevent possible contagion or threats to the world economy, then Europe for its part will make a decisive contribution.”
  • Schaeuble Condemns Discord 'Nonsense' Following Euro Spat. German Finance Minister Wolfgang Schaeuble condemned as “nonsense” a breakdown in communication that caused a meeting of euro-area finance ministers to descend into confusion with a spat between Luxembourg and Austria. Schaeuble said the abrupt cancellation of a press conference in Copenhagen yesterday by the meeting’s chairman, Luxembourg Prime Minister Jean-Claude Juncker and the following apology of Austrian Finance Minister Maria Fekter over her pre- announcement to reporters that the group had limited new bailout lending to 500 billion euros ($667 billion) could have the effect of uniting decision makers. “This is nonsense,” Schaeuble told reporters after the meeting ended today. “If we want to calm markets, if we want to win back lost trust that we’re making with the right decisions, we have to implement them rather than continuing to feed more and more speculation.”
  • China Arrests Six for Web Rumors; Microblogs Ban Comments. China closed 16 websites and detained six people for spreading rumors that military vehicles were entering Beijing, as microblogging websites disabled their comment features for three days. The authorities detained the six for “fabricating or disseminating online rumors,” the state-run Xinhua News Agency reported today, citing city police and the State Internet Information Office, without naming the detainees. The websites were closed for spreading rumors that “something wrong” was going on in Beijing, Xinhua said. Speculation of a coup spread on the Internet on March 20, helping spark the biggest jump in credit-default swaps for Chinese government bonds in four months. The Communist Party holds a congress later this year to pick the next generation of leaders who may run China for the next decade and the lack of a transparent process may escalate the risk and impact of rumors. Sina Corp.(SINA) started a 72-hour suspension of the commenting function on its popular microblogging site today, citing a need to clear up rumors and illegal information, the company, whose Twitter-like service has more than 300 million registered users, said in a statement. Users opening Tencent Holding Ltd. (700)’s microblog site saw a similar notice.
  • Roche May Abandon its Bid for Illumina(ILMN), SonntagsZeitung Reports. Roche Holding AG (ROG), a Basel, Switzerland-based drugmaker, may drop its $6.6 billion bid for Illumina Inc., SonntagsZeitung reported, citing an unidentified person close to Roche’s board. San Diego, California-based Illumina, a diagnostics company, can’t rely on Roche’s continuing participation in negotiations, the person said, adding that for Roche, Illumina is a “nice-to-have,” not a “must-have,” the Swiss newspaper reported.
  • Iran Says Russia Relations to See ‘Leap’ With Putin at Kremlin. Iran’s relations with Russia will witness a “leap” with Vladimir Putin’s return to the Kremlin, the Fars reported, citing Iranian Foreign Ministry spokesman Ramin Mehmanparast. Russia and Iran have “multiple grounds for cooperation,” Mehmanparast said in an interview with state-run news agency. The “horizon of relations with Russia will be bright” and the level of relations will rise considerably, he said.
  • Groupon(GRPN) Reports 'Material Weakness,' Restates Quarterly Revenue. Groupon Inc. (GRPN), the largest provider of daily deals online, reported a “material weakness” in its financial controls and said fourth-quarter results were worse than previously stated because of higher refunds to merchants. The revisions reduced revenue in the period by $14.3 million to $492.2 million, the Chicago-based company said yesterday in a regulatory filing. Groupon had reported $506.5 million last month.
  • Facebook(FB) Valued at $102.8 Billion in Final Auction on SharesPost. Facebook Inc. (FB)’s implied valued rose 8.9 percent to $102.8 billion yesterday in what was expected to be the last auction of its stock on SharesPost Inc.’s exchange before the social-networking company’s initial public offering. SharesPost completed the auction at a price of $44.10 for 150,000 units, the firm said in an e-mailed statement. That’s up from an auction earlier this month with a price of $40.50 a share, valuing the company at $94.4 billion, based on a share count of 2.33 billion.
  • Egypt's Muslim Brotherhood Nominates President Candidate. Egyptian military judges dropped convictions against Muslim Brotherhood presidential candidate Khairat el-Shater, clearing the nominee of the nation’s dominant political party to run in the election, the group’s lawyer said. “We have taken administrative, legal and judicial measures before the military judiciary and based on this, all convictions have been dropped,” Abdel Monem Abdel Maqsoud said in a phone interview in Cairo yesterday. “All legal obstacles have been removed, and el-Shater now has the right to fully exercise all his political rights,” he said.
  • South Korean Exprts Fall 1.4% on Weakness in Global Demand. South Korea’s exports were less than analysts forecast in March, sliding 1.4 percent from a year earlier on weakness in global demand. Imports fell 1.2 percent, leaving a trade surplus of $2.3 billion, the Ministry of Knowledge Economy said in an e-mailed statement today. The median estimate in a Bloomberg News survey of 13 economists was for a 1.3 percent gain in exports.
  • Why Are the Fed and SEC Keeping Wall Street's Secrets? Getting what should be public information about major Wall Street firms can be maddeningly difficult. Bloomberg News discovered this in its ultimately successful effort to get information on the $1.2 trillion in “secret loans” the Fed doled out during the financial crisis. And I’ve had no small experience of it myself.
  • Japan Tankan Confidence Not Improving, Threatens Rebound. Sentiment among Japan’s largest manufacturers failed to improve in March as executives predicted the yen will rebound against the dollar, hurting exporters' sales and profits. The quarterly Tankan index was unchanged from minus 4 in December, the Bank of Japan said today in Tokyo. That was less than the median estimate of 25 economists surveyed by Bloomberg News for a reading of minus 1.

Wall Street Journal:
  • EU Lenders Kick Troubles Down Road. Even as the European banking crisis shows signs of easing, lenders across the Continent are engaging in a variety of maneuvers to avoid, or at least delay, coming to terms with potential problems lurking on their books. Some banks are concocting unorthodox structures designed to improve all-important capital ratios, without raising new capital or moving unwanted assets off their balance sheets. Others are engaging in complex transactions with struggling customers to help temporarily avoid loan defaults—but possibly exposing the lenders to future problems.
  • Inside Elite Chinese Circle, Brit Came to Fear for His Life. Neil Heywood, the Briton whose death in China is at the center of a Chinese political crisis, told friends he feared for his safety because he had fallen out with the wife of a senior Communist Party leader, according to people familiar with the matter. Mr. Heywood had claimed to be part of the small inner circle of Bo Xilai, a former political rising star whose sacking as party chief of the city of Chongqing this month set off one of the biggest upheavals in Chinese politics since the Tiananmen Square crackdown on demonstrators in 1989.
  • Investors Dip Into Riskier Waters. After a Solid First Quarter, Market Trends Take Turn Toward Normal; 'It's Too Early to Declare Victory'. Full-fledged optimism is in short supply, but compared to the start of the year, investors are at least feeling safe enough to poke their heads out of their bunkers. The euro zone has stepped back from the brink of collapse, the U.S. economy is showing continued signs of life, particularly on the employment front, and central banks have extended efforts to support economic growth.
  • Oil Boom Sparks River Fight. The oil boom in North Dakota is sparking a high-stakes legal battle over land few people would think to fight for: the muddy banks of the Missouri River. As energy companies race to lock up every available oil-producing acre, the state of North Dakota has been leasing mineral rights to the land beneath and along the river. Now, landowners say they deserve a share of the tens of millions of dollars in proceeds, because the state is including shoreline areas they believe belong to them.
  • Obama and the Eisenhower Standard by Fouad Ajami.
Business Insider:
Zero Hedge:

CNBC:

Wall Street All-Stars:

NY Times:
  • Police Are Using Phone Tracking as a Routine Tool. Law enforcement tracking of cellphones, once the province mainly of federal agents, has become a powerful and widely used surveillance tool for local police officials, with hundreds of departments, large and small, often using it aggressively with little or no court oversight, documents show. The practice has become big business for cellphone companies, too, with a handful of carriers marketing a catalog of “surveillance fees” to police departments to determine a suspect’s location, trace phone calls and texts or provide other services. Some departments log dozens of traces a month for both emergencies and routine investigations.
The Telegraph:
WirtschaftsWoche:
  • The Group of 20 nations and the European Union are pressuring Germany to avoid reducing its budget deficit too fast so that the country can continue being Europe's "engine of growth," citing German Deputy Finance Minister Steffen Kampeter.
Weekend Recommendations
Barron's:
  • Made positive comments on (UNP), (BIG), (RGR), (AVII) and (FITB).
Night Trading
  • Asian indices are -.50% to +.50% on average.
  • Asia Ex-Japan Investment Grade CDS Index 156.0 -6.0 basis points.
  • Asia Pacific Sovereign CDS Index 126.75 -7.0 basis points.
  • FTSE-100 futures +.10%.
  • S&P 500 futures +.32%.
  • NASDAQ 100 futures +.38%.
Morning Preview Links

Earnings of Note
Company/Estimate
  • (PBY)/.12
Economic Releases
10:00 am EST
  • Construction Spending for February is estimated to rise +.7% versus a -.1% decline in January.
  • ISM Manufacturing for March is estimated to rise to 53.0 versus a reading of 52.4 in February.
  • ISM Prices Paid for March is estimated to rise to 63.0 versus 61.5 in February.

Upcoming Splits

  • (ASNA) 2-for-1
Other Potential Market Movers
  • The Fed's Pianalto speaking, Eurozone Unemployment Rate, Eurozone Manfacturing PMI and the (NYX) Investor 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 75% net long heading into the week.

Sunday, April 01, 2012

Weekly Outlook

U.S. Week Ahead by MarketWatch (video).
Wall St. Week Ahead by Reuters.
Stocks to Watch Monday by MarketWatch.
Weekly Economic Calendar by Briefing.com.

BOTTOM LINE: I expect US stocks to finish the week modestly lower on profit-taking, rising global growth fears, more shorting and high energy prices. My intermediate-term trading indicators are giving mostly bullish signals and the Portfolio is 75% net long heading into the week.

Friday, March 30, 2012

Market Week in Review


S&P 500 1,408.47 +.81%*

Photobucket

The Weekly Wrap by Briefing.com.

*5-Day Change

Weekly Scoreboard*


Indices

  • S&P 500 1,408.47 +.81%
  • DJIA 13,212.04 +1.0%
  • NASDAQ 3,091.57 +.77%
  • Russell 2000 830.30 +.03%
  • Wilshire 5000 14,627.44 +.71%
  • Russell 1000 Growth 663.73 +.93%
  • Russell 1000 Value 691.34 +.62%
  • Morgan Stanley Consumer 801.54 +1.20%
  • Morgan Stanley Cyclical 1,017.02 -.31%
  • Morgan Stanley Technology 716.79 +1.36%
  • Transports 5,253.16 +.68%
  • Utilities 458.93 +1.36%
  • MSCI Emerging Markets 43.06 +.04%
  • Lyxor L/S Equity Long Bias Index 1,039.41 -.08%
  • Lyxor L/S Equity Variable Bias Index 822.11 +.38%
  • Lyxor L/S Equity Short Bias Index 538.99 unch.
Sentiment/Internals
  • NYSE Cumulative A/D Line 145,222 -.02%
  • Bloomberg New Highs-Lows Index -77 -80
  • Bloomberg Crude Oil % Bulls 12.0 -7.7%
  • CFTC Oil Net Speculative Position 229,452 -2.2%
  • CFTC Oil Total Open Interest 1,562,147 +.25%
  • Total Put/Call .97 -6.73%
  • OEX Put/Call 1.07 +3.88%
  • ISE Sentiment 97.0 -9.35%
  • NYSE Arms .68 -26.09%
  • Volatility(VIX) 15.50 +4.59%
  • S&P 500 Implied Correlation 61.09 -2.04%
  • G7 Currency Volatility (VXY) 10.08 -.59%
  • Smart Money Flow Index 11,114.31 +.54%
  • Money Mkt Mutual Fund Assets $2.605 Trillion -.70%
  • AAII % Bulls 42.47 +.21%
  • AAII % Bears 25.48 -8.38%
Futures Spot Prices
  • CRB Index 308.46 -1.91%
  • Crude Oil 103.02 -3.49%
  • Reformulated Gasoline 330.81 -1.69%
  • Natural Gas 2.13 -10.22%
  • Heating Oil 317.01 -1.61%
  • Gold 1,671.90 +.50%
  • Bloomberg Base Metals Index 219.61 +.06%
  • Copper 382.50 +.46%
  • US No. 1 Heavy Melt Scrap Steel 402.93 USD/Ton -.10%
  • China Iron Ore Spot 147.60 USD/Ton +1.65%
  • Lumber 260.90 +.11%
  • UBS-Bloomberg Agriculture 1,554.92 +.41%
Economy
  • ECRI Weekly Leading Economic Index Growth Rate 0.0% +80 basis points
  • Philly Fed ADS Real-Time Business Conditions Index -.0427 +11.59%
  • S&P 500 Blended Forward 12 Months Mean EPS Estimate 108.55 +.23%
  • Citi US Economic Surprise Index 18.90 -8.5 points
  • Fed Fund Futures imply 50.0% chance of no change, 50.0% chance of 25 basis point cut on 4/25
  • US Dollar Index 79.0 +.11%
  • Yield Curve 188.0 unch.
  • 10-Year US Treasury Yield 2.21% -2 basis points
  • Federal Reserve's Balance Sheet $2.861 Trillion -.51%
  • U.S. Sovereign Debt Credit Default Swap 30.0 -3.22%
  • Illinois Municipal Debt Credit Default Swap 217.0 +1.79%
  • Western Europe Sovereign Debt Credit Default Swap Index 269.07 -3.15%
  • Emerging Markets Sovereign Debt CDS Index 271.24 +.44%
  • Saudi Sovereign Debt Credit Default Swap 118.35 +.39%
  • Iraqi 2028 Government Bonds 84.33 +2.85%
  • China Blended Corporate Spread Index 626.0 +16 basis points
  • 10-Year TIPS Spread 2.34% -3 basis points
  • TED Spread 40.25 unch.
  • 3-Month Euribor/OIS Spread 41.25 -3.5 basis points
  • 3-Month EUR/USD Cross-Currency Basis Swap -50.50 +1.5 basis points
  • N. America Investment Grade Credit Default Swap Index 92.61 +1.19%
  • Euro Financial Sector Credit Default Swap Index 220.24 +5.42%
  • Emerging Markets Credit Default Swap Index 244.74 +2.37%
  • CMBS Super Senior AAA 10-Year Treasury Spread 162.0 +7 basis points
  • M1 Money Supply $2.208 Trillion -.88%
  • Commercial Paper Outstanding 937.50 +.70%
  • 4-Week Moving Average of Jobless Claims 365,000 +10,000
  • Continuing Claims Unemployment Rate 2.6% unch.
  • Average 30-Year Mortgage Rate 3.99% -9 basis points
  • Weekly Mortgage Applications 663.70 -2.67%
  • Bloomberg Consumer Comfort -34.7 +.2 point
  • Weekly Retail Sales +3.40% +10 basis points
  • Nationwide Gas $3.92/gallon +.03/gallon
  • U.S. Heating Demand Next 7 Days 27.0% below normal
  • Baltic Dry Index 934.0 +2.86%
  • Oil Tanker Rate(Arabian Gulf to U.S. Gulf Coast) 40.0 +6.67%
  • Rail Freight Carloads 232,401 +2.32%
Best Performing Style
  • Large-Cap Growth +.93%
Worst Performing Style
  • Small-Cap Growth -.06%
Leading Sectors
  • HMOs +7.69%
  • Oil Tankers +6.85%
  • Networking +2.27%
  • REITs +1.67%
  • Restaurants +1.61%
Lagging Sectors
  • Alt Energy -2.05%
  • I-Banking -2.22%
  • Oil Service -2.93%
  • Coal -3.28%
  • Education -5.10%
Weekly High-Volume Stock Gainers (8)
  • AMLN, PNR, TAST, EPAM, KIOR, RHT, FDO and HII
Weekly High-Volume Stock Losers (10)
  • TEA, SCOR, LPI, JOSB, MAPP, SNX, AFFY, FINL, MMR and KDN
Weekly Charts
ETFs
Stocks
*5-Day Change

Stocks Rising into Final Hour on Euro Bounce, Better US Economic Data, Window-Dressing, Investor Performance Angst


Broad Market Tone:

  • Advance/Decline Line: Higher
  • Sector Performance: Most Sectors Rising
  • Volume: Below Average
  • Market Leading Stocks: Underperforming
Equity Investor Angst:
  • VIX 15.58 +.65%
  • ISE Sentiment Index 100.0 -15.25%
  • Total Put/Call .99 -3.88%
  • NYSE Arms 1.13 +25.89%
Credit Investor Angst:
  • North American Investment Grade CDS Index 91.15 -1.82%
  • European Financial Sector CDS Index 220.25 +1.18%
  • Western Europe Sovereign Debt CDS Index 268.84 -1.60%
  • Emerging Market CDS Index 244.62 -.50%
  • 2-Year Swap Spread 25.0 +.25 basis point
  • TED Spread 40.25 -1.0 basis point
  • 3-Month EUR/USD Cross-Currency Basis Swap -50.50 -.5 basis point
Economic Gauges:
  • 3-Month T-Bill Yield .07% +1 basis point
  • Yield Curve 188.0 +6 basis points
  • China Import Iron Ore Spot $147.60/Metric Tonne -.07%
  • Citi US Economic Surprise Index 18.90 -.7 point
  • 10-Year TIPS Spread 2.34 +3 basis points
Overseas Futures:
  • Nikkei Futures: Indicating a +102 open in Japan
  • DAX Futures: Indicating a +21 open in Germany
Portfolio:
  • Slightly Higher: On gains in my Biotech and Medical sector longs
  • Disclosed Trades: Covered all of my (IWM)/(QQQ) hedges and some of my (EEM) short, then added them back
  • Market Exposure: 75% Net Long
BOTTOM LINE: Today's overall market action is mildly bullish, as the S&P 500 trades near session highs on some better US economic data, more financial sector optimism, a bounce in the euro, short-covering, investor performance angst and window-dressing. On the positive side, Oil Service, Ag, Semi, HMO and REIT shares are especially strong, rising more than +1.0%. Financials have traded well throughout the day. Copper is gaining +.84%. The 10Y Yld is rising +6 bps to 2.22%. Major Asian indices were mostly higher, led by a +2.0% gain in India. The Shanghai Composite bounced +.47%, but is down -3.7% over the last 5 days and has cuts its gains for the year to +2.9%. As well, China’s ChiNext Index of smaller growth-oriented companies fell another -.8% overnight and is down -8.1% this week. Major European indices are rising around +.75%, led by a +1.3% gain in France. Spanish shares are bouncing +1.2% today, but are down -3.3% this week and -6.5% ytd, which remains a large red flag for the region. The Bloomberg European Financial Services/Bank Index is rising +1.0% today. The Germany sovereign cds is down -3.3% to 73.66 bps, the France sovereign cds is down -2.2% to 169.41 bps, the Portugal sovereign cds is down -2.0% to 1,073.11 bps and the UK sovereign cds is down -2.5% to 62.83 bps. On the negative side, Homebuilding, Airline, Education and Coal shares are under pressure, falling more than -.75%. Gold is rising +.5%, the UBS-Bloomberg Ag Spot Index is jumping +3.1% and Lumber is falling -1.3%. The Italy sovereign cds is gaining +1.3% to 396.51 bps and the Japan sovereign cds is up +.91% to 99.48 bps. The Philly Fed ADS Real-Time Business Conditions Index continues to trend lower from its late-December peak despite investor perceptions that the US economy is accelerating. Moreover, the Citi US Economic Surprise Index has fallen back to early-Nov. levels. Lumber is -9.0% since its Dec. 29th high despite the better US economic data, dovish Fed commentary, improving sentiment towards homebuilders, equity rally and decline in eurozone debt angst. Moreover, the weekly MBA Home Purchase Applications Index has been around the same level since May 2010. The Baltic Dry Index has plunged around -60.0% from its Oct. 14th high and is now down around -45.0% ytd. China Iron Ore Spot has plunged -18.5% since Sept. 7th of last year. Shanghai Copper Inventories are right near a new record and have risen +741.0% ytd. I still think this is more of a red flag for falling demand rather than the intentional hoarding, which many suggest. US stocks continue to trade very well as every small dip is still seen as a buying opportunity and almost all negatives are ignored. Investor complacency is fairly high again given the recent deterioration in the macro backdrop. Some market leaders, such as my (AAPL) long, are beginning to roll over a bit. Volume is especially light for a quarter-end. I would like to see the market prove itself after quarter-end before becoming more aggressive on the long-side. For the recent equity advance to regain traction, I would still expect to see further European credit gauge improvement, a further subsiding of hard-landing fears in key emerging markets, a rising 10-year yield, better volume, stable-to-lower energy prices and higher-quality stock market leadership. I expect US stocks to trade mixed-to-higher into the close from current levels on short-covering, more financial sector optimism, a bounce in the euro, some better US economic data, window-dressing and investor performance angst.

Today's Headlines


Bloomberg:
  • Rajoy to Unveil Deepest Spanish Budget Cuts in 30 Years. Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy will unveil the most austere budget since before Spain’s return to democracy in 1978, risking a deeper recession in a bid to avoid succumbing to Europe’s debt crisis. “There’s interest in seeing how they are going to manage this particular trick of cutting the budget so aggressively,” said Harvinder Sian, an interest-rate strategist at Royal Bank of Scotland Group Plc in London, during a telephone interview. “The recession will be dramatic.”
  • Italy Losing Luster as Strikes Tarnish Debt Rally. The Italian bond surge delivering better returns than oil, silver or the dollar this year will fade as the nation seeks to borrow 100 billion euros ($136.7 billion) in the second quarter against a backdrop of strikes. Italian securities due in a year or more have outperformed commodities, currencies and other sovereign debt in 2012, when adjusted for volatility, as budget cuts by Prime Minister Mario Monti and European Central Bank lending spurred demand for the nation’s assets.
  • Euro Spat Erupts as Fekter Upstages Juncker at Crisis Talks. A euro-area finance ministers’ meeting to bolster Europe’s crisis-fighting efforts was thrown into confusion as a spat between Luxembourg and Austria erupted over who got to brief journalists first on the outcome. Jean-Claude Juncker, 57, who chairs the meetings, abruptly cancelled a press conference in Copenhagen today after Austria’s Maria Fekter stole the Luxembourg prime minister’s thunder and signalled to reporters that the group had limited new bailout lending to 500 billion euros ($667 billion). “There was no point in having a press conference, because the Austrian finance minister announced it,” Juncker told reporters as he hustled into an elevator after the meeting. “I’m against babbling, so I wanted to make a point today,” he said in an interview later in the day. Fekter, 56, apologized.
  • Corporate Bond Risk Falls in Europe, Credit-Default Swaps Show. The cost of insuring against default on European corporate debt fell, according to traders of credit-default swaps. Contracts on the Markit iTraxx Crossover Index of 50 companies with mostly high-yield credit ratings dropped 15 basis points to 604, according to JPMorgan Chase & Co. at 8 a.m. in London. The Markit iTraxx Europe Index of 125 companies with investment-grade ratings was down 2.5 at 124 basis points. The Markit iTraxx Financial Index linked to senior debt of 25 banks and insurers declined four basis points to 214 and the subordinated gauge was six lower at 348.
  • Sino-Forest to File for Bankruptcy Protection. Sino-Forest Corp. (TRE), the Chinese timber grower accused of fraud by short seller Carson Block, said it plans either a sale of the company or a restructuring under which noteholders would acquire substantially all of its assets.
  • Global Payments(GPN) Trades Halted as Industry Probes Data Breach. Global Payments Inc., the electronic-transaction processor, had trading halted as the credit-card industry investigated a data breach that affected firms including MasterCard (MA) Inc. Global Payments fell 9.1 percent to $47.50 when trading was halted in New York, after earlier plunging more than 13 percent. The Wall Street Journal reported that the Atlanta-based firm was hit by a security breach that may have put 50,000 cardholders at risk. MasterCard fell 0.6 percent to $425.47 at 1:19 p.m. Visa Inc. (V) fell 0.5 percent to $118.45.
  • Obama Campus Fervor Losing to Apathy as Students Sour on 2012. Now a senior, Cassidy, 21, said she’s not working on a campaign this time around. She’s too busy looking for a job at a nonprofit advocacy group. She and her friends aren’t discussing the election as much as in 2008, she said. “There is not much talk of Obama at all,” Cassidy said of the mood on campus, which extends beyond the president. “I don’t think anyone’s satisfied.”
  • Consumers in U.S. Boost Spending. Purchases climbed 0.8 percent in February, Commerce Department figures showed today in Washington, exceeding the 0.6 percent median gain forecast in a Bloomberg News survey of economists. The Thomson Reuters/University of Michigan’s final index of consumer sentiment rose to 76.2, the highest since February 2011, from 75.3 last month.
  • Business Activity in U.S. Falls Slightly in February. Business activity in the U.S. held near a 10-month high in March, showing the economy is weathering rising fuel costs. The Institute for Supply Management-Chicago Inc. said today its barometer fell to 62.2 from 64 in February. Readings greater than 50 signal growth. Economists forecast the gauge would fall to 63, according to the median of 58 estimates in a Bloomberg News survey.
  • Scana Receives NRC Approval to Build South Carolina Reactors. Scana Corp. (SCG) won U.S. approval to build nuclear reactors, the second construction permit issued by regulators in more than 30 years for units that may be among the nation’s last erected this decade. The U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission today voted 4-1 to approve the Cayce, South Carolina, company’s plan to construct and operate two units at its Virgil C. Summer plant, about 26 miles (42 kilometers) northwest of Columbia. Chairman Gregory Jaczko dissented, citing pending safety rules in response to Fukushima Dai-Ichi disaster in Japan.
  • Copper Traders Turn Most Bearish in Two Months on China: Commodities. Copper traders are the most bearish in two months after stockpiles tracked by the biggest metals bourse rose for the first time in five weeks and Goldman Sachs Group Inc. cut its recommendation on commodities to neutral. Eleven of 25 analysts surveyed by Bloomberg expect copper to drop next week, the highest proportion since Jan. 6. Seven were neutral. Inventories reported by the London Metal Exchange rose 1.4 percent on March 27, the first gain since Feb. 22. They retreated the following two days and rose again today. Reserves in Shanghai’s bonded warehouses tripled since November and any strengthening in demand next quarter may be “tepid,” Barclays Capital said in a report March 28.
  • Corn, Wheat, Soybeans Surge, Renewing Food-Inflation Concerns. Corn prices surged the most in 21 months, and wheat and soybean jumped after forecasts by the U.S. Department of Agriculture signaled tighter crop supplies, renewing concerns that food inflation will quicken. Corn inventories on March 1 in the U.S. fell more than analysts forecast to the lowest for this time of year since 2004, the USDA said today in a report. Wheat reserves dropped to a three-year low, and planting intentions trailed estimates. Farmers will sow 73.902 million acres with soybeans this year, down 1.4 percent from 2011, the agency said after surveying farmers.
  • French Police Arrest 19 Islamic Radicals, Sarkozy Says. Just over a week after killing a self-declared jihadist who murdered seven people in the Toulouse area, French police arrested 19 people involved in radical Islamist networks across the country. “These arrests are linked to the world of a certain sort of radical Islam,” President Nicolas Sarkozy said in an interview today with Europe1 radio. Kalashnikov automatic weapons were found in the homes of some of those arrested, he said, adding that there may be additional raids across the country.
Wall Street Journal:
CNBC.com:
Business Insider:
Zero Hedge:
NY Post:
  • Next Stop, Grand Central for Goldman(GS) Tell-All. It is going to pay off big time for former Goldman Sachs exec Greg Smith to write about his stint in the belly of the Wall Street beast. Smith scored a mind-boggling $1.5 million advance to chronicle his life and times at the investment bank.
New York Times:
  • Large Hedge Funds Fared Well in 2011. Hedge funds have endured a rough year. Tumultuous markets. Tighter regulations. An insider trading crackdown. But despite the lackluster environment, the top managers still took home $14.4 billion in 2011.
  • A Bill to Loosen Hedge Fund Marketing. Investors may soon get a keyhole view into the cloistered world of hedge funds and private equity firms, thanks to a little-known provision in a new bill that would relax rules on how investment firms can market themselves to the public. The bill, called the Jump-start Our Business Start-ups Act, or JOBS Act, would reverse parts of a nearly 80-year-old regulation preventing these funds from discussing even the most basic items, like performance or investment strategy, with outsiders. The rule, part of the Securities Act of 1933, gave an already secretive industry the regulatory cover to remain silent. “It’s a dramatic change from where the industry is,” said Tripp Kyle, a partner at the public relations firm Brunswick Group, which works with some of the largest investment firms in the world. “I think it presents a real opportunity for firms to evolve their mind-set from what they can’t do to what they can and perhaps should be doing.”

Gallup:

Reuters:

  • BP(BP): U.S. Hiding Evidence on Size of Gulf Oil Spill. BP Plc has accused the U.S. government of withholding evidence that may show the 2010 Gulf of Mexico oil spill was smaller than federal officials claimed, a key issue in determining the oil company's liability. A reduction in the size of the spill would lower the maximum civil fine BP could be forced to pay under the U.S. Clean Water Act, a sum now estimated as high as $17.6 billion.

Telegraph:

Ansa:

  • Fiat SpA CEO Sergio Marchionne said that the month of March was "horrible" and that car sales in Italy fell by around 40%.