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Posts Tagged ‘Global Stocks’

Morning Call: Global stocks rally on economic optimism

Overnight Developments

  • European stocks are higher with the European DJ Stoxx 50 up +0.86% and Dec S&Ps are up +9.40 points, both at 1-month highs. The dollar and Treasuries are weaker while most commodities rallied with crude oil at a 1-month high as a larger-than-expected increase in Aug China industrial production lifted mining stocks and raw material producers and boosted optimism in the global recovery. The European Commission raised its economic growth forecast for the Euro-Zone this year to 1.7% instead of a previously projected 0.9%, and said the economy may slow to a more "moderate" expansion in the second half. Bank stocks and the euro currency strengthened after the Basel Committee on Banking Supervision reached a compromise that more than doubles capital requirements for the world’s banks and gives them as long as 8 years to comply with the higher capital requirements intended to prevent future crisis. Credit Agricole jumped 6.7%, Societe Generale climbed 4.6% and Commerzbank advanced 2.0%. Deutsche Postbank AG slipped 6.8% after Deutsche Bank AG said it plans to raise at least 9.8 billion euros in its biggest-ever share sale to take over Postbank and meet stricter capital rules. Deutsche Bank expects to offer between 24 euros and 25 euros a share in cash to Postbank shareholders to increase its 29.95% stake in the lender.
  • The Asian markets today closed higher with Japan up +0.89%, Hong Kong +1.89%, China +1.01%, Taiwan +2.55%, Australia +1.20%, Singapore +1.47%, South Korea +1.03%, India +2.17%. Strong economic data from China lifted Asian stocks and eased concern about a slowdown in the economic recovery. China’s Aug industrial production increased 13.9% y/y, more than market expectations of 13.0% y/y and Aug China retail sales rose +18.4% y/y. The PBOC reported Aug new loans of 545.2 billion yuan ($80 billion) and a 19.2% y/y increase in M2, the broadest measure of money supply. Both numbers were stronger than expected with the increase in M2 growth the first in 9 months. Aug China consumer prices rose 3.5% y/y, their biggest increase in 22 months due to a rise in food costs.

Today’s U.S. Earnings Reports

Earnings reports (confirmed releases, sorted by mkt cap) FUL-HB Fuller (BEST earnings consensus $0.45), LRN-K12 Inc. (-0.07), PCYC-Pharmacyclics (-0.07), PMFG-PMFG Inc. (0.10), MTRX-Matrix Service (0.10), VALV-Shengkai Innovations (0.16), GCOM-Globecomm Systems (0.17).

 

Day Trader: Click here to ready the complete Morning Call.

Morning Call: Global stocks slightly higher ahead of Aug US payrolls

Overnight Developments

  • European stocks are higher with the European DJ Stoxx 50 up +0.59% and Sep S&Ps up +0.10 of a point, both at 2-week highs. The dollar is weaker while Treasuries and most commodities are little changed as the markets anxiously await the monthly US payrolls report. Speaking to reporters in Seoul today, ECB Council member Draghi said that while the economic recovery remains "fragile," it is becoming more broad-based. Draghi, who is also the governor of Italy’s central bank, said the ECB’s monetary stance would remain "accommodative." The euro strengthened after ECB Council member Wellink told Market News International that the yen’s appreciation against the euro is helping some Euro-Zone exporters. Yell Group Plc rose 6.2% as the publisher of the UK’s yellow pages directories rallied for a third straight day on takeover speculation, while Theolia SA plunged 9.4% after the French wind-power company reported a first-half net loss of 24.2 milli on euros, larger than the 14.1 million-euro loss a year earlier.
  • The Asian markets today closed mostly higher with Japan up +0.57%, Hong Kong +0.49%, China -0.04%, Taiwan +1.42%, Australia +0.19%, Singapore +0.53%, South Korea +0.16%, India -0.09%. Asian stocks rose after US reports showed an unexpected increase in pending home sales and improved retail sales that eased concerns of an economic slowdown. Sony, the electronics maker that gets 22% of sales from the US, rose 2.4% and James Hardie Industries SE, the biggest seller of home siding in the US, climbed 2.1%. Technology stocks also advanced with Wintek Corp., a component maker for Apple’s iPads, surging 7% after saying its Aug revenue rose 17% m/m, while Chimei Innolux, Taiwan’s largest maker of liquid-crystal displays, closed 6.9% higher amid speculation that Q4 demand for consumer electronics will improves from the previous 3 months. Japan’s economy probably grew more than three times the government’s initial estimate of +0.4% annualized in Q2 after a Finance Ministry repo rt today showed Japan Q2 capital investment excluding software fell -1.5% y/y, its smallest decrease since 2007 as a result of strong overseas demand. Japan will release its revised Q2 GDP growth estimate on Sep 10.

 

Overnight U.S. Stock News

  • Sep S&Ps this morning are up +0.10 of a point. The stock market yesterday finished on its high with modest gains (Dow +0.49%, S&P 500 +0.91%, Nasdaq Composite +1.06%). The S&P 500 and the Dow climbed to 2-week highs and the Nasdaq posted a 1-1/2 week high. Bullish factors included (1) carry-over strength from a boost to European equity markets after the ECB raised its 2010 GDP estimate for the Euro-Zone to between 1.4% and 1.8%, up from a previous forecast of between 0.7% and 1.3%, (2) comments from ECB President Trichet who said a double-dip recession in the Euro-Zone is "not in the cards," which boosts confidence in the global economic recovery, (3) the unexpected decrease in weekly US initial unemployment claims (-6,000 to 472,000 versus expectations of +2,000 to 475,000), (4) strength in homebuilders after the unexpected increase in Jul pending US home sales (+5.2% m/m versus expectations of -1.0% m/m), and (5) a rally in retailers after Aug ICSC chain store sales rose +3.2% y/y, their ninth straight monthly increase.
  • Bearish factors included (1) the weaker-than-expected Jul factory orders (+0.1% versus expectations of +0.2%), (2) the prediction from the chief economist at FTN Financial who said that with "the rate of layoffs still uncomfortably high, there’s no reason to expect an acceleration in US consumer spending," and (3) the prediction from Edward Prescott, senior adviser to the Minneapolis Fed, that the US economy is likely to experience a period of stagnation until the country reduces its debt.
  • Take-Two Interactive (TTWO) surged 13% in European trading after the video game publisher reported an unexpected Q3 profit of 28 cents a share and boosted its earnings outlook on sales of the newest release "Red Dead Redemption."
  • H&R Block (HRB) climbed 3.8% in pre-market trading after it reported a fiscal Q1 loss of 36 cents a share, beating analysts’ estimates for a loss of 40 cents.

 

Day Trader: Click here to read the complete Morning Call.

Morning Call: Global stocks little changed ahead of the ECB policy meeting

Overnight Developments

  • European stocks are slightly weaker with the European DJ Stoxx 50 down -0.36% and Sep S&Ps down -1.20 points. The dollar and Treasuries are little changed while copper rose to a 4-month high after the IMF raise its economic forecast for South Korea, the world’s fourth largest copper consumer. European and US stock prices are fluctuating on either side of unchanged ahead of the conclusion of today’s ECB’s monetary policy meeting in which policy makers are likely to extend emergency lending measures to banks into 2011. The French Q2 jobless rate unexpectedly slipped -0.2 to 9.7%, its first decline in 2 years as companies began hiring again. DSG International Plc rose 1.2% after the UK’s largest consumer-electronics retailer reported an increase in Q1 sales, boosted by the World Cup soccer tournament and the introduction of Apple’s iPad. On the negative side, Pernod Ricard SA slid 2.2% after it reported first-half profit of 951 million euros ($1.2 billion), bel ow analysts’ estimates of 987 million-euros, while Yara International ASA, the largest publicly traded maker of nitrogen fertilizer, dropped 3.2% after Morgan Stanley downgraded the shares to "equal weight" from "overweight."
  • The Asian markets today closed higher with Japan up +1.52%, Hong Kong +1.19%, China +1.30%, Taiwan +0.69%, Australia +0.82%, singapore +0.13%, South Korea +0.54%, India +0.18%. Asian stocks rose after faster-than-estimated growth in US Aug manufacturing supported confidence in global economic growth. Japanese exporters rose as the yen weakened with Honda Motor up 1.9%, Nissan Motor up 3% and Sony up 2.2%. Chinese automakers advanced after China’s passenger-car sales grew 59% y/y in Aug, more than 3 times July’s pace, while Ping An Insurance, China’s second-largest insurer, gained 2.7% on plans to merge its bank unit with Shenzhen Development Bank after it said it will pay 29.1 billion yuan ($4.3 billion) for a stake that will give it control of Shenzhen. South Korean stocks rallied after the IMF raised its economic growth forecast for the country to 6.1% this year from 5.75% previously, and said the country still has room to raise its benchmark interest rate to a mor e neutral 4.0% from 2.25% currently. The Bank of Korea raised its benchmark rate 25 bp to 2.25% on July 9 as it joined Asian counterparts including India and Malaysia in removing monetary stimulus.

 

Overnight U.S. Stock News

  • Sep S&Ps this morning are down -1.20 points. The stock market yesterday rallied sharply and closed on its high (Dow +2.54%, S&P 500 +2.95%, Nasdaq Composite +2.97%). The Nasdaq climbed to a 1-1/2 week high, while the S&P 500 and the Dow rallied to 1-week highs. Bullish factors included (1) carry-over strength from a rally in Asian and European stock markets which bolstered confidence in the global economic outlook after China’s manufacturing activity accelerated more than expected in August and Australia’s economy expanded in Q2 at its fastest pace in 3 years, (2) a rally in industrial stocks after the unexpected increase in the US Aug ISM manufacturing index (+0.8 to 56.3 versus expectations of -2.7 to 52.8), (3) strength in commodity and energy producers after a slide in the dollar and increased optimism that an expanding global economy will boost demand for raw materials lifted most commodity prices, and (4) gains in semiconductor makers after resea rch firm Gartner predicted chip sales will grow by +32% to $300 billion this year.
  • Bearish factors included (1) the unexpected decline in jobs in the Aug ADP employment change (-10,000 versus expectations of +15,000), which fuels concern about Friday’s Aug nonfarm payroll report, (2) the larger-than-expected decline in July US construction spending which fell for the third straight month along with the downward revision to June construction spending (Jul -1.0% versus expectations of -0.5% and Jun revised down to -0.8% from +0.1%), and (3) comments from Dallas Fed President Fisher who said he is "reluctant" to expand the Fed’s balance sheet to stimulate the economy unless there are additional tax and regulatory policies in place to spur job growth.
  • Collective Brands (PSS) sank 7.3% in pre-market trading after the company reported Q2 earnings of 32 cents a share, missing analysts’ estimates of 45 cents.
  • Costco (COST) may be active to the upside today after the largest warehouse club chain in the US reported sales rose 9% to $5.9 billion in the four weeks that ended Aug 29 with comparable revenue increasing 7% during the period.

Day Trader: Click here to read the complete Morning Call.

Morning Call: Global stocks slide on concern the economic recovery may falter

Overnight Developments

  • European stocks are weaker with the European DJ Stoxx 50 down -1.01% and Sep S&Ps down -4.20 points. The dollar and most commodities are lower while Treasuries and bunds are higher. European bank stocks are leading share prices lower with Raiffeisen International Bank Holding AG down 1.8% after the Austrian bank that operates in 17 former communist countries in eastern Europe reported Q2 net income of 71 million euros ($89.75 million), below analysts’ estimates of 99 million-euros. Eurobank Ergasias SA fell 3.1% as Greece’s second-largest lender said first-half profit fell after loan losses and taxes increased. Aug Euro-Zone inflation slowed to 1.6% y/y from 1.7% y/y in July, while the Aug Euro-Zone unemployment rate held at 10.0% for a fifth month, the highest in 12 years. In Germany, the number of people out of work declined -17,000 in Aug, its 14th consecutive month of declines, as the unemployment rate held steady at 7.6%. The German economy is leading Europe’s recovery as exports and investment surge, and may limit any slowdown in the Euro-Zone.
  • The Asian markets today closed lower with Japan down -3.55%, Hong Kong -0.97%, China -0.41%, Taiwan -1.61%, Singapore -0.23%, South Korea -1.23%, India -0.34%. Asian stocks fell after slower-than-estimated growth in US personal income increased concern the economic recovery may falter. Japanese stocks tumbled despite an unexpected +0.3% m/m increase in Jul Japan industrial production and the larger-than-expected +0.7% m/m increase in Jul Japan retail sales. Stock prices in Japan remain under pressure on concern that the steps taken Monday by the BOJ and the government to halt the yen’s gain and boost economic growth will be insufficient. Q2 GDP in India expanded 8.8% annualized, its fastest pace in 2-1/2 years, which increases pressure on the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) to extend its recent string of interest rate hikes. The markets now expect another 25 bp rate hike by the RBI at its next meeting Sep 16 to cool inflation as India’s wholesale-price inflation has rem ained stubbornly around 10% since Jan.

 

Overnight U.S. Stock News

  • Sep S&Ps this morning are down -4.20 points. The stock market yesterday opened lower and sold-off steadily the entire day and finished on its low (Dow -1.39%, S&P 500 -1.47%, Nasdaq Composite -1.56%). Bearish factors included (1) comments from the BOJ after its emergency meeting in which it expanded its bank loan program and said that "uncertainty" regarding the American economy is growing, (2) the weaker-than-expected Jul US personal income which fuels concern the economic rebound may slow further (+0.2% versus expectations of +0.3%), (3) the action by Morgan Stanley to cut its second-half GDP estimate for the US to between 2.0% and 2.5% from an earlier estimate of 3.0% to 3.5%, and (4) the action by Barclays Capital to reduce its year-end S&P 500 forecast to 1,120 from an earlier forecast of 1,220, saying "the market-implied probability of recession increases."
  • Bullish factors included (1) carry-over strength from an early rally in European equities after Aug Euro-Zone economic confidence rose more-than-expected to its highest level in 2-1/2 years along with a rally in Asian shares after the BOJ expanded its bank-loan program, (2) the stronger-than-expected Jul US personal spending (+0.4% versus expectations of +0.3%), and (3) increased M&A activity after Sanofi-Aventis bid $18.5 billion for Genzyme, Intel agreed to buy Infineon Technologie’s wireless unit for $1.4 billion and 3M said it agreed to buy Cogent for $943 million.
  • Ford Motor (F) slipped 2.1% in European trading on speculation that tomorrow’s US auto sales results will show that Aug sales this year were the slowest since 1982 as model-year closeout deals failed to entice customers.

 

Day Trader: Click here for the complete Morning Call.

Morning Call: Global stocks mixed ahead of speeches from Fed Chairman

Overnight Developments

  • European stocks are little changed with the European DJ Stoxx 50 up +0.03% and Sep S&Ps are up +3.50 points. The market‘s attention is focused on speeches later today from Fed Chairman Bernanke and ECB President Trichet from the Fed’s annual symposium at Jackson Hole, Wyoming. Losses in European banks are undercutting European stock prices today with Banca Papolare di Milano down 5% after the Italian bank reported Q2 net income of 20.1 million euros, lower than analysts’ estimates of 41.6 million-euros, and Credit Suisse Group AG predicted that earnings estimates for 2010-12 will likely be revised down by 10 to 15% following the bank’s “very weak set of results.” Commerzbank AG slumped 2.6% after Handelsbatt said the bank plans to sell new shares as early as next month to pave the way for an exit by the German government. Limiting losses in European markets was the upward revision to Q2 UK GDP figures to +1.2% q/q and +1.7% y/y, higher than the initi al estimate of +1.1% q/q and +1.6% y/y, and shows the British economy expanding by its biggest amount since 2001.
  • The Asian markets today closed mostly higher with Japan up +0.95%, Hong Kong -0.07%, China +0.30%, Taiwan +0.43%, Australia +0.32%, Singapore +0.44%, South Korea +0.06%, India -1.25%. Japanese stocks closed higher and the yen weakened against the dollar after Japanese Prime Minister Kan said the government is ready to take “bold” action in the currency market to stem the yen’s advance. Kan said he expects the BOJ to implement monetary policy “swiftly,” and that he plans on meeting with BOJ governor Shirakawa soon after he returns from the US. July Japan consumer prices excluding fresh food fell -1.1% y/y, their 17th consecutive monthly decline, while July Japan overall household spending rose +1.1% y/y, lower than expectations for a +1.5% y/y increase, and signals that Japan’s economic recovery may be faltering. On the bright side, Japan added 210,000 jobs in July from a month earlier, the most since Jan, while the unemployment dropped -0.1 to 5.2% , its first decline in 6 months as the job-to-applicant ratio rose to 0.53, meaning there are 53 job openings for every 100 job candidates, the most since March 2009.

 

Overnight U.S. Stock News

  • Sep S&Ps this morning are up +3.50 points. The stock market yesterday fluctuated on both sides of unchanged until early afternoon when it ailed off into the close and finsihed just above its low (Dow -0.74%, S&P 500 -0.77%, Nasdaq Composite -1.07%). Bearish factors included (1) renewed concerns over Europe’s sovereign-debt crisis after El Economista reported that a Spanish court ruled Spain’s method of auditing sales tax was illegal and voided 5.1 billion euros ($6.48 billion) in value-added taxes collected in past years, which fuels concern about Spain’s fiscal stability, (2) concerns the US economic recovery is continuing to weaken after the Kansas City Fed said that manufacturing in its area slowed in Aug, with no companies reporting m/m increases, and (3) the prediction from Societe Generale that stocks are headed for their third bear market since 2000 as the global economy contracts and because “there is still too much hope” among investors t o suggest that stock prices will hit bottom any time soon.
  • Bullish factors included (1) the larger-than-expected decline in weekly initial unemployment claims (-31,000 to 473,000 versus expectations of -10,000 to 490,000), (2) strength in raw materials and energy producers after a weak dollar prompted an advance in the prices of most commodities, and (3) the prediction from Kansas City Fed President Hoenig who said that he still expects the US economy to expand by about 3% this year, in line with his forecast from a month ago.
  • J. Crew Group (JCG) fell 6.5% in pre-market trading after the clothing retailer cut its full-year earnings forecast to $2.35 a share at most, lower than a previous forecast of as much as $2.45.
  • Omnivision Technologies (OVTI) dropped 4.1% in pre-market trading after the company reported Q1 sales of $193.1 million, below analysts’ extimates of $204.1 million.

 

Day Trader: Click here to read the complete Morning Call.

Morning Call: Global stocks mixed – 8/26/2010

Overnight Developments

  • European stocks are higher with the European DJ Stoxx 50 up +0.45% and Sep S&Ps up +1.00 point. Better-than-expected earnings results are leading European stocks higher as Credit Agricole, France’s largest bank by branches, jumped 3.8% after it reported Q2 net income of 279 million euros, beating analysts’ estimates of 318 million euros, while L’Oreal, the world’s biggest cosmetics maker, surged 6.6% after it reported first-half net income increased 21% from last year to 1.32 billion euros. Also boosting European stocks was the +0.1 point increase in the Sep German GfK consumer confidence survey to an 11-month high of 4.1 as stronger economic growth and declining unemployment in Germany boosted income expectations. Loan growth grew in Europe in July as the economic recovery gathered steam after the ECB reported a +0.9% y/y increase in loans to Euro-Zone households and companies in July, the fastest pace in 13 months, which suggests the economy may not lose as much momentum as some economists forecast.
  • The Asian markets today closed mixed with Japan up +0.69%, Hong Kong -0.11%, China +0.25%, Taiwan -0.61%, Australia +0.83%, Singapore -0.02%, South Korea -0.27%, India +0.26%. Japanese exporters rallied and led Japanese stocks higher as the yen weakened against the dollar. The Asahi newspaper reported today that the Japanese government may ask the BOJ to ease monetary policy further as part of an economic stimulus package, while the Nikkei English news reported that Japanese Prime Minister Kan told business leaders he is in contact with the Finance Ministry and the central bank on the possibility of currency intervention. The yen has risen 15% this year and Suzuki Motor Corp. Chairman Suzuki said the strengthening currency poses an “extremely grave” situation and will have a “very big impact” on profit.

Overnight U.S. Stock News

  • Sep S&Ps this morning are up +1.00 point. The stock market yesterday sold off early but recovered its losses the rest of the session and finished higher (Dow +0.20%, S&P 500 +0.33%, Nasdaq Composite +0.84%). The S&P 500, Dow and Nasdaq all fell to 1-1/2 month lows but erased their losses and finished higher. Bullish factors included (1) speculation that the recent plunge in equity prices overshot the potential damage from a slowdown in the economy, (2) strength in homebuilders, despite the plunge in Jul new home sales to a record low, after Toll Brothers rallied when it unexpectedly reported its first quarterly profit since 2007 as writedowns declined, and (3) a supportive interest rate picture that keeps stock valuations low and benefits consumers and businesses after the yield on the 10-year T-note fell to a 1-1/2 year low of 2.42%.
  • Bearish factors included (1) carry-over weakness from a fall in European stocks after S&P cut Ireland’s long-term sovereign credit rating one step to AA-, its lowest since 1995, and raised its estimate for recapitalizing the Irish banking system to as much as 50 billion euros ($63 billion) from a previous estimate of 35 billion euros, which renews concern over the European sovereign-debt crisis, (2) the weaker-than-expected Jul durable goods orders (+0.3% versus expectations of +3.0%), and the unexpected decline in Jul durable goods orders ex transportation which had its biggest drop in 1-1/2 years (-3.8% versus expectations of +0.5%), (3) the unexpected plunge in Jul new home sales which fell to their lowest level since records began in 1963 (-12.4% to 276,000 versus expectations of unchanged at 330,000), and (4) the unexpected decline in the Jun FHFA house price index (-0.3% m/m versus expectations of +0.1% m/m).
  • Schlumberger (SLB), the world’s biggest oilfied-services contractor, rose 1% in European trading after crude oil prices gained.

 

Day Trader: Click here to read the complete Morning Call.

Morning Call: Global stocks and commodities slump on concern the economic recovery is dissipating

Overnight Developments

  • European stocks are weaker with the European DJ Stoxx 50 down -1.27% and Sep S&Ps down -7.40 points, both at their lowest levels in a month. This prompted a flight-to-safety into German bunds and Treasuries with the yield on the 10-year bund falling to a record low 2.232%. Risk aversion also prompted a surge in the yen to a 15-year high against the dollar, while most commodities slumped with crude oil at a 1-1/2 month low. European stocks retreated, led by weakness in construction and basic-resource companies, on concern that economic growth is slowing. CRH Plc, the world’s second-largest maker and distributor of building materials, tumbled 14% after the company forecast that earnings will fall 10% this year due to a slowdown in the US. HeidelbergCement AG, the world’s largest maker of aggregates used to produce concrete and asphalt, dropped 4.8% and Wolseley Plc, the world’s largest supplier of heating and plumbing products, tumbled 5.2%. EU Commissioner f or economic and monetary affairs, Olli Rehn, said that a slowdown in the US recovery and turmoil in the sovereign debt markets could cause concern in Europe, where growth is likely to decelerate in he second half. On the bright side, Jun Euro-Zone industrial new orders climbed a larger-than-expected +2.5% m/m as stronger global growth helped fuel Q2 Euro-Zone GDP to its fastest rate expansion in 4 years.
  • The Asian markets today closed mostly lower with Japan down -1.33%, Hong Kong -1.10%, China +0.54%, Taiwan -0.44%, Australia -1.08%, Singapore -0.11%, South Korea -0.34%, India -0.53%. Japan’s Nikkei 224 Stock Index plunged to a 15-month low on concern the global recovery is faltering. The yen rose to an 8-year high against the euro and a 15-year high against the dollar, which undercut exporters as the strengthening yen threatens to erode Japan’s export earnings. Japan’s Prime Minister Naoto Kan tried to slow the yen’s advance when he said "steep currency moves are undesirable" as Japanese policymakers and government leaders are under pressure to protect Japan’s fragile economic recovery as the yen’s surge threatens to undermine export earnings and deepen deflation. According to the Sankei newspaper, Prime Minister Kan will meet today with business leaders to discuss the yen’s strength and its impact on the economy. Asian mining-companies and raw materials and energy producers closed lower on demand concerns as commodity prices declined, while Foster’s Group Ltd., Australia’s biggest beer and wine maker, slumped 4.3% after posting a second-half loss.

Overnight U.S. Stock News

  • Sep S&Ps this morning are down -7.40 points. The stock market yesterday traded higher early but moved lower in the early afternoon and finished with modest losses (Dow -0.38%, S&P 500 -0.40%, Nasdaq Composite -0.92%). Bearish factors included (1) speculation that the US economic data to be released this week will point to a slowing economy, which questions the sustainability of the economic recovery and raises concern about the possibility of a double-dip recession, (2) the prediction from Moody’s Investors Service that European governments’ budget cuts in the aftermath of the debt crisis will weigh on economic growth and increase the risk of countries having their credit rating cut, (3) the larger-than-expected decline in the Aug Euro-Zone PMI composite index (-0.6 to 56.1 versus expectations of -0.4 to 56.3), which signals the pace of the recovery in Europe might have peaked, and (4) weak retail demand for stocks after the ICI reported that bond funds in the US attracted more money than equity funds in 30 straight months through June, the longest such stretch in 23 years.
  • Bullish factors included (1) continued strong M&A activity as global takeovers announced so far this year have totaled $1.29 trillion, up +23% from the same time last year, (2) the unexpected increase in the Aug Euro-Zone consumer confidence index, which climbed to a 2-1/2 year high (+2 to -12 versus expectations of unchanged at -14), and (3) strength in utilities after Credit Suisse Group AG said the stocks are already discounting a potential future dividend-tax rate increase "in the low 30% range," which should limit sustained risk of lost value and leaves upside if Congress avoids the full planned increase.
  • Pfizer (PFE) slid 1.3% in European trading after iys cancer treatment Sutent failed in a large-scale study to improve overall survival in patients with a form of lung cancer.

 

Day Trader: Click here to read the complete Morning Call.

Morning Call: Global stocks mostly lower

Overnight Developments

  • European stocks are slightly higher with the European Stoxx up +0.45% although Sep S&Ps are down -1.30 points after sliding to a 3-week low in overnight electronic trade when Cisco Systems, the largest maker of networking equipment, forecast sales that missed analysts’ estimates. The dollar index strengthened to a 2-1/2 week high, while Treasuries and most commodities weakened with copper falling to a 2-week low and crude oil sinking to a 1-1/2 week low. European stocks fluctuated between slight losses and gains as equities try to regain their footing following Wednesday’s deep slide. AB InBev gained 3.7% after the world’s largest brewer reported Q2 net income rose to $1.15 billion, beating analysts’ estimates of $1.08 billion, and Vestas Wind Systems A/S, the world’s largest maker of wind turbines, rose 3.8% after winning an order for turbines in what will be Australia’s biggest wind-energy project. Undercutting European stock prices was the unexpected -0.1% m/m drop in Jun Euro-Zone industrial production, which was dragged lower by a decline in durable consumer goods such as furniture and home appliances. In its monthly bulletin for Aug released today, the ECB said that Q3 growth in the Euro-Zone is likely "better than expected," echoing ECB President Trichet’s comments last week, while the central bank cut its forecast for 2011 GDP growth in the Euro-Zone to 1.4% versus a previous projection of 1.5%.
  • The Asian markets today closed mostly lower with Japan down -0.86%, Hong Lomg -0.89%, China -1.19%, Taiwan -0.83%, Australia -1.23%, Singapore -0.75%, South Korea -2.19%, India +0.02%. The yen fell back slightly from a 15-year high against the dollar after Japanese Vice Finance Minister Tamaki met with BOJ members to discuss the financial markets. Nintendo and Sony, which get more than 70% of their sales abroad, slumped at least 3% on concern the yen’s appreciation will hurt the value of Japanese exports, while concerns that the global economic recovery is unraveling sent Japan’s Nikkei 225 Stock Index tumbling to a 13-month low. Australian stocks closed lower after the country’s jobless rate in July rose to 5.3% from 5.1% in June. India’s industrial production rose 7.1% y/y in June, the slowest pace in 13 months, which adds to evidence that Asian economies are weakening.

Overnight U.S. Stock News

  • Sep S&Ps this morning are down -1.30 points. The stock market yesterday sold-off steadily the entire day and finished sharply lower (Dow -2.49%, S&P 500 -2.82%, Nasdaq Composite -3.01%). All of the indexes sank to 1-1/2 week lows. Bearish factors included (1) carry-over weakness from Tuesday on speculation that the decision by the Fed to purchase long-term Treasuries indicates the economic recovery is in jeopardy, (2) concerns that the global economy is slowing after China’s July industrial output rose the least in 11 months and the BOE cut its economic growth estimate for England to a 3.0% annual pace instead of the 3.6% rate forecast in May, (3) the unexpected widening of the US Jun trade balance to -$49.9 billion, its highest level in 20 months which indicates that trade subtracted more from Q2 GDP than previously estimated, and (4) weakness in materials and energy producers after metals and crude prices sank on demand concerns.
  • Bullish factors included (1) the smaller-than-expected budget deficit in the July US monthly budget statement (-$165.0 billion versus expectations of -$169.0 billion), and (2) the plunge in the yield on the 10-year T-note to a 1-1/3 year low of 2.680%.
  • Cisco Systems (CSCO) sank 7.3% in European trading after the company late yesterday forecast revenue for the current quarter of between $10.64 billion and $10.83 billion, below analysts’ estimates of $10.95 billion. Cisco was then downgraded to "perform" from "outperform" at Oppenheimer after the results.
  • EBay (EBAY) gained 1.1% in pre-market trading after Citigroup upgraded the company to "buy" from "hold," saying that losses in 2010 and an appealing valuation set up a good "entry point" for investors.

 

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Morning Call: Global stocks slump after the Fed signals a slowdown

Overnight Developments

  • European stocks are weaker with the European Stoxx down -1.15% and Sep S&Ps down -15.10 points. The drop in US stocks that began after the FOMC meeting yesterday afternoon accelerated in overnight trade with Sep S&Ps falling to a 1-week low as the Fed signaled the recovery is decelerating. Treasuries around the globe gained, with the US 2-year T-note yield dropping to a record low of 0.4892%, while the yield on the 10-year German bund slipped to a record low of 2.458%. The dollar index rose to a 1-1/2 week high and commodities slumped with copper declining to a 1-week low. Adding to pressure on European stocks was the Bank of England’s quarterly inflation report in which the BOE cut its economic growth estimate for England to a 3.0% annual pace instead of the 3.6% rate forecast in May and said that inflation will be at about 1.5% in 2012, lower than its 2.0% goal, which signals the economy may need more emergency stimulus. July UK nationwide consumer con fidence tumbled a more-than-expected 7 points to a 15-month low of 56, which aided a drop in the British pound to a 1-1/2 week low against the dollar.
  • The Asian markets today closed mostly lower with Japan down -2.70%, Hong Kong -0.83%, China +0.62%, Taiwan -1.02%, Australia -1.88%, Singapore -1.17%, South Korea -1.32%, India -0.82%. Japan’s Nikkei 225 Stock Index fell to a 2-1/2 week low on economic growth concerns after Jun Japan machine orders, an indicator of business investment in 3 to 6 months, rose +1.6% m/m, far less than the expected +5.4% m/m increase. Japan’s exporters also closed lower after the yen surged to a 15-year high against the dollar as a stronger yen reduces the value of overseas income at Japanese companies when converted into their home currency. Chinese bank stocks weakened after China’s banking regulator ordered banks to transfer off-balance-sheet loans onto their books and make provisions for those that may default. Adding to evidence that China’s economy is cooling, China’s July industrial output rose +13.4% y/y, the least in 11 months, while new loans in July were 532.8 billion yuan, be low expectations of 600 billion yuan. China’s July inflation quickened to 3.3% y/y, the fastest pace in 21 months, boosted by a low year-earlier base for comparison and rising food costs.

Overnight U.S. Stock News

  • Sep S&Ps this morning are down -15.10 points. The stock market yesterday traded in negative territory throughout the day, although a late-day rally helped it to close well above its worst levels (Dow -0.51%, S&P 500 -0.60%, Nasdaq Composite -1.24%). Bearish factors included (1) carry-over weakness from a fall in Chinese stocks on evidence that China’s economic growth is slowing after July China imports rose at their slowest pace of growth in 9 months, while July property prices in 70 major Chinese cities posted their smallest increase in 6 months, (2) the unexpected decline in Q2 nonfarm productivity which fell for the first time in over 2 years (-0.9% versus expectations of +0.2%), (3) weakness in materials and energy producers after the dollar index rallied to a 1-week high and the prices of most commodities tumbled, and (4) the fall in technology stocks led by a slump in semiconductor shares after Barclays Plc and R.W. Baird & Co. reduced their rating s on Intel, the world’s largest semiconductor manufacturer, because of weakening orders for personal computer components.
  • Bullish factors included (1) strength in US phone companies after Wells Fargo upgraded the sector to “marketweight” from “underweight,” saying that US telephone stocks are increasingly appealing as a haven from slowing growth in the economy and because the industry pays out historically high dividends relative to the S&P 500 Index and that the industry “appears to be on the verge of a turnaround,” and (2) the post FOMC statement in which the Fed said they will reinvest principal payments on mortgage holdings into long-term Treasury securities as they expand their quantitative easing in an attempt to bolster economic growth and keep the US economy from lapsing back into recession.
  • Cree (CRE) slumped 9.8% in European trading after the company forecast Q1 sales of $280 million at most, below analysts’ estimates of $284.3 million.

A123 Systems (AONE) dropped 4.6% in European trading after the company reported a Q2 loss of 33 cents a share, wider than the 27-cent loss estimated by analysts.

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Overnight U.S. Stock News

  • Sep S&Ps this morning are down -15.10 points. The stock market yesterday traded in negative territory throughout the day, although a late-day rally helped it to close well above its worst levels (Dow -0.51%, S&P 500 -0.60%, Nasdaq Composite -1.24%). Bearish factors included (1) carry-over weakness from a fall in Chinese stocks on evidence that China’s economic growth is slowing after July China imports rose at their slowest pace of growth in 9 months, while July property prices in 70 major Chinese cities posted their smallest increase in 6 months, (2) the unexpected decline in Q2 nonfarm productivity which fell for the first time in over 2 years (-0.9% versus expectations of +0.2%), (3) weakness in materials and energy producers after the dollar index rallied to a 1-week high and the prices of most commodities tumbled, and (4) the fall in technology stocks led by a slump in semiconductor shares after Barclays Plc and R.W. Baird & Co. reduced their rating s on Intel, the world’s largest semiconductor manufacturer, because of weakening orders for personal computer components.
  • Bullish factors included (1) strength in US phone companies after Wells Fargo upgraded the sector to “marketweight” from “underweight,” saying that US telephone stocks are increasingly appealing as a haven from slowing growth in the economy and because the industry pays out historically high dividends relative to the S&P 500 Index and that the industry “appears to be on the verge of a turnaround,” and (2) the post FOMC statement in which the Fed said they will reinvest principal payments on mortgage holdings into long-term Treasury securities as they expand their quantitative easing in an attempt to bolster economic growth and keep the US economy from lapsing back into recession.
  • Cree (CRE) slumped 9.8% in European trading after the company forecast Q1 sales of $280 million at most, below analysts’ estimates of $284.3 million.

A123 Systems (AONE) dropped 4.6% in European trading after the company reported a Q2 loss of 33 cents a share, wider than the 27-cent loss estimated by analysts.

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Morning Call: Global stocks mostly higher

Overnight Developments

  • European stocks are higher with the European Stoxx up +0.41% and Sep S&Ps up +1.60 points. The BOE as expected left its benchmark interest rate unchanged at 0.5% and kept its asset purchase plan unchanged at 200 billion pounds. The markets will now await the outcome of the ECB’s policy meeting later this morning and comments from ECB President Trichet. The euro is stronger and near a 3-month high after comments from the IMF that Greece has shown “great progress” in implementing austerity measures and should qualify for the next installment of emergency loans in a 110 billion-euro rescue package. European stocks also received a boost after June German factory orders climbed a more-than-expected +3.2% m/m as the global recovery strengthened and spurred demand for German goods. Aviva Plc soared 6.7% and led insurance companies higher after the UK’s second-biggest insurer reported first-half profit of 1.27 billion pounds ($2 billion), beating analysts’ estimate of 1.17 billion pounds. Aviva also increased its dividend as it raised its half-year payout to 9.5 pence a share from 9 pence a year earlier. Undercutting European stock gains was the 3.6% drop in Unilever after the world’s second-largest maker of consumer goods said Q2 sales rose 3.6% from a year earlier, below analysts’ estimates of 4.0%.
  • The Asian markets today closed mixed with Japan up +1.73%, Hong Kong +0.01%, China -0.89%, Taiwan -0.45%, Australia +0.54%, Singapore +0.16%, South Korea -0.32%, India -0.24%. Toyota closed nearly 2% higher and led a rally in Japanese automakers after it raised its full-year profit forecast to 340 billion yen ($3.94 billion) for the year ending in March, compared with an earlier estimate of 310 billion yen, as sales in Asia grow and demand in the US recovers following Toyota’s recall of 8 million vehicles. Japanese exporters also gained after the yen weakened against the dollar, which boosts the value of repatriated overseas revenue. Property stocks and bank shares led declines in Chinese stocks today on concern that China’s proposed new stress tests of its banks signals the government may be growing more concerned about the health of the real estate market.

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