Financials

Links 9/10/2010

Posted by Steven Russolillo on September 10, 2010
Banks, Economy, Federal Reserve, Financials, Markets, S&P 500, Unemployment, Washington / No Comments

- SEC narrowing its investigation into Lehman on its questionable accounting practices makes sense. “Lehman has long looked to be the poster child of likely accounting fraud,” Yves Smith writes at naked capitalism. But she notes that while Lehman looks like a “textbook case of excessively creative accounting…I would not hold my breath about obtaining criminal indictments.”

- Reflecting push for ever-shorter trading horizons, CBOE has asked regulators permission to list options expiring daily. Contracts’ lifetimes would be between one and four days. Move follows growing interest trading options that expire weekly. “I guess the question isn’t why, but why not?” asks Adam Warner at Daily Options Report.

- “Growth is slowing when it should be surging,” at this point, former labor secretary Robert Reich complains on his blog. “We may or may not fall into another hole, but a so-called ‘double dip’ isn’t really the worry,” he says. “The worry is we’re not getting out of the giant hole we fell into.”

- Adobe (ADBE) wastes little time celebrating Apple’s (AAPL) move to loosen the reins over its software developer rules.

- Nokia (NOK) replacing its CEO is a long time coming, but Digital Daily blogger John Paczkowski questions timing of the move. It comes ahead of Nokia World and the company’s major product launch. That means new CEO Stephen Elop isn’t starting off with a clean slate, “but a full one overflowing with a new software platform and a new smartphone portfolio.”

- Reuters blogger Felix Salmon is concerned that the average American remains pretty pessimistic about the US economy, and these viewpoints could manifest as self-fulfilling prophecies. “It would be nice to see the bulls out there come up with some good explanation of how their forecasts are consistent with these survey results,” Salmon says. “Because on the strength of these answers, the double dip is coming.”

- But contrary to Salmon’s belief, Business Insider’s Vincent Fernando says when everyone’s sour on the economy, it’s actually in better shape than many think. “When most people are reported as being extremely negative, your contrarian alarms should be going off as an investor.”

- Our colleague Kristina Peterson hits a home run in today’s C1 story on the Briargate traders who trade at the market’s open and close and chill out for the rest of the day. What a life.

- St. Louis Fed President James Bullard says the central bank has moved closer to providing additional support to the economy, although he added he doesn’t expect that action to become necessary.

- With tomorrow marking the ninth anniversary of 9-11, take a few minutes to read Todd Harrison’s reflection of the horrific day. A well-written and extremely moving piece.

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Stocks Continue Their Glide Higher

Posted by John Shipman on September 09, 2010
Dow Jones Industrials, Economic Indicators, Economy, Financials, Markets, S&P 500 / No Comments

Slow, lazy climb

Bigger-than-expected declines in initial weekly jobless claims and July trade deficit carry stocks for a while today, with Dow Industrials threatening early to reach into triple digits on the upside.

It continues to be what Art Cashin calls a “low-volume levitation,” which nearly succumbed to evaporation as bulls showed signs of afternoon fatigue. US stocks manage modest gains, but still unable to produce an upside breakout to really demoralize bears.

Materials sector ends as the only one in the red; financials, health-care and telecom lead, but conviction still seems MIA. DJIA rises 28.23 to 10415.24, and Nasdaq Comp adds 7.33 to 2236.20. S&P 500 ends 5.31 higher at 1104.18.

Look for more aimless, wandering action tomorrow (stalking the euro), as the only notable data release is July wholesale trade and inventories.

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Links 9/7/2010

- Hewlett-Packard’s (HPQ) suit against former CEO Mark Hurd looks “very much like it was filed in a fit of passion after hearing that Hurd had signed on with Oracle,” Reuters blogger Felix Salmon says. “There’s no tactical or strategic rationale for this: it’s just petulance, really.”

- “Hurd’s knowledge of H-P’s server and data storage-systems business will undoubtedly come in handy at Oracle, which has been aggressively moving into that very space ever since its acquisition of Sun,” Digital Daily blogger John Paczkowski says. “In that sense, Hurd’s hiring is a real coup for Oracle. Who better to put the screws to a rival than a former CEO with a bone to pick?”

- There are currently 161 potential IPOs on file that are hoping to raise $56B. Staggering numbers but, as Josh Brown points out at The Reformed Broker, not necessarily as great as they appear. “Between LBO retreads and the previously bankrupt, it remains difficult to get excited about the initial public offering dealflow, robust as the pipeline seems to be in dollar terms on the surface.”

- Former OMB Director Peter Orszag makes his debut as a columnist for the New York Times by advocating an extension of the Bush-era tax cuts for two years for the middle class, and even for the upper class if that’s what’s needed to get a bill through Congress. “Higher taxes now would crimp consumer spending, further depressing the already inadequate demand.”

- The labor force had little to celebrate this Labor Day, Robert Reich says. Organized labor is down, and non-organzed labor is facing joblessness and underemployment. “Face it: The national economy isn’t escaping the gravitational pull of the Great Recession.”

- If the market has been overly bearish lately, paving the way for relief rallies and such, it’s not really showing. John Hussman notes the VIX, which remains in relatively placid territory. “It’s difficult to look at the evidence and conclude that investors are excessively bearish, much less terrified here.”

- FCIC hearings revealed how reliant Lehman was on daily, short-term funding to cover longer-term costs. “It was a recipe for disaster, a trailer park in search of a tornado,” Barry Ritholtz writes at The Big Picture.

- “The truth is that the trouble in housing is not, for the most part, a demand-side issue,” Ryan Avent writes. “The problem is the millions of homeowners stuck in houses they can’t afford to sell. These households represent a significant shadow supply of foreclosures-in-waiting. I agree that it would be silly for the administration to try to support housing prices by offering more goodies to potential homebuyers. But it doesn’t follow that letting prices go their own way will magically get housing markets moving again.”

- “Newspaper advertising revenues are on track this year to dive to a 25-year low of approximately $26.5 billion, or 47% of the record $49.4 billon in sales achieved by the industry as recently as 2005,” Alan Mutter notes.

- What’s up with Google’s logo today?

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Links 9/3/2010

Posted by Steven Russolillo on September 03, 2010
Autos, Banks, Economy, Financials, GM, Housing, Internet, Markets, Media, Recession, Technology, Unemployment, Washington / Comments Off

- Considering the “uncomfortably uncertain” mood heading into this morning’s jobs data, the report wasn’t that bad. “The overall picture is of a labor market that continues to chug along in the right direction, albeit far too slowly,” Ryan Avent notes. “The pace of employment recovery implies several long, hard years ahead for American workers. But given the mood on markets and around dinner tables lately, one has to appreciate the continuation of the upward trend.”

- Stocks popped Friday on the jobs data, but Capital Gains and Games blogger Andrew Samwick says the report merely represents “more of the same” for the labor market. “There is nothing in here that merits joy,” he writes. “Expect the spinmeisters to focus on the rise in private sector employment (up 763,000 since the low in December 2009) and the upward revisions (to smaller job losses) from the two prior months.”

- The positive vibe (at least for stocks) generated from nonfarm payrolls data can’t be sitting well with former labor secretary Robert Reich. “The Great Jobs Depression continues to worsen,” Reich writes on his blog. “The last time we saw anything on this scale was in the 1930s…The practical choice we face is this: Either major action to reverse the jobs emergency or years of intolerably high unemployment coupled with demagoguery and scapegoating.”

- August jobs report offers a “small sigh of relief,” but the big takeaway is the labor market remains essentially flat, Reuters blogger Felix Salmon says. “Flat, then, is the new up — which only goes to demonstrate just how worried the markets are about a double-dip recession,” he writes. “We’re not remotely in full-bore recovery mode yet.”

- August auto sales, released earlier this week, were portrayed as worst sales in 27 years. But that’s not best way to interpret the data, James Hamilton writes at Econbrowser. “The story for autos remains pretty much what it has been for some time — we’ve bounced off the bottom, but remain stuck at a point far below what would normally be expected. Double dip? Not here, not yet. Disappointingly sluggish growth? Very much so.”

- “The outlook for subpar growth and weak job creation — although superior to a new recession — is a real and present danger, and today’s employment report doesn’t offer much reason to dismiss the danger,” James Picerno writes at The Capital Spectator. “If the economy continues to struggle, eventually the risk of a recession will become more than a low-probability prediction.”

- Mark Thoma uses the central valley in California as a metaphor for economic recovery. “It’s narrow east to west, but very long north to south,” he notes at Economist’s View. “We went down into the valley as we went into the recession, and the question for me has always been whether we are heading east to west so that we will climb out of the valley relatively quickly, or north to south as we trudge along at the bottom of the valley for considerable time…The fact that we’ve had essentially no growth for a year now, and no hint of change any time soon, makes the north to south fear very real.”

- Barnes & Noble’s (BKS) battle with activist investor Ron Burkle is symbolic of a “big fish swallowing a small fish only to be itself swallowed by an even bigger one,” Josh Brown writes at The Reformed Broker. “Founder Len Riggio built the largest bookseller on earth by putting thousands of mom & pops under his sword across the country,” Brown notes. “Now he himself is facing his own possible destruction from the twin threats of shareholder activist Ron Burkle and the disintermediation of the digital age.”

- With Dell pulling out of the 3Par (PAR) bidding war, Robert Cyran wonders if Dell shareholders are on Xanax. Dell investors “displayed neither much concern about overpayment nor relief about the deal being dropped,” he says. “After a decade of scandals, missed opportunities and dismal performance, they may have stopped caring.”

- Just your typical brawl at the US Open.

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Links 9/2/2010

Posted by Steven Russolillo on September 02, 2010
Bankruptcy, Economy, Financials, Housing, Internet, Markets, Media, Recession, Retail Sales, S&P 500, Technology, Unemployment / Comments Off

- Soaring currency trading volume won’t have a happy ending. “It is a Fool’s Goldrush and will end horribly for most,” Josh Brown writes at The Reformed Broker. “The good news is, you can take the cautionary tales of the stock game, the mortgage game and the real estate game and figure out how you want to be positioned when the inevitable boom-bust-hatred cycle shifts into high gear.”

- Former Lehman CEO Dick Fuld was given a “surprisingly sympathetic ear” from the FCIC at yesterday’s hearing. “This is a deeply disturbing development,” Barry Ritholtz says at The Big Picture. “It leads to the unfortunate suspicion that the FCIC does not have the slightest clue as to the causes of the housing collapse, recession and market crash…I now fear the FCIC report is going to be an ideological farce.”

- It’s becoming obvious there is “no magic bullet” to immediately speed up the recovery, Harvard economist Kenneth Rogoff writes. “It took more than a decade to dig today’s hole, and climbing out of it will take a while, too,” he says. “Americans will have to be patient for many years as the financial sector regains its health and the economy climbs slowly out of its hole.”

- Investor demand for US Treasuries has waned over the last few sessions after some better-than-expected economic reports. But the “big test” comes tomorrow morning with the August nonfarm payroll report. “A smaller loss of jobs could stoke more optimism about the economy and raise more questions about how much lower interest rates can or should go in the near term,” LA Times’ Tom Petruno says. “But a bigger loss could re-energize bond bulls.”

- Yesterday was a 90% upside day, “the 13th such so-called panic-buying day since the April 26 high,” Jeff Cooper notes at Minyanville. Meanwhile, there’s been 14 panic-selling days during the same period, he says. “This kind of volatility is a market in disarray. It’s not a sign of a healthy market,” he says. “Risk runs high when frenzy runs deep.”

- Slate’s James Ledbetter wonders why people consistently underestimate Netflix (NFLX). “There is one company that has been more consistently underestimated than any other, whose innovations, growth, and, indeed, survival have been dismissed and denied for nearly all its corporate life. That’s Netflix,” he says. But “while its critics were flailing away, the company has continued to grow steadily and spread its influence well beyond the red envelope.”

- AOL renewing and expanding its search agreement with Google (GOOG) was a “surprisingly quick and even stealthy move,” Kara Swisher reports at All Things D.

- “Summertime, and the living is easy…for many, too easy. This July was the worst on record for youth employment: Less than half of all 16- to 24-year-olds had a job,” WSJ’s Heard on the Street says. “Meanwhile, at the other end of the spectrum, more than 40% of over-55s have work or are looking for it, the highest share since JFK was in office.”

- Housing prices still need to drop by 10% in order for the market to correct itself, Barry Ritholtz tells Tech Ticker.

- For all the runners out there, WSJ’s Nick Wingfield reviews three running apps.

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Second Thoughts, Professor?

Posted by John Shipman on September 01, 2010
Banks, Economy, Federal Reserve, Financials, Markets, Stimulus, Stress Tests, TARP, Treasury Department, Washington / Comments Off

Bernanke launching "unconventional measures."

Sounds as if former Fed vice chairman and Princeton professor Alan Blinder has changed his tune a bit. Hat tip to Gluskin Sheff’s David Rosenberg for pointing out this Blinder quote in a NY Times story late last week:

The Fed has run out of the strong tools, and is turning to the weak ones…When you’re fighting in a foxhole and you’ve used up the machine guns and hand grenades, then you pull out the swords and start throwing rocks.

The Times went on to quote Blinder as saying the economy seemed “substantially worse” than it did three months ago.

Interesting, Alan. Three months ago, eh? That’s around the time the good professor penned an op-ed for the WSJ (so rich we had to clip it out and save it in the bottom file drawer), titled “Government to the Economic Rescue.”

Continue reading…

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Zhou Found Alive and Well; China’s Banks? Well…

Posted by Paul Vigna on August 31, 2010
China, Economy, Financials / Comments Off

It’s about 8:30 p.m. in Beijing right now. I’m sure Zhou Xiaochuan, the governor of the People’s Bank of China, is sitting back in his easy chair, with his feet up and slippers on, relaxing after a satisfying dinner that concluded another successful day out in the public eye, rumors of his disappearance notwithstanding.

Finally, we have an official denial from the Chinese government, the AFP reports. The central bank released photos of Zhou meeting with Japanese and Italian officials, and if you take Chinese officials at their words, well,that’s that . Bloomberg has a story about the Japanese finance minister saying he met with Zhou yesterday. It’s hard to imagine why a Japanese official would go along with some kind of Chinese cover-up of the disappearance of the head of the central bank, so you can more or less file this one away. Right?

Perhaps. Maybe Zhou didn’t blow $430 billion in some bizarre Treasury bet gone awry. Maybe he didn’t defect. Maybe he is going to work tomorrow, just like he does every day. But don’t think there aren’t screwy things going on in the Chinese financial sector that are every bit the volatile brew that was mixed here in the U.S.

I point you to two recent posts from the Journal’s China Real Time Report. First, Dinny McMahon writes about a curious essay by Bank of China Chairman Xiao Gang, unusually in English. It seems China’s top banking executives aren’t exactly happy with the way the banking system’s being run. Not that they’d ever come out and flatly say that.

Continue reading…

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Still Way Too Many Mortgage Late-Payers

Posted by John Shipman on August 26, 2010
Banks, Economic Indicators, Economy, Financials, Housing, Markets, Real Estate, Unemployment / Comments Off

Second-quarter mortgage delinquency data from the Mortgage Bankers Association out this morning, and best that can be said about this lot is that maybe it’s leveling off. Maybe.

Delinquencies look a little better than during 1Q, but are still notably higher than a year ago. MBA chief economist Jay Brinkmann says the numbers show “a mixture of somewhat good news and somewhat bad news.” Good news is that foreclosure starts were down, and number of homes in some stage of foreclosure fell for the first time since 2006. Loans 90 days late or more, the largest share of delinquent loans, also fell.

Bad news is the rate of short-term delinquencies went up, and that “may ultimately drive the foreclosure measures back up,” Brinkmann said. So much for the good news. 

It’s not hard to see why foreclosure starts have declined, as the government has pulled out all the stops (HAMP program, pressure on banks to modify loans) to stem the tide. Also, banks are overwhelmed with late-payers, and sheer volume alone is an impediment to finally getting around to initiating foreclosure action.

But persistently high unemployment, and redefaults on mods may end up overwhelming all that. “Ultimately the housing story, whether it is delinquencies, homes sales or housing starts, is an employment story,” Brinkmann notes, and until the job story gets better, housing will remain weak.

Continue reading…

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Sign of the Times, or Something Else?

How 'bout another $100 on Cisco, pal?

Interesting post by Jeff Cooper at Minyanville today, which gets to some notions we’ve held as close observers of US stock markets, particularly during the past 18 months. Needless to say, the rationale behind many a rally has been suspect, at best, and whipsaw moves have become part of the daily grind.

From Cooper: 

Getting whipped, and getting whipped around when you’re a highly competitive individual, gives rise to “unusual uncertainty.” This seems true whether you’re an individual or a company. Both end up playing more not to lose than to win. And this is a road to perdition marked by death by a thousand cuts.

While the markets are an emotional beast, if anything, when any wisp of logic is shredded by seemingly random acts of pernicious trendlessness, the exit sign looms large in neon.

Trading ranges are the hallmark of throwing in the towel. Whipsaws without any apparent underlying raison d’être define times of unusual uncertainly where the machines dominate with strategies of trying to squeeze dimes out of nickels.

Continue reading…

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As Demand Wanes, Banks Loosen Up

Posted by John Shipman on August 16, 2010
Banks, Earnings, Economic Indicators, Economy, Federal Reserve, Financials, Markets / 1 Comment

Not looking for loans, just a place to take a load off.

Both businesses and consumers have been less than eager to take out new loans, and banks in their second-quarter earnings discussions universally lamented the weak loan demand environment.

Now it looks as if banks are easing their loan standards to seduce more demand.

The main message in the Fed’s quarterly senior loan officer survey out today is that, in general, banks have eased their credit standards after a long tightening spell. They’re also becoming more competitive on business loan terms and lines of credit as they try to win new loans from a smaller pool of those actually seeking fresh credit, something Paul and I noted in an Upshot column last month.

Continue reading…

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