Saturday, 4 February 2012

Friday Watch


Evening Headlines
Bloomberg:
Greece Aiming to Close Swap in Second Bailout Faces Fight to Stay in Euro. Greece’s fight to win its second international bailout may only open a new chapter in its struggle to remain in the euro area. The rescue plan, which European officials and Greek creditors say may be wrapped up in coming days, includes a loss of more than 70 percent for bondholders in a voluntary exchange and loans likely to exceed the 130 billion euros ($171 billion) now on the table. That won’t stanch the bleeding, say economists including Holger Schmieding of Berenberg Bank in London. Greece will be saddled with too much debt, too little growth and too large a budget hole to do without even more money that euro nations led by Germany are increasingly reluctant to offer, they say. “Greece is in deep trouble,” Schmieding said in a Jan. 30 report. “The current Greek adjustment program is failing. Excessive austerity, a lack of supply-side reforms, administrative incompetence and political deadlock have pushed the Greek economy into an apparent death spiral. More of the same will not work.” As Greek officials negotiate with representatives of the so-called troika -- the European Commission, European Central Bank and International Monetary Fund -- Deutsche Bank AG Chief Executive Officer Josef Ackermann may travel to Athens this weekend for talks over a swap involving Greek debt with a face value of about 200 billion euros.
Europe's Leaders Shouldn't Sacrifice Union to Save Common Currency: View. The euro-area crisis is forcing many of the European Union’s long-running political disputes to the surface at the same time. As they wrestle to save the currency, Europe’s leaders -- above all Britain’s David Cameron, France’s Nicolas Sarkozy and Germany’s Angela Merkel -- need to make sure they don’t dismantle the union in the process. China Restricts Mortgage Loans for Overseas Buyers to Cool Property Prices. China will limit mortgage loans for home purchases by foreigners to stem overseas investment in its property market as part of efforts to cool prices. The nation’s planning agency won’t approve medium- and long-term foreign debt quotas for overseas banks in 2012, if they intend to use such borrowings to fund mortgages taken out by foreigners, the National Development and Reform Commission said in a statement. Premier Wen Jiabao this week reiterated that the government will maintain curbs on the property market to bring prices down to a reasonable level. China last year increased down-payment requirements and mortgage rates on some homes and imposed housing purchase restrictions in about 40 cities. Fisher Calls Fed's Target Forecasts Misguided 'Guesswork'. Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas President Richard Fisher described policy makers’ forecasts for the central bank’s main interest rate as little more than speculation. “These are not binding commitments,” Fisher said today in a speech in Austin, Texas. Fed officials’ projections for the economy and interest rates are “largely guesswork, especially looking out over a multiyear period.” The Fed on Jan. 25 released federal funds rate forecasts by policy makers for the first time and extended its pledge to keep rates near zero at least through late 2014. Chairman Ben S. Bernanke today acknowledged improvement in some recent economic data while cautioning that the economy still faces risks, including fiscal deficits that in the long-run must be reduced. Fisher, who doesn’t vote on policy this year, has been among the most vocal critics of Fed easing, dissenting last year twice against moves to push down long-term rates and to keep the benchmark U.S. interest rate near zero until at least mid-2013. He voted five times in 2008 in favor of tighter policy and said today he opposes the 2014 interest rate pledge. “I resisted the notion of a need for a statement indicating that monetary accommodation be tied to a specific date, be it in mid-2013, late 2014 or any other,” Fisher said in a speech to the Headliners Club. “Instead, I feel that the key should be to calibrate monetary policy according to the state or condition of the economy.” The Dallas Fed leader told reporters after his speech that recent U.S. economic reports have been “pretty good,” and that he opposes additional Fed asset purchases to stimulate growth. “I don’t see how you could justify it given the status of the current economy,” he said. “Is it needed? I don’t think so. Secondly, it compounds the difficulty of an exit when the right time comes.” Monetary policy easing may not be effective in bolstering the labor market, Fisher said. Still, “accommodation will be in place until the economy gathers sufficient steam,” he said. “It is slowing gathering but it is slow.” In his prepared remarks, Fisher repeated his concern that monetary policy alone could do little to reduce U.S. unemployment, saying fiscal and regulatory policies have impeded job creation. Texas was one of three states that have regained jobs lost during the past recession, as well as North Dakota and Alaska, he said. “To the extent that inflation is running below 2 percent, the Federal Reserve may have somewhat greater latitude to pursue accommodation,” Fisher said. “However, the past few years have demonstrated, yet again, that allowing inflation to rise by no means guarantees faster job growth.”Banks Join Pensions in Squeeze as Federal Reserve's Low Rates Erode Profit. The Federal Reserve, which cut its target for the federal funds rate to a zero-to-0.25 percent range on Dec. 16, 2008, said last month that rates would remain “exceptionally low” at least through late 2014. While the unprecedented period of near-zero rates is meant to aid an ailing economy, it poses challenges for banks, insurers, pension funds, and savers. The hope is that by making mortgages and other loans cheaper, ultra-low rates eventually may revive economic growth, Bloomberg Businessweek reports in its Feb. 6 issue. For now they’re squeezing profits at banks and disrupting investment strategies at insurance companies and pension funds. They’ve reduced payouts on savings accounts and bonds, and may lead to higher bank fees and insurance premiums. “For most people, there’s been more downside to these low rates than upside,” says Barry Ritholtz, chief executive officer of FusionIQ, a New York-based investment research firm. “They’ve punished savers and people living on fixed income, and made insurance more expensive.” Kyle Bass Urges Texas Fund to Hold Gold Hedge as Assets Shrink. Kyle Bass, the Dallas hedge-fund manager, urged overseers of Texas’s state university endowment, the second-largest U.S. college fund, to stick with a $1 billion investment in gold bullion even as the fund’s assets decline. “I’m against selling any of the gold,” Bass said today at a meeting of fund directors in Austin, citing the need for a hedge against mounting risks driven by government deficits in the U.S. and Europe. “As every day goes by, I see deflation in the things you own and inflation in the things you need.MF Futures Customers Compete to Lead Lawsuit Against Corzine. MF Global Inc. futures customers are competing to lead a lawsuit against Jon Corzine, the parent company’s former chief executive officer, over the alleged theft of $1.2 billion of their assets. Court filings show at least seven actions against Corzine by futures customers in Manhattan federal court. Plaintiffs who’ve nominated themselves to lead a potential group suit include Sapere CTA Fund LP, which sued Corzine and other former MF Global Holdings Ltd. executives for $90 million; Seattle money manager William Fleckenstein along with Kay P. Tee LLC, a firm with a trading account at MF Global; and, together, Davide Accomazzo and Roberto Calle Gracey, who said in court papers they filed the first action on behalf of futures customers.Geithner Says Systemically Risky Firms to Be Named in 2012. U.S. Treasury Secretary Timothy F. Geithner said the first non-bank financial companies deemed systemically risky will be named this year, and the department will release more plans for an overhaul of housing finance.U.S. Senate Adopts Measure to Ban Bonuses at Fannie, Freddie. The U.S. Senate passed a prohibition on executive bonuses at Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, the government-controlled mortgage companies that are dependent on taxpayer aid. The Senate voted 96-3 to approve a bill including the ban proposed by Republican John McCain of Arizona and Democrat John Rockefeller of West Virginia, which was added by voice vote earlier today. The measure was introduced after the companies’ regulator, the Federal Housing Finance Agency, approved nearly $13 million in bonuses to 10 executives. McCain, on the Senate floor this week, said he found it “hard to believe” it would be difficult to find people to run the firms “without the incentive of multi-million dollar bonuses.” “There are many examples of intelligent, well-qualified, patriotic individuals working in our federal government who make significantly less than the top executives at Fannie and Freddie with just as much responsibility,” McCain said.Japan Inc. Suppliers Cut Jobs as Yen Batters TV, Chip Profit. Japan Inc. is suffering and the supply chain is bearing the cost. The yen's 7 percent surge against the dollar in the past 12 months has widened losses at Sony, Mazda and Sharp Corp., which plans to halve TV production at its biggest factory to reduce inventory. Manufacturers have been forced to both relocate production outside of Japan and to press their suppliers for cost cuts.Wynn Macau Profit Misses Analysts' Estimates on Competition. Wynn Macau Ltd., the Hong Kong-listed casino unit of Wynn Resorts Ltd.(WYNN), missed analysts estimates for its full-year profit on rising competition in the world’s largest gambling hub. Fourth-quarter net income rose 15 percent to $239.9 million from $208.8 million a year earlier, the company said in a statement to the Hong Kong stock exchange. Based on numbers derived from the statement, full-year profit was $759.8 million, missing estimates of $795.3 million from 16 analysts surveyed by Bloomberg. Competition is increasing in Macau, the only place in China where casinos are legal, as Sands China Ltd. and other operators build more gaming centers to tap surging numbers of Chinese gamblers. Sands China Ltd., controlled by Sheldon Adelson’s Las Vegas Sands Corp.(LVS), this week posted annual profit that beat analysts’ estimates. “Wynn’s performance was weak relative to the market,” Macquarie Securities analyst Gary Pinge said in a report. The brokerage downgraded the stock to underperform and cut its share price target to HK$17 from HK$17.50. Wall Street Journal:
Futures on Credit-Default Swaps Seen as Natural Evolution. Efforts to create an exchange-traded futures contract tied to credit-default swaps haven't yet gained traction after 18 months of talks, but banks dealing in the private multitrillion-dollar market for credit derivatives believe such contracts will eventually appear for a simple reason: They should attract new players. Dealers have long been fiercely protective of keeping the status quo in credit-default swaps or "CDS" because they have booked fat profits from customers not being able to see where other customers are trading. But dealers believe that opening up the market with a futures contract could bring in a more diverse user base, and that they could make up for thinner margins with larger volumes. Dealers' proposed futures contracts would track the performance of a basket of CDS, allowing investors to trade around the expected future value of that default protection on a range of companies. The most commonly traded CDS indexes are the CDX North America Investment Grade index and the iTraxx Europe, both administered by Markit, which also has been involved in the dealer talks. The notional amount of CDSs rose 8% in the first half of last year to $32.4 trillion, according to the Bank for International Settlements, and as of the end of June 2011 represented about 5% of the $708 trillion swaps market. U.S. Fears Iran's Links to al Qaeda. U.S. officials say they believe Iran recently gave new freedoms to as many as five top al Qaeda operatives who have been under house arrest, including the option to leave the country, and may have provided some material aid to the terrorist group. The men, who were detained in Iran in 2003, make up al Qaeda's so-called management council, a group that includes members of the inner circle that advised Osama bin Laden and an explosives expert widely considered a candidate for a top post in the organization. Senate Passes Insider-Trading Ban. After years of delay, Congress took a big step toward approving new rules to ban lawmakers from trading stocks based on information they pick up in the halls of Capitol Hill—a move aimed in part at helping repair the institution's low approval ratings. The Senate voted overwhelmingly, 96-3, to pass the legislation, called the Stop Trading On Congressional Knowledge Act, or Stock Act. The bill now moves to the House, where Republican leaders said they would vote on it next week. Swiss Bank Wegelin Indicted on U.S. Tax Charges. U.S. prosecutors filed criminal charges against Switzerland's oldest bank, alleging it helped wealthy Americans hide more than $1.2 billion in secret accounts abroad, the latest move in an ongoing crackdown on overseas tax evasion. The indictment of Swiss private bank Wegelin & Co., founded in 1741, marks the first time U.S. authorities have charged a bank rather than individuals with helping Americans evade taxes.Banks Depleting Earnings Backstop. The rainy-day funds that U.S. banks have been tapping to boost their earnings could soon begin to dry up, and that doesn't bode well for bank profits. Many banks have been "releasing" reserves against bad loans since the worst of the crisis passed and the economy began recovering. That money flows to the bottom line, helping some banks boost earnings at a time when lending and trading profits have been soggy. Business Insider:
Incredible Photos From The Brutal Cold Front That's Killed Over A Hundred In Europe. Zero Hedge:
4-Wk Avg NYSE Volume Lowest Since 1999. (graph)Morgan Stanley(MS) Cuts EURUSD Forecast From 1.20 To 1.15 On Upcoming ECB Easing.Europe's "Great Deleveraging" Has Only Just Begun. (graph)
CNBC:
Fed Policy 'Too Loose For Too Long': Rep. Ryan. The U.S. is "limping out of this recession" at growth of 1.7 percent thanks to Federal Reserve policy that has been "too loose for too long," Rep. Paul Ryan, R.-Wis., chairman of the House Budget Committee, told CNBC.
FINalternatives:
Hedge Funds Add 1.34% To Start Year, Credit Suisse Index Shows. Four of the five strategies tracked by the LAB indices posted gains, led by long/short, which rose 2.57%, and event-driven, which added 2.14%. Global strategies rose 0.59% and merger arbitrage 0.49%, while managed futures lost 0.27% on the month. Reuters:
Weak Customer Spending Hurts Acme Packet(APKT) Outlook, Shares Fall. Network gear maker Acme Packet Inc reported fourth-quarter results below analysts' expectations and forecast a weak full-year profit as its customers scaled back on spending and delayed orders. Acme Packet shares slid 12 percent to $27.17 in after-market trade on the Nasdaq. Financial Times:
Deutsche Bank Concerned by Offer of ECB Loans. Deutsche Bank has risked a clash with the European Central Bank by indicating it sees a stigma attached to the long-term help offered to banks to try to ease the eurozone’s funding crisis. Josef Ackermann, chief executive, made clear that Deutsche might not take up the ECB’s next offer of unlimited three-year loans because it might be seen as tantamount to government aid that could damage the bank’s reputation. Telegraph:
Eurozone Bail-Out Funds Not Enough, Warns OECD. International debt inspectors believe they have found another €15bn (£12.5bn) black hole in Greece’s public finances caused by the deepening recession, delivering the crippled nation another devastating blow. With pressure growing over talks with private investors about the terms of a €100bn debt write-off, officials calculated that to bring the country’s debts to a sustainable level at 120pc of GDP the international community would need to find an extra €15bn, raising the prospect of a Greek default. Sources told news organisations in Brussels that weak growth will make it even more difficult for Greece to resolve its debt problem, leaving the eurozone and the International Monetary Fund with the prospect of an even larger bail-out than the €130bn planned. The warning came as the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) said the emergency bail-out funds are not big enough. The international think-tank said the European Financial Stability Facility’s (EFSF) €440bn (£366bn) firepower “is not enough” to support the lending requirements of indebted countries, particularly given that it “has not found it easy to raise funds with low yields”. Greece, Portugal, Italy, Ireland and Spain need to repay a total of €700bn this year and €400bn next year. Oil Price Could Fall to $70 in 2012 Amid Volatility, Shell Warns. Oil prices could fall to $70 a barrel during 2012, from current levels above $110, as high volatility in the economy and energy markets becomes "a fact of life", Royal Dutch Shell executives said. Globe and Mail:
Ottawa Leans on Banks to Tighten Lending. Ottawa is becoming increasingly uncomfortable with record-low mortgage rates being offered by some Canadian banks and the ease with which some institutions are advancing lines of credit. Finance Department officials raised concerns with bankers in recent weeks about historically low mortgage rates as well as lending standards, industry sources said Thursday. After warning for several months about the debt levels of Canadian households, government officials were upset that banks continued to reduce rates and make a bigger push on home loans.

People's Daily:
China should prevent using wealth accumulated to overspend on luxury goods, according to a commentary published on the People's Daily today written by Jiang Hongbing. Evening Recommendations
Citigroup Global Markets:
Reiterated Buy on (ACE), boosted estimates, target $81.Reiterated Buy on (DOW), target $39.Night Trading
Asian equity indices are -1.0% to

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Bull Radar

.05%Stocks Rising on Unusual Volume:
PRXL, VRTX, CNC, RTEC, MAT, PCAR, HOLX, WPRT, PAY, EW and MCK
Stocks With Unusual Call Option Activity:
1) RSH 2) MAT 3) ZAGG 4) LNC 5) ENDP
Stocks With Most Positive News Mentions:
1) LMT 2) PRXL 3) MAT 4) FWLT 5) BA
Charts:
ETFs Rising on Unusual VolumeStocks Rising on Unusual Volume
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Bear Radar


Style Underperformer:
Mid-Cap Value -.71%Sector Underperformers:
1) Homebuilders -2.0% 2) Hospitals -1.90% 3) Steel -1.50%Stocks Falling on Unusual Volume:
CHU, LFC, ABB, ESIO, MPEL, NTRI, CPHD, VIVO, GSM, SPLS, ABFS, Z, PMTC, RVBD, ABCO, SNCR, ACAT, RDEA, FSLR, CREE, QCOR, YPF, BNS, ICB, GCI, SCCO, CFX and PMC
Stocks With Unusual Put Option Activity:1) FCN 2) RENN 3) KRE 4) RDN 5) MTG
Stocks With Most Negative News Mentions:
1) SPLS 2) CF 3) CCL 4) BAC 5) BLK
Charts:
ETFs Falling on Unusual VolumeStocks Falling on Unusual Volume
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Today's Headlines


Bloomberg:
EU Stumbles as Merkel Signals Greece Debt Deal Delay. European leaders sparred with Greece over a second rescue program, clouding progress toward a permanent aid fund and tougher budget rules designed to stabilize the euro. Greece faced criticism that its economic makeover is faltering, and it fended off German-led calls for a European overseer to take command of its budget after its deficits surpassed targets for two years. “What the Greeks have to do is show they are ready to implement the package,” Dutch Prime Minister Mark Rutte told reporters as he arrived for a European Union summit in Brussels today. “We can help Greece through this difficult phase, but then Greece has to execute all agreements they made with us.” Bargaining with Greece over a debt writedown and its economic management threatened to overshadow a summit meant to point the way out of the financial crisis by speeding the setup of a full-time 500 billion-euro ($654 billion) rescue fund and signing off on a German-inspired deficit-control treaty. A start-of-year respite from market pressures continued today when Italy raised 7.5 billion euros, close to its maximum target, in preparation for its biggest redemption of 2012. At least five more countries plan bond sales this week. The euro slipped 0.9 percent to $1.3160 at 5:30 p.m. in Brussels, snapping a five-day rally. Stocks in Europe Fall Most in Six Weeks; BNP Paribas Tumbles on French Tax. European stocks dropped the most in six weeks as Portuguese bonds sank amid concern a meeting of the region’s leaders will fail to draw a line under the sovereign- debt crisis. BNP Paribas SA (BNP) tumbled 7.1 percent, leading French banks lower, as President Nicolas Sarkozy said he will unilaterally impose a financial-transaction tax. Royal Philips Electronics NV (PHIA) fell 2.2 percent after reporting a larger-than-estimated loss. Hochtief AG (HOT) slid 5.8 percent after saying it will post a wider annual loss than previously anticipated. The Stoxx Europe 600 Index retreated 1.1 percent to 252.52 at the close of trading, the largest slide since Dec. 14.Portugal Likely to Get Scant Relief From Greek Debt Agreement: Euro Credit. The Greek debt swap negotiations that may produce relief for Athens are fueling concerns in Lisbon where an agreement would make it more likely Portuguese investors would be next in line to accept a loss. European leaders have said a Greek accord where investors take a 50 percent writedown in the face value of their bonds is unique and won’t be applied to other nations struggling to tame rising debts. Holders of Portuguese securities are skeptical, with the yield on the nation’s 10-year bonds rising today to a euro-era record of 16.45 percent. “Portugal’s debt and lack of growth is very similar to Greece,” Yannick Naud, who manages $150 million at Glendevon King Asset Management, said in a Jan. 23 interview in London. “Its bonds are falling because it’s very obvious to everyone that if there’s a haircut for Greece, there might well be a haircut for Portugal too.” Corporate Bond Risk Rises in Europe, Credit-Default Swaps Show. The cost of insuring against default on European corporate debt rose, according to traders of credit- default swaps. Contracts on the Markit iTraxx Crossover Index of 50 companies with mostly high-yield credit ratings increased 13.5 basis points to 618.5 basis points, according to JPMorgan Chase & Co. at 7:30 a.m. in London. An increase signals worsening perceptions of credit quality. The Markit iTraxx Europe Index of 125 companies with investment-grade ratings was up 3.25 at 144.75 basis points. The Markit iTraxx Financial Index linked to senior debt of 25 banks and insurers added 4.5 basis points to 215 and the subordinated gauge was up six at 375.
MF Global Said 'Never Been Stronger' a Week Before Failure. A week before MF Global Holdings Ltd. collapsed, its chief financial officer told Standard & Poor’s in an e-mail that the futures broker had “never been stronger.” S&P provided the House Financial Services Subcommittee on Oversight and Investigations with an excerpt of the e-mail from MF Global CFO Henri Steenkamp. S&P also informed the panel that Jon Corzine, then MF Global’s chief executive officer, met with its analysts on Oct. 20 to reassure them that his $6.3 billion bet on European sovereign debt was no threat to the firm, according to a Jan. 17 letter obtained by Bloomberg News. Canada's Subprime Crisis Seen With U.S.-Styled Loans: Mortgages. Canadian lenders are loosening standards on mortgages that are similar to U.S. subprime loans, posing an "emerging risk" to financial institutions, according to the country's banking regulator. Banks and other lenders are becoming "increasingly liberal" with mortgages and home-equity credit lines that don't require individuals to prove their income, according to documents obtained by Bloomberg News under freedom of information law from the Office of the Superintendent of Financial Institutions. The mortgages, typically granted to the self-employed and recent immigrants, "have some similarities to non-prime loans in the U.S. retail lending market," the documents show. "Non- income qualified" lending has been added to a list of issues to be considered by OSFI's "emerging-risk committee," the documents show. "It just speaks to the general easing in lending standards, which has contributed to a booming housing market," said David Madani, an economist in Toronto with Capital Economics, which estimates that Canadian housing prices may fall 25 percent over the next few years. "The problem is sort of baked in now, so I'm not sure there's a way to prevent a weakening of the housing market."Corn, Soybean Futures Decline as Rain May Boost Crops in Argentina, Brazil. Corn fell for the first time in eight sessions and soybeans dropped on speculation that rain in South America will boost crop potential, reducing demand for supplies from the U.S., the world’s biggest exporter.Consumer Spending in U.S. Stalls. Consumer spending stalled in December as Americans took advantage of a jump in incomes to restore depleted savings, indicating households remain focused on repairing finances. Purchases were little changed after rising 0.1 percent the prior month, Commerce Department figures showed today in Washington. The median estimate of 77 economists surveyed by Bloomberg News called for a 0.1 percent increase in sales. Incomes climbed by the most in almost a year, pushing the savings rate to a four-month high. Wall Street Journal:
Germany Warns Greece on Aid Funds. Germany's finance minister issued an unusually blunt warning that the euro zone might refuse to grant Greece a fresh bailout, pushing Athens into default unless it persuades Europe it can overhaul its state and economy. "Greece needs to decide," Wolfgang Schäuble said in an interview with The Wall Street Journal, when asked whether the euro zone would grant or withhold the second bailout package for the country since 2010, expected to be in excess of €130 billion ($172 billion).CFTC to Step Up Focus on High-Frequency Trading. The Commodity Futures Trading Commission is planning to take a closer look at high-frequency trading, with an eye on getting a clearer understanding of how electronic trading affects commodity markets and participants.Fed Survey Finds Banks Still Cautious to Lend. Banks in the U.S. kept credit fairly tight in the final months of 2011 even as demand for loans increased, putting a brake on the slow economic recovery. The Federal Reserve's quarterly survey showed that credit standards on commercial and industrial loans were little changed for the 56 domestic banks that were interviewed, after the banks stopped relaxing credit in the third quarter.Syrain Forces Battle Ahead of U.N. Talks. Syrian forces heavily shelled the restive city of Homs on Monday and troops pushed back dissident troops from some suburbs on the outskirts of Damascus in an offensive trying to regain control of the capital's eastern doorstep, activists said. President Bashar al-Assad's regime is intensifying its assault aimed at crushing army defectors and protesters, even as the West tries to overcome Russian opposition and win a new U.N. resolution demanding a halt to Syria's crackdown on the 10-month-old uprising. Activists reported at least 28 civilians killed on Monday.
CNBC.com:
Why Even 20-Somethings Are Worried About Retirement.Pay Up-Front Portugal Slides Towards Bond Pariah Greece.Rates May Need to Rise Sooner: Philly Fed's Plosser. "If the economy evolves as I think it might, then it’s likely it might have to be sooner than that," he said of a mid-2014 increase. "I’ve said previously that I thought it possible rate hikes would have to come before mid-2013. I was unhappy with the calendar date in the statement. I’m still uphappy with the statement. I don’t think it’s the right way to convey policy." He said it is "clear" from the Fed's statement the mid-2014 date "is contingent on the evolution of the economy. It is not a commitment and shouldn’t be interpreted as a commitment. It’s a conditional statement." He acknowledged "we are punishing savers" by keeping rates at near zero. "The policy is to get people to quit saving and start spending," he said. The problem is, when they start liquidating assets "it's gonna be gone" for the next generation. He also acknowledged low interest rates are forcing some investors to take "unwise risks" in the search for yield from stocks, Plosser said. Business Insider:
China Has Begun Buying Up Germany's Family-Owned Industrial Backbone.The Most Bullish Number From Today's Big Dallas Fed Manufacturing Report. (graph)Bubble Watching: My Trip To The 'Hawaii Of China'. (pics)
Zero Hedge:
European Elections And Tolstoy's Portugal.Everything You Need To Know About Europe In Three Charts.Youth Unemployment Across Europe. (chart)Japanese Population to Shrink by One Third, Size of Workforce to Plunge in Under 50 Years.

The Detroit News:

Treasury Ups Auto Bailout Loss Estimate. The U.S. Treasury Department boosted its estimate of government losses in the $85 billion auto bailout by $170 million. In the government's latest report to Congress this month, the Treasury upped its estimate to $23.77 billion, up from $23.6 billion. Last fall, the government dramatically boosted its forecast of losses on the rescues of General Motors Co., Chrysler Group LLC and their finance units from $14 billion to $23.6 billion. Much of the increase in losses is due to the sharp decline of GM's stock price over the last six months. GM was trading at noon today at $24.24. It's down 35 percent over its 52-week-high of $37.23, but the Detroit automaker has rebounded from a low set last year of $19.05.The Daily Ticker:
Freddie Mac Betting Against Homeowners Is Latest GSE Outrage. (video)

Reuters:

Gulf Arabs Have Plans Against Hormuz Closure - Official. Coastguards and naval forces of the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) group of Arab countries have contingency plans for a possible attempt by Iran to shut the Strait of Hormuz, a Kuwaiti maritime official said on Monday.Oil Slips in Choppy Trade. Oil prices slipped on Monday in volatile trading a day after Iran postponed a parliamentary debate on a proposed halt to crude sales to the European Union. The dollar index .DXY strengthened and the euro fell from a six-week high against the U.S. currency as talks on a Greek debt agreement continued, keeping investors cautious about the outlook for the economy and oil demand. The possibility Iran may yet halt exports to the EU, along with data showing improved European economic sentiment and a successful bond auction in Italy, helped limit oil's losses."Oil is lower because Iran didn't cut off sales to Europe and the dollar index is stronger, and there still isn't a deal on Greece," said Phil Flynn, analyst at PFGBest Research in Chicago.Brent March crude fell 46 cents to $111 a barrel by 12:45 p.m. EST, having traded from $110.80 to $111.78. That intraday peak was in sight of front-month Brent's 200-day moving average of $111.89.U.S. March crude fell 36 cents to $99.20 a barrel, having swung from $98.50 to $100.05, seesawing either side of the front-month 50-day moving average at $99.27.Rajoy Says Spain Won't Make 2012 Growth Target. Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy said on Monday Spain was not going to meet its existing growth target for 2012, but wouldn't go into detail about what that may mean for its plans to cut its budget deficit sharply. Financial Times:
Portugal Yields Jump On Default Fears. Portugal’s bond yields reached new euro-era highs as many investors priced in a Lisbon default amid fears its debt holders could suffer heavy losses once a restructuring deal with Greece is agreed. At one point the yield on benchmark 10-year Portuguese debt rose as much as 204 basis points to 17.26 per cent. Portuguese credit default swaps, meanwhile, rose to record levels as the market priced in about a 70 per cent chance the country would default over the next five years.Eurozone Crisis: Live Blog.

Telegraph:

European Venture Capital Deals at 10-Year Low.

Financial Times Deutschland:

Kloeckner says steel demand in Europe may drop 5% or more, citing CEO Gisbert Ruehl. Insecurity in the markets is at the moment probably higher and more threatening than during 2008 with no end in sight for the debt crisis.Bild:
Greece should be closely monitored by the European Union if it won't manage itself, German Economy Minister Philipp Roesler said in an interview. Greece also shouldn't receive any more aid until it implements reforms, Roesler said, adding that Germany opposes adding money to the European Stability Mechanism.

Shanghai Daily:

New Home Sales in Shanghai Fall to Lowest in 7 Years. NEW home sales in Shanghai during the week-long Lunar New Year holiday fell to the lowest in seven years on a sluggish buying sentiment. More than 1,700 square meters of new homes, or 16 units, excluding government-funded affordable housing, were sold across the city during the holiday which ended on Saturday, the lowest since 2006 when the city's housing data were first tracked, said a report released yesterday by Shanghai Deovolente Realty Co. The sales by area fell 33.3 percent from the Lunar New Year holiday in 2011, and the unit number shed 27.9 percent.0comments: Post a Comment

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Stocks Rising Into Final Hour on Better US Economic Data, More Tech/Financial Sector Optimism, Short-Covering, Technical Buying


Broad Market Tone:
Advance/Decline Line: Substantially Higher
Sector Performance: Almost Every Sector Rising
Volume: Around Average
Market Leading Stocks: Performing In Line
Equity Investor Angst:
VIX 17.21 -4.28%
ISE Sentiment Index 152.0

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Weekly Scoreboard*

1.44%
NYSE Arms .59 -66.85%
Volatility(VIX) 17.10 -7.72%S&P 500 Implied Correlation 70.88 -3.94%
G7 Currency Volatility (VXY) 10.18 -.39%
Smart Money Flow Index 10,304.86 -.38%
Money Mkt Mutual Fund Assets $2.692 Trillion unch.
AAII % Bulls 43.81 -9.48%
AAII % Bears 25.08

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Market Week in Review

All Links - By CategoryGlobal NewsU.S. NewsVideo NewsTerrorism/WarMedia/Political WatchdogsFinancial NewsFinancial PortalsFinancial CommentaryI-BanksEconomic PortalsEconomic CommentaryCentral Bank NotesMarket ReadingsTrader's CornerCalendars/SchedulesSentiment/IndicatorsCommodities/FuturesTrading PortalsSector WorkTrade Journals/PublicationsScreens and ScansQuotesStock-Specific ResearchCharts of InterestHedge Fund InformationSites of InterestBlogs of Note

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