Bloomberg:
- ECB Battles Germany on Pace of EU Plans to Handle Failing Banks. The
European Central Bank clashed with Germany over how the European Union
will handle struggling banks and whether to create a common agency and
fund to manage failures. ECB Executive Board member Joerg Asmussen
called for creating a central agency and an industry-funded common
backstop for handling failing banks by “the summer of next year,” when
the ECB takes up new supervisory duties. He set out the central
bank’s position before EU finance chiefs met in Brussels today. In a
public debate during the meeting, Finance Minister Wolfgang Schaeuble
held to Germany’s view that the EU shouldn’t try to create a single
resolution agency without amending current treaties.
- European Stocks Rise as Earnings Offset German Confidence. European
stocks advanced as companies
from ICAP (IAP) Plc to European Aeronautic Defence & Space Co.
rallied after reporting earnings, offsetting German investor sentiment
that gained less than forecast in May. ICAP Plc surged the most in
more than four years after posting full-year profit that exceeded its
previous forecast. EADS advanced 3 percent after earnings beat analysts’
projections. Anglo American Plc and Glencore Xstrata Plc each retreated
at least 1 percent as JPMorgan Chase & Co. cut its forecast for
China’s economic growth. The Stoxx Europe 600 Index added 0.4 percent to 305.66 at
the close of trading, its highest level since June 2008.
- Oil Shockwaves From U.S. Shale Boom Seen by IEA Ousting OPEC. The U.S. shale boom will send “shockwaves” through the
global oil trade over the next five years, benefiting the nation’s
refiners and displacing OPEC as the driver of supply growth, the IEA
said. North America will provide 40 percent of new supplies to
2018 through the development of light, tight oil and oil sands, while
the contribution from the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries
will slip to 30 percent, according to the International Energy Agency.
The IEA trimmed global fuel demand estimates for the next four years,
and predicted that consumption in emerging economies may overtake
developed nations this year.
- Commodity Holdings Tumble to Lowest in Four Years, BofA Says. Money managers are the most bearish
on commodities in more than four years as a majority expected a
weaker Chinese economy for the first time in 14 months, a Bank
of America Corp. survey showed. A net 29 percent of the fund managers surveyed were
underweight the asset class in May as their positions
“collapsed” to the lowest level since December 2008. One in
four now consider a “hard landing” in China as the biggest
risk to their investments. The bank surveyed professional
investors who together oversee $517 billion. “There has been a marked uptick” in concern about China,
said John Bilton, an investment strategist at Bank of America’s
Merrill Lynch unit, at a press conference in London today. “A
hard landing is not our core scenario, but certainly investors
are right to start thinking they should at least hedge some of
that tail risk.”
Wall Street Journal:
MarketWatch:
CNBC:
Zero Hedge:
Business Insider:
Reuters:
Telegraph:
Style Underperformer:
Sector Underperformers:
- 1) Coal -1.11% 2) Steel -.95% 3) Gold & Silver -.56%
Stocks Falling on Unusual Volume:
- TSL, JKS, HBHC, YPF, EGY, SKM, CLMT, JBLU, WES, SPH, EOPN, TSLA, SCTY, YY, SDT, AMAP, CTRP, AL, BBRY, JOY, CVRR, SKX, TRMB and RATE
Stocks With Unusual Put Option Activity:
- 1) OCN 2) SCTY 3) VHC 4) EWJ 5) TSLA
Stocks With Most Negative News Mentions:
- 1) FCX 2) CREE 3) KBH 4) FB 5) EBIX
Charts:
Style Outperformer:
Sector Outperformers:
- 1) I-Banks +1.62% 2) Biotech +1.39% 3) Gaming +1.20%
Stocks Rising on Unusual Volume:
- IOC, WPX, LMOS, MNST, CPA, GOL, SNE, TTWO, SSYS, SODA, CPA, XONE, DDD, ESI, GMCR, APOL, SFLY, ECYT, AXLL, LNKD, MYGN, CZR and EW
Stocks With Unusual Call Option Activity:
- 1) DNR 2) SSYS 3) CPRT 4) FXY 5) SCHW
Stocks With Most Positive News Mentions:
- 1) FDS 2) WY 3) AMAT 4) JEC 5) EW
Charts:
Evening Headlines
Bloomberg:
- Secret U.S. Trawl of AP Calls Decried by Press Groups. Media groups and government watchdogs
said the U.S. Justice Department interfered with press freedom
when it secretly collected telephone records from Associated
Press reporters and editors over a two-month period last year. The AP disclosed the government’s action in a letter
yesterday to Attorney General Eric Holder from Gary Pruitt, the
president and chief executive officer of the news service.
Pruitt called the collection of phone records at four locations
used by reporters a “massive and unprecedented intrusion” of
AP’s right to gather news under the U.S. Constitution. The Justice Department’s seizure of the Associated Press’s
phone records is “Nixonian,” said Danielle Brian, executive
director of the Project on Government Oversight. Holder “has
trampled a line meant to protect our free and independent
press.”
- IRS Focus on Tea Parties Stirs Dissent on Health Care Law.
A handful of Cincinnati-based
Internal Revenue Service employees have accomplished what no
bipartisan White House dinner ever could: uniting the U.S. Congress.
Capitol Hill lawmakers are now on a mission to dissect how the tax
agency wound up targeting Republican-friendly groups for extra scrutiny.
Republican Senate Leader Mitch McConnell called it a “travesty” and the
chamber’s majority leader, Democrat Harry Reid, termed the matter “very
troubling.” While the top tax collectors at the IRS face grillings in
Congress, the ramifications of the outrage are likely to ripple far
beyond them. Even as President Barack Obama yesterday labeled the IRS
action “outrageous,” the issue will complicate his ability to press
other initiatives, including implementing the health-care law, in which
the IRS plays an enforcement role, political scientists and
strategists from both parties said yesterday. “This was dirty, no
question, and it will do nothing to improve the tense relationship
between the Obama administration and Republican leaders,” said Kenneth
Warren, a political science professor at Saint Louis University in
Missouri.
- Cameron Gives Way to Tory Rebels in Backing EU-Referendum Bill. British
Prime Minister David Cameron ceded to the rebellion in his own
Conservative Party, offering to support a bill authorizing a referendum
by 2017 on the U.K.’s continued membership in the European Union.
The prime minister’s visit to the U.S., where he has been talking about
the conflict in Syria and his agenda for next month’s Group of Eight
summit, has been overshadowed by a growing number of Conservative
lawmakers saying they planned a
Parliamentary vote against his legislative program to protest
his failure to deliver such a bill.
- Tata Steel Flags $1.6 Billion Writedown on Weak Europe Demand. Tata
Steel Ltd. (TATA), India’s biggest producer, said it expects a $1.6
billion writedown in asset values because of a drop in steel demand in
Europe. Demand in Europe has fallen by almost 8 percent in the year
ended March 31, Mumbai-based Tata said yesterday in a statement. Weaker economic and market conditions in Europe are expected to
continue in the near and medium-term, leading to a cut in
expected cash flows and the valuation of the company’s European
business, Tata said.
- China Stocks Fall Most in 3 Weeks on Economic, Property Concerns. China’s
stocks fell the most in three weeks on concern an economic slowdown is
deepening and the government is introducing more restrictions on the
property market to limit gains in housing prices. China Vanke Co., the
largest developer, dropped the most in three weeks after the 21st
Century Business Herald reported Beijing tightened rules for the
pre-sale of homes. China Eastern
Airlines Corp. slid to a one-month low after Credit Suisse Group
AG said Chinese airline traffic growth slowed last month. ZTE
Corp. slumped 4.4 percent after the Wall Street Journal reported
the European Union will seek to start a probe into alleged
unfair trade practices by the telecom company. The Shanghai Composite Index (SHCOMP) fell 1.6 percent to 2,206.52 at the 11:30 a.m. break, the most since April 23. The CSI 300
Index slid 2 percent to 2,480.
- Asian Shares Rise for Second Day as Yen Rebounds; Gold Advances. Asian shares rose for a second day,
led by Japanese utilities, as gold climbed after a three-day
decline lured buyers. Japan’s yen rallied from the lowest level in more than four years, while the Malaysian ringgit advanced.
The MSCI Asia Pacific Index added 0.4 percent at 11:09 a.m.
in Tokyo, while South Korea’s Kospi Index increased 0.8 percent.
- Rubber Snaps Five-Day Rally as Rebound in Yen Reduces Appeal. Rubber fell from a two-month high,
snapping a five-day winning streak, as a rebound in Japan’s currency against the dollar cut the appeal of yen-based futures. Rubber for delivery in October lost as much as 2 percent to 288 yen a kilogram ($2,837 a metric ton) on the Tokyo Commodity
Exchange and was at 289.8 yen at 10:18 a.m.
Wall Street Journal:
- EU Closer to China Telecom Probe. The
European Union's trade chief will ask for backing this week from
senior members of the bloc's executive arm to start investigations into
alleged unfair trade practices by Chinese network-equipment suppliers
Huawei Technologies Co. and ZTE Corp., an EU official said, amid concern
from European companies that such a probe could prompt a backlash
against their interests in China.
- Bank Bailout Blues Stall U.K. Recovery.
Five years after rescuing one of the world's biggest banks, the British
government still hasn't figured out what to do with it—a sign of the
country's struggle to put its banking woes behind it.
- The IRS Wants You. The scandal over politicized tax enforcement is growing. There is a pattern here. Oppose the Obama Administration or liberal priorities, and you too can become an IRS target.
Fox News:
- Justice Department secretly obtained AP phone records. The Justice Department secretly obtained two months of telephone
records of reporters and editors for The Associated Press in what the
news cooperative's top executive called a "massive and unprecedented
intrusion" into how news organizations gather the news. The records obtained by the Justice Department listed outgoing calls
for the work and personal phone numbers of individual reporters, for
general AP office numbers in New York, Washington and Hartford, Conn.,
and for the main number for the AP in the House of Representatives press
gallery, according to attorneys for the AP. It was not clear if the
records also included incoming calls or the duration of the calls. In
all, the government seized the records for more than 20 separate
telephone lines assigned to AP and its journalists in April and May of
2012. The exact number of journalists who used the phone lines during
that period is unknown, but more than 100 journalists work in the
offices where phone records were targeted, on a wide array of stories
about government and other matters.
- Republicans want new Clinton testimony on Benghazi, float possibility of subpoena. Calls are growing for former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton to
return to Capitol Hill -- under subpoena, if necessary -- to answer new
questions that have surfaced about her role in the response to the
Benghazi terror attack. “I believe she was disconnected and dispassionate about what was
happening,” House Oversight and Government Reform Committee Chairman
Darrell Issa told Fox News on Monday.
During the interview, Issa kept the option of forcing Clinton to testify on the table.
MarketWatch.com:
CNBC:
- CTFC Probes Over 1 Million US Swap Contracts. A top U.S. financial regulator has launched a broad inquiry into
the legitimacy of more than 1 million energy and metals transactions by
the biggest traders in commodities markets over the past two years. The Commodity Futures Trading Commission has issued a "special call"
asking Wall Street banks and other traders to provide documents that
would prove recent derivatives transactions known as "exchanges of
futures for swaps" were legal. Lawyers at the CFTC enforcement division
are also scrutinizing the trades for possible violations. "They are looking at a huge amount of trading," an industry lawyer said.
- Corn Crop Planting At Third Slowest Pace in Three Decades. Less
than a third of the corn crop in key planting states is in the ground,
the third lowest level for this time of year since 1980. The U.S. Department of Agriculture Monday reported that 28 percent of
the expected corn crop has been planted, and in key farm belt states,
like Iowa and Illinois, the levels are even lower.
Zero Hedge:
Business Insider:
New York Times:
- Grind of Euro Crisis Wears Down Support for Union, Poll Finds. Europeans
have never been wild about the European Union. With the region sapped
by the euro crisis, confidence in the institution and the benefits it
was supposed to provide is flagging faster and further than ever before,
according to an influential opinion survey released Monday. The
results of an annual survey by the Pew Research Center, a nonpartisan
organization based in Washington, show a deepening disillusionment with
the union in major member countries. The results of the survey suggest
that more citizens than ever could end
up opposing the transfer of more power to European Union institutions
that may be vital for transforming the euro into a viable currency over
the long term.
Reuters:
- U.S. banks push back on change in loan loss accounting. More than a dozen of the biggest U.S. banks have questioned a proposed
accounting change meant to boost reserves for risky loans, saying the
results would be vastly different from those of a similar rule being
developed by global standard-setters. A key reform
arising out of the 2007-08 global financial crisis, the proposal would
require banks to look ahead and reserve for expected losses on the day a
loan is made. Currently, banks do not have to reserve for risky loans until there are signs of a loss.
- SolarCity(SCTY) quarterly loss bigger than expected, shares drop.
SolarCity Corp on
Monday reported a larger-than-expected quarterly loss, reversing a
year-ago profit, due to higher costs related to its business that
installs solar panels on rooftops.
The company's shares slid 4.5 percent in after-hours trade
following the announcement.
Telegraph:
- EU bank proposals 'risk domino sequence of failures’. Proposed European Union rules governing how losses are imposed on creditors in
a failed bank pose the risk of a “domino effect” threatening financial
stability in Britain, George Osborne will warn on Tuesday.
The Standard:
- Lee & Man tips price declines. Lee & Man Paper Manufacturing (2314), the
second largest containerboard manufacturer by output in the mainland,
expects prices to weaken in the near term as costs for raw materials
fall. Paper products in the mainland now retail at 3,300 yuan
(HK$4,165) to 3,400 yuan per tonne, said executive director Edmond Lee
Man-bun yesterday after the company's annual general meeting.
China Securities Journal:
- State
Economist Says China Can't Cut Rates. China can't cut interest rates
due to abundant global liquidity, citing Zhu Baoliang, head of the State
Information Center's economic forecast department.
21st Century Business Herald:
- Beijing has tightened rules of pre-sales of homes, mandating
approval from the mayor's office in addition to regular housing bureau
approval. Pre-sales prices won't be allowed to be higher than current
housing prices in the same area. Beijing new housing inventory is 60,995
units, near a historical low, citing data from Netease.
Evening Recommendations
Night Trading
- Asian equity indices are -.50% to +.50% on average.
- Asia Ex-Japan Investment Grade CDS Index 102.5 +1.5 basis points.
- Asia Pacific Sovereign CDS Index 82.0 -.25 basis point.
- NASDAQ 100 futures +.09%.
Morning Preview Links
Earnings of Note
Company/Estimate
Economic Releases
7:30 am EST
- The NFIB Small Business Optimism Index for April is estimated to rise to 90.3 versus 89.5 in March.
8:30 am EST
- The Import Price Index for April is estimated to fall -.5% versus a -.5% decline in March.
Upcoming Splits
Other Potential Market Movers
- The Fed's Plosser speaking, German ZEW Index, German
inflation data, weekly retail sales data, BofA Merrill
Metals/Mining/Steel Conference, JPMorgan Tech/Media/Telecom Conference,
UBS Financial Services Conference and the Citi Power/Energy/Utilities
Conference could also impact trading today.
BOTTOM LINE: Asian indices are mostly higher, boosted by technology and consumer shares in the region. I expect US stocks to open modestly higher and weaken into the afternoon, finishing modestly lower. The Portfolio is 50% net long heading into the day.
Broad Market Tone:
- Advance/Decline Line: Lower
- Sector Performance: Mixed
- Market Leading Stocks: Performing In Line
Equity Investor Angst:
- ISE Sentiment Index 82.0 -33.87%
- Total Put/Call .83 +12.16%
Credit Investor Angst:
- North American Investment Grade CDS Index 73.64 +2.01%
- European Financial Sector CDS Index 139.48 +3.60%
- Western Europe Sovereign Debt CDS Index 90.62 +3.0%
- Emerging Market CDS Index 236.0 +1.1%
- 2-Year Swap Spread 14.25 +.75 basis point
- 3-Month EUR/USD Cross-Currency Basis Swap -14.75 -.75 bp
Economic Gauges:
- 3-Month T-Bill Yield .04% unch.
- China Import Iron Ore Spot $129.40/Metric Tonne -.15%
- Citi US Economic Surprise Index -8.0 -.7 point
- 10-Year TIPS Spread 2.32 -2 bps
Overseas Futures:
- Nikkei Futures: Indicating +113 open in Japan
- DAX Futures: Indicating +7 open in Germany
Portfolio:
- Slightly Higher: On gains in my medical/biotech sector longs and emerging markets shorts
- Market Exposure: 50% Net Long
Bloomberg:
- Schaeuble Says Slovenia Right on No Aid Needed as Yields Rise. Slovenia is right to say it doesn’t
need a bailout, German Finance Minister Wolfgang Schaeuble said as the country’s benchmark bond declined.
“The Slovenian government says it can do it without the rescue
umbrella, it doesn’t want a program and I think they are right,”
Schaeuble told reporters in Brussels today before a
meeting of finance ministers from the 17-member euro bloc.
Jeroen Dijsselbloem, the chief of euro group and the Dutch
finance minister, said Slovenia’s Finance Minister Uros Cufer
will brief them on the nation’s overhaul plan and the European
Commission will give its assessment later this month.
- Europe Eases Corporate Tax Dodge as Worker Burdens Rise.
- European Stocks Decline From 2008 High; Commerzbank Sinks.
Commerzbank AG sank the most in two months after Handelsblatt reported
the lender will sell new shares this week. Standard Chartered Plc
dropped to a four-month low as Carson Block, the short seller who runs
Muddy Waters LLC, said he’s
betting against the bank’s debt. Air France-KLM Group fell 4
percent. Lonmin Plc rallied 2.6 percent after the platinum
producer returned to profit in the fiscal first half.
- China’s Investment Slows as Production Trails Estimates.
China’s fixed-asset investment unexpectedly decelerated last
month while industrial output trailed estimates, adding to concerns that
the economy will fail to show much of a recovery this quarter. Fixed-asset
investment excluding rural households in the first four months of the
year increased 20.6 percent, the National Bureau of Statistics said
today in Beijing, compared with 20.9
percent in the first quarter. Production grew 9.3 percent in April from a
year earlier and retail sales climbed 12.8 percent, according to the
agency.
- China April Home Sales Fall 13% as Property Curbs Take Toll.
- Crude Drops a Third Day as China Reduces Demand. West Texas Intermediate oil fell for
a third day as China’s crude processing reached the lowest level in eight months in April and OPEC boosted output.
Prices dropped as much as 1.6 percent as refining in China decreased to
9.36 million barrels a day, according to data published today on the
website of the Beijing-based National Bureau of Statistics. Output in
the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries rose last month to the
highest level in five months. “High supplies and weak demand are never a
bullish signal,” said Michael Lynch, president of Strategic Energy
& Economic Research in Winchester, Massachusetts. “People
were hoping China would absorb some of the surplus. Now it looks like
the surplus is going to get bigger, especially since OPEC is producing
more.” WTI for June delivery fell $1.25, or 1.3 percent, to $94.79 a
barrel at 11:17 a.m. on the New York Mercantile Exchange.
- Grain-Carrier Ship Rates Slide a 14th Day as Demand Seen Slowing. Rates for Panamax ships that carry
grains and minerals fell for a 14th day amid speculation that
demand to transport Latin American crop cargoes is slowing. Day rates for the 750-foot-long ships that haul about
75,000 metric tons slid 0.1 percent to $7,923, staying at the
lowest since Feb. 28, according to the Baltic Exchange in
London, which publishes prices on more than 50 maritime routes.
They’ve fallen every day since April 22, the longest streak of
consecutive declines since February. The
Baltic Dry Index, a wider measure of commodity shipping costs,
fell 0.6 percent to 879 points, the lowest since May 3,
according to the exchange.
- Your Future Will Be Manufactured on a 3D Printer.
- Monsanto(MON) Wins Seed Case as High Court Backs Patent Rights.
The U.S. Supreme Court bolstered Monsanto Co.'s ability to control the
use of its genetically modified seeds, ruling that companies can block
efforts to
circumvent patents on self-replicating technologies.
Wall Street Journal:
- Health Officials Detail Payment Cuts for Uninsured.
The Obama administration on Monday published a plan for cuts in payments
for hospitals that treat many uninsured patients and said states that
decline to expand their Medicaid programs under the 2010 health law
won't get preferential treatment at first.
Fox News:
- IRS scrutiny went beyond Tea Party, targeting of conservative groups broader than thought. An IRS campaign to apply additional scrutiny to conservative groups
went beyond targeting "Tea Party" and "patriot" groups to include those
focused on government spending, the Constitution and several other broad
areas. The additional guidelines created by the agency were part of a
timeline, obtained by Fox News, from the Treasury Inspector General for
Tax Administration, which is looking into the controversial IRS
practice. IRS officials apologized Friday for the scrutiny, but new
information suggests senior leaders were apprised of the effort as early
as 2011 despite public denials from the top.
- Obama calls Benghazi controversy a 'sideshow'. The president addressed the issue during a press conference alongside
British Prime Minister David Cameron, who is visiting Washington. Obama
denied any suggestion that there was a cover-up, questioning recent
reports that showed a State Department official trying to water down the
administration's initial story-line on what happened the night of Sept.
11. "There's no there there," Obama said. The president, further,
reiterated prior arguments that he called the attack terrorism from the
start, dismissing claims that the administration intentionally
downplayed that element. But Rep. Darrell Issa, R-Calif., chairman of the House Oversight and
Government Reform Committee, called Obama's latest comments "revisionist
history." "The president can't have it both ways," Issa told Fox News.
CNBC:
- Investors Borrow Cash From Portfolios at Record Pace. Emboldened by soaring stock prices and record-low borrowing costs,
stock investors are taking out loans against their portfolios at the
fastest pace since before the Great Recession hit. So-called
margin debt hit $379.5 billion in March, the highest level since July
2007 when such debt hit an all-time record of $381.4 billion, according
to the most recent data available compiled by the New York Stock
Exchange.
- Get Ready for Huge Drug Cost Gap in Obamacare. Cancer
patients could face high costs for medications under President Barack
Obama's health care law, industry analysts and advocates warn. Where you
live could make a huge difference in what you'll pay.
Zero Hedge:
Business Insider:
ValueWalk.com:
Reuters:
Telegraph: