Monday, November 04, 2013

Today's Headlines

Bloomberg:
  • Shiller’s Bubble Warning Dismissed in Loan Surge: Brazil Credit. Brazil’s President Dilma Rousseff is disregarding warnings about a housing bubble and is stoking demand instead by helping people buy more homes as prices surge. The government increased the price limit of houses people can buy using the unemployment insurance fund on Sept. 30 after public lending for homes increased more than four times as much as private banks in the two years through June, to 202 billion reais ($90 billion), according to central bank data. Rousseff’s homebuilding program has propelled demand as she seeks to stimulate the economy before next year’s presidential election. Robert Shiller, six weeks before winning the Nobel Prize for economics, cautioned that such demand may be fueling a bubble as home prices grow twice as fast as rent. Mortgage debt as a percentage of disposable household income has climbed to a record 15 percent, almost double the level at the start of Rousseff’s term.
  • Former Chinese Commander Warns of War If Japan Shoots Down Drone. A retired Chinese military commander warned Japan that attacking China’s drones would represent the “first shot” of a war, adding to tensions over islands claimed by both sides in the East China Sea. China should attack Japanese planes over the islands as a “minimum response,” Wang Hongguang, former deputy commander of the Nanjing military region, wrote in the Global Times today. Japan Prime Minister Shinzo Abe should be “mentally prepared,” Wang wrote. “China has many kinds of countermeasures from low intensity to high intensity.” The Global Times said in July that Wang had retired recently.
  • Swiss Banks May Shrink on Higher Leverage, JPMorgan Says. UBS AG (UBSN) and Credit Suisse Group AG (CSGN), Switzerland’s biggest banks, may have to shrink their fixed-income, currencies and commodities activities if the nation’s regulator imposes higher leverage ratios than currently planned, according to JPMorgan Chase & Co. (JPM) analysts.
  • European Stocks Climb to Five-Year High as HSBC Rallies. European stocks rose to a five-year high as HSBC Holdings Plc reported increased profit and investors awaited this week’s interest-rate decision from the European Central Bank. HSBC climbed the most in two months as Europe’s biggest bank said pretax profit gained 30 percent. PostNL NV rallied 7.8 percent after the Dutch postal operator raised its income guidance. Ryanair Holdings Plc (RYA) tumbled the most in five years after cutting its earnings forecast amid higher competition and a weaker economy. UBS AG and Credit Suisse Group AG fell. The Stoxx Europe 600 Index gained 0.3 percent to 322.5 at the close of trading, the highest since May 2008.
  • Commodity Index Drops as Dollar Slips, Treasuries Advance. Industrial metals led a gauge of commodities to a four-month low, while the dollar fell and Treasuries rose, as investors assessed economic data for clues to the next policy moves from central banks. U.S. shares fluctuated while European stocks closed at a five-year high. The S&P GSCI Index of 24 commodities lost 0.2 percent to 611.07 at 12:57 p.m. in New York as copper slid 1.3 percent and natural gas sank 2.3 percent. The Bloomberg U.S. Dollar Index, a gauge of the currency against 10 major peers, fell 0.2 percent after climbing for six straight days in its longest rally since May. Ten-year Treasury yields decreased three basis points to 2.60 percent.
  • Seattle May Be First Big City Where Burger Flippers Get $31,200. In Seattle, supporting a $15-an-hour minimum wage could be suicide for politicians. It’s too low. Ed Murray, who’s running for mayor, vows to phase in that minimum for many jobs if he’s elected tomorrow. Incumbent Mike McGinn has declared he may not necessarily stop at $15. Much of the U.S. would scoff at mandating a full-time pay equivalent of $31,200 a year, but in the biggest metropolitan area in the Pacific Northwest it’s an idea taken very seriously.
  • SAC Agrees to Plead Guilty to End Insider-Trading Case. Billionaire Steven A. Cohen's SAC Capital Advisors LP, the hedge fund accused of fostering a culture of rampant insider trading, has agreed to plead guilty to securities fraud and wire fraud, pay a record $1.8 billion and shutter its investment advisory business.
Wall Street Journal:
  • Google’s(GOOG) Schmidt on NSA, China, North Korea. Google Inc. Executive Chairman Eric Schmidt bristled at reports that the U.S. government allegedly spied on the company’s data centers, saying such an act is “outrageous” and could be a breach of the law if proven true. “It’s really outrageous that the national security agency was looking between the Google data centers if that’s true. The steps that the organization was willing to do without good judgment to pursue its mission and potentially violate people’s privacy, it’s not okay,” Mr. Schmidt told The Wall Street Journal in an interview in Hong Kong. “The Snowden’s revelations have assisted us in understanding that it’s perfectly possible that there are more revelations to come.”
Fox News:
  • Top hospitals opt out of ObamaCare. The Obama administration has been claiming that insurance companies will be competing for your dollars under the Affordable Care Act, but apparently they haven’t surveyed the nation’s top hospitals.
CNBC:
Zero Hedge: 
Business Insider: 
Washington Post:
  • For consumers whose health premiums will go up under new law, sticker shock leads to anger. Americans who face higher ­insurance costs under President Obama’s health-care law are angrily complaining about “sticker shock,” threatening to become a new political force opposing the law even as the White House struggles to convince other consumers that they will benefit from it. The growing backlash involves people whose plans are being discontinued because the policies don’t meet the law’s more-stringent standards. They’re finding that many alternative policies come with higher premiums and deductibles.
USA Today:
Reuters:
  • Italy eyes 'Google(GOOG) Tax' to help fix public finances. Italy's largest ruling party has proposed legislation to raise government revenues by making it more expensive for multinational online companies like Google, Amazon and Yahoo to do business there. A bill tabled by the center-left Democratic Party (PD) aims to raise at least 1 billion euros through a law, dubbed the "Google Tax", obliging companies that advertise and sell online in Italy to do so only through agencies with a tax presence in the country.  
  • METALS-Copper falls on uncertain demand outlook for China. Copper fell for a third consecutive session on Monday due to a drop in the euro, but remained firmly within a range that has persisted for months on uncertainty about the outlook for demand from top consumer China. Benchmark copper on the London Metal Exchange closed at $7,149 a tonne, down from a last bid of $7,240 on Friday.
  • Saudi minister demands Iran leave Syria. Saudi Foreign Minister Prince Saud al-Faisal on Monday demanded that Iran leave Syria, saying Tehran was helping President Bashar al-Assad strike his own people.
Financial Times:
  • Strong euro poses risk to recovery, Fabrizio Saccomanni warns. Italy’s finance minister has warned of the risks of a strengthening euro to Europe’s fragile recovery, urging the European Central Bank to ease monetary policy to help the continent’s small and medium enterprises. The comments by Fabrizio Saccomanni come less than two weeks after the euro hit a two-year high against the dollar. The single currency has pared back some of its gains, but remains more than 2 per cent higher than at the beginning of the year.
Telegraph:
ARD:
  • ECB's Asmussen Says Interest Rates are Too Low in Germany. Germany is being "seen as a safe haven, capital is flowing into Germany," European Central Bank Executive Board member Joerg Asmussen says in an interview.
Xinhua:
  • Party Urges China to Curb Extravagant Official Spending. Chinese Communist Party recently issued a notic on curbing problems related with "formalism, bureaucracy, laxity and extravagance." The notice bans using public funds to hold extravagant banquets. The notice calls for curbs on excessive construction of government buildings. the notice calls for strict controls on spending on government cars.

Bear Radar

Style Underperformer:
  • Large-Cap Growth -.17%
Sector Underperformers:
  • 1) Disk Drives -2.23% 2) Semis -.37% 3) Biotech -.23%
Stocks Falling on Unusual Volume:
  • WRLD, RYAAY, BPI, UBS, RNF, CS, GVA, NQ, FBRC, IDCC, EDMC, ELLI, FLDM, GTLS, EPAY, ICGE, DD, CVRR, MW, BSFT, NPO, VSI, KORS, CLMT, MSG and PENN
Stocks With Unusual Put Option Activity:
  • 1) CVC 2) AOL 3) XME 4) FDX 5) NVDA
Stocks With Most Negative News Mentions:
  • 1) AVP 2) AMZN 3) ICE 4) NTAP 5) AFL
Charts:

Bull Radar

Style Outperformer:
  • Small-Cap Growth +.84%
Sector Outperformers:
  • 1) Coal +2.41% 2) Steel +1.98% 3) Homebuilders +1.89%
Stocks Rising on Unusual Volume:
  • TPH, BRY, VECO, CVA, SFY, GTI, LINE, VMC, RLGY, ZLTQ, CSIQ, SYY, SCTY, X, FSLR, NUAN, QLIK, SPWR, HWAY, WLT, AOL, GRPN and VOLC
Stocks With Unusual Call Option Activity:
  • 1) DNR 2) AKS 3) STZ 4) TPX 5) MAT
Stocks With Most Positive News Mentions:
  • 1) K 2) AAPL 3) LMT 4) T 5) MON
Charts:

Monday Watch

Weekend Headlines 
Bloomberg: 
  • Xi Borrows From Mao Playbook in Power Play Ahead of Plenum. The mission for the near-dozen Communists sitting round a table at a Beijing ministry was explicit: criticize their boss, who was present. Party cadres carefully recorded their comments as they spoke, in an echo of sessions held decades ago under Chairman Mao Zedong’s direction.
  • Park Calls for Ending ’Vicious Cycle’ of Appeasing North Korea. South Korean President Park Geun Hye called for ending the “vicious cycle” of rewarding North Korean provocations, saying it complicates negotiations and emboldens the Kim Jong Un regime to advance its nuclear program. “We cannot repeat the vicious cycle of the past where North Korea’s nuke threats and provocations were met with rewards and coddling,” she told BBC World News in an interview that aired today. “Otherwise, North Korea will continue to further advance its nuclear capability.” 
  • Asian Stocks Fall After Fisher Speech on Fed Policy. Asian stocks fell after Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas President Richard Fisher said the U.S. central bank should end its record stimulus as soon as possible. South Korean financial companies including Woori Finance Holdings Co., Shinhan Financial Group Co., Mirae Asset Securities Co. and Hana Financial Group Inc. dropped more than 1.6 percent. Coca-Cola Amatil Ltd. (CCL), Australia’s largest listed drinks company, slumped 4.9 percent after forecasting 2013 earnings will decline. China Resources Enterprise Ltd., a brewer and retailer with businesses in Hong Kong and mainland China, gained 1.5 percent. The MSCI Asia Pacific excluding Japan Index fell 0.2 percent to 478.49 as of 11:47 a.m. in Hong Kong, after rising as much as 0.2 percent.
  • Euro at Six-Week Low on ECB; Aussie Climbs as Spending Surges. The euro fell to its lowest level in more than six weeks before European Central Bank Executive Board member Joerg Asmussen speaks in the run-up to a policy meeting amid signs further stimulus may be needed in the region. The euro fell 0.1 percent to $1.3480 as of 12:43 p.m. in Singapore, and last week dropped 2.3 percent, the largest decrease since the five days ended July 6, 2012. It fell as low as $1.3442 today, the least since Sept. 18. 
  • Rebar Fluctuates as Investors Await China Party Plenum Meeting. Steel reinforcement-bar futures swung between gains and losses before a meeting of China’s top Communist Party officials in Beijing which will map out a blueprint for economic reform. Rebar for May delivery, the most-active contract by volume on the Shanghai Futures Exchange, rose as much as 0.4 percent to 3,685 yuan ($603) a ton and fell as low as 3,666 yuan before trading at 3,670 yuan by 10:41 a.m. local time. The contract lost 1.5 percent last month.
  • Junk Loans Approach $1 Trillion as Standards Dip: Credit Markets. Loans to junk related companies in the U.S. are on pace to exceed $1 trillion this year, a level not seen before the financial crisis, as concern rises that lenders are lowering their standards. The almost $873 billion of leveraged loans made in 2013 to borrowers ranging from hotel chain Hilton Worldwide Holdings Inc. to coal producer Peabody Energy Corp. is more than the $642.3 billion obtained in all of last year and up from the post-crisis low of $161.5 billion in 2009, according to Bloomberg. At the current rate, the record of $899.1 billion in 2007 may be eclipsed as soon as this week.
  • Fed Gives Banks New Dire Scenarios for 2014 Stress Tests. Lenders including JPMorgan Chase & Co. (JPM) and Citigroup Inc. (C) will have to show they can survive the demise of a trading partner or a plunge in value of high-risk business loans in the 2014 version of U.S. stress tests. The scenarios for the annual tests, outlined by the Federal Reserve in a statement yesterday, reflect some of the most pressing threats seen by regulators as they gauge the ability of the U.S. financial system to withstand economic shocks. Bankers will have to show what would happen to the value of leveraged loans they hold, the impact of another housing bust and how they’d fare if a firm that owes them substantial sums collapses.
  • Health Site Flaws Test Democrats’ Unity as Attacks Rise. Democratic Senator Joe Manchin of West Virginia announced he is drafting legislation with Republican Senator Johnny Isakson of Georgia to postpone the law’s penalty for failing to obtain health insurance, a core provision that the White House has insisted on maintaining without delay. Senator Mary Landrieu of Louisiana, a Democrat facing re-election in a state that backed Obama’s Republican opponents in 2008 and 2012, said in an interview this week that Obama should fire some staff members to hold them accountable for the website’s problems. She stopped short of joining demands from Republicans for Sebelius’s resignation. Health and Human Services officials who testified this week before House committees will appear next week in front of two Senate panels whose Republican members have been outspoken in criticizing them
  • Obama’s ‘Dishonesty’ Could Slow Second Term. President Barack Obama continued to take political heat for the troubled debut of his signature health plan while his advisers downplayed the significance of the program’s low enrollment rate. Mitt Romney, the Republican candidate who lost the 2012 presidential race to Democrat Obama, accused the president of lying. “He wasn’t telling the truth,” Romney said today on NBC’s “Meet the Press.” “That fundamental dishonesty has really -- has really put in peril the whole foundation of his second term,” Romney said. “I think it is rotting it away.” During the presidential campaign and later, as Congress debated the Affordable Health Care Act, Obama repeatedly said that no one would be forced to give up their existing health coverage under the law. The statement “undermined the president’s credibility,” Romney said.
  • Obamacare Birth Control Rule Assailed by Court as Split Widens. A requirement of President Barack Obama’s health-care law that group insurance plans cover contraceptives may violate religious freedom, a U.S. appeals court said, widening a split among the circuits and making it more probable the U.S. Supreme Court will take up the issue. A three-judge panel in Washington said a lower court was wrong to deny an injunction sought in a lawsuit by two brothers who are Catholic. The men sued on religious grounds, seeking to exclude contraceptive coverage from health plans provided by their produce-distribution companies. While the panel didn’t rule on the actual challenge, they disagreed with the trial judge’s determination that the suit was unlikely to succeed. 
Wall Street Journal:
  • Investors Return to IPOs in Force. Investors are stampeding into initial public offerings at the fastest clip since the financial crisis, fueling a frenzy in the shares of newly listed companies that echoes the technology-stock craze of the late 1990s
  • You Also Can't Keep Your Doctor. I had great cancer doctors and health insurance. My plan was cancelled. Now I worry how long I'll live. Everyone now is clamoring about Affordable Care Act winners and losers. I am one of the losers. My grievance is not political; all my energies are directed to enjoying life and staying alive, and I have no time for politics. For almost seven years I have fought and survived stage-4 gallbladder cancer, with a five-year survival rate of less than 2% after diagnosis. I am a determined fighter and extremely lucky. But this luck may have just run out: My affordable, lifesaving medical insurance policy has been canceled effective Dec. 31.
Fox News:
CNBC:
  • For signs of bubble, look no further than LBOs. Market watchers who have been out hunting for bubbles may want to look at debt rather than equity. A number of measures that focus on leverage, particularly in the area of corporate takeovers, show that kind of risk-taking back at levels just before the financial system imploded and sent the economy into its worst slump since the Great Depression. Leveraged buyouts—LBOs—for both big and midsize companies are approaching debt levels last experienced in 2007, according to the latest figures from Thomson Reuters. 
Zero Hedge:
Business Insider:
New York Times:
  • After Delay, Lenders Set To Visit Greece for Audit. Inspectors from Greece’s international lenders have put a postponed visit to the country back on the agenda and will return early this week after Athens made a new proposal on filling a gap of 2 billion euros in the 2014 budget, the European Commission has said.
New York Post: 
Real Clear Politics:
  • Obamacare's Widening Disconnect. Our relationship with government is in shambles, our feeling of disconnect with Washington at an historic level. Yet the real problem is not a health-care website that doesn’t work. The real problem is a president and a Washington culture which both believe it is okay to lie to get a bill passed. There is no connection between such behavior and the values of most Americans beyond Washington, for whom getting what you want usually results from hard work, honest bargaining and a little compromise. 
Reuters:
  • Egypt to look beyond U.S. for arms: foreign minister. Egypt's Foreign Minister Nabil Fahmy said on Saturday that Egypt would look beyond the United States to meet its security needs and warned Washington that it could no longer ignore popular demands in a changed Arab world. Speaking ahead of a visit by U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry, Fahmy said the United States must take a long-term view of its relations with Egypt and understand that in the wake of the Arab Spring, "it would have to deal now with the Arab peoples, not only with Arab governments". 
  • Italian banks' cut plans too modest despite strike call. With Italy mired in its longest recession since the Second World War, the country's hard-pressed banks are cutting jobs, closing branches and infuriating unions, but the cuts are far too modest to achieve the profitability gains they need.
Financial Times:
  • Europe's Big Banks Cut Corporate Lending, Boost Sovereign Debt. Region's 16 largest banks lowered risk exposure to corporate credit by 9%, while raising risk exposure to sovereign debt by 26% in 2011, 2012, citing Fitch Ratings. Fitch cites approaching Basel III capital rules as being partly to blame for decline in corporate credit lending.
Telegraph:
Tagesspiegel:
  • Schaeuble Says No ESM Money for Ailing Banks. German Finance Minister Wolfgang Schaeuble says his party agreed with potential coalition partner SPD not to consent to spending tax money to save banks in Europe, particularly not from the ESM.
China Securities Journal:
  • China's Property Bubble Is "Danger" to Economy. China's real estate bubble poses "danger" to economy and the government should combine property controls with economic reform of land and tax policies, according to a front-page editorial. It is urgent to reduce bubble caused by speculation and reduce potential financial and economic risks.
Weekend Recommendations
Barron's:
  • Bullish commentary on (CVA) and (DFS).
Night Trading
  • Asian indices are -.50% to unch. on average.
  • Asia Ex-Japan Investment Grade CDS Index 134.0 +4.0 basis points.
  • Asia Pacific Sovereign CDS Index 103.50 +4.0 basis points.
  • FTSE-100 futures +.49%.
  • S&P 500 futures +.23%.
  • NASDAQ 100 futures +.25%.
Morning Preview Links

Earnings of Note

Company/Estimate
  • (CME)/.73
  • (VMC)/.26
  • (SYY)/.47
  • (K)/.89
  • (ODP)/.06
  • (VNO)/1.09
  • (HTZ)/.71
  • (APC)/1.16
  • (THC)/.44
  • (TDW)/.87
  • (CF)/3.92
  • (MRO)/.77
  • (DNB)/1.87
Economic Releases
10:00 am EST
  • Factory Orders for September are estimated to rise +1.8%.
Upcoming Splits
  • (WWW) 2-for-1
  • (DSW) 2-for-1
Other Potential Market Movers
  • The Fed's Powell speaking, Fed's Rosengren speaking, Eurozone PMI, RBA rate decision, ISM New York for October and the Robert W. Baird Industrial Conference could also impact trading today.
BOTTOM LINE: Asian indices are modestly lower, weighed down 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 50% net long heading into the week.

Sunday, November 03, 2013

Weekly Outlook

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 rising global growth fears, profit-taking, technical selling, rising eurozone/emerging markets debt angst, more shorting and earnings concerns. My intermediate-term trading indicators are giving neutral signals and the Portfolio is 50% net long heading into the week.

Friday, November 01, 2013

Market Week in Review

S&P 500 1,761.64 +.11%*


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The Weekly Wrap by Briefing.com.


*5-Day Change