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2011-09-29

1. FED

1) Fed in Banks’ Wheelhouse May Fuel Bond Shift, Deutsche Bank Says

The Federal Reserve’s decision to resume purchases of government-backed mortgage securities may help push banks to expand the types of bonds they buy, according to Deutsche Bank AG. By lowering mortgage-bond yields, the Fed’s plan to reinvest proceeds from the $1 trillion of housing debt it holds into new home-loan securities may fuel buying of riskier debt with higher yields.

“It’s hard to say that there’s some huge ‘student body left’ movement to suddenly jump into credit risk, but there’s certainly more anecdotal evidence it’s happening,” Abrahams, Deutsche Bank’s New York-based securitization-research head said.

Abrahams noted Fed policy makers had been signaling they wanted to rid the central bank’s balance sheet of its unconventional mortgage-bond holdings as quickly as possible. He also joins analysts at Credit Suisse Group AG and CRT Capital Group LLC in saying the Fed may have decided to switch tactics to push banks to lend.

2) Fed’s Hoenig Says Operation Twist Risks New ‘Complexities’

Federal Reserve Bank of Kansas City President Thomas Hoenig said the Fed’s plan to push down long- term interest rates may produce accidental outcomes and policy makers risk creating “imbalances” in the economy.

2. Euro zone Crises

1) EU Split Over Push for Bigger Bank Haircut in Greek Rescue

The European Commission is resisting a push to impose bigger writedowns on banks’ holdings of Greek government debt than those agreed on at a July 21 summit, a European official said.

The German Finance Ministry said it wasn’t “putting pressure on anybody” over haircuts after Chancellor Angela Merkel signaled in an interview with Greek television broadcast today that policy makers may review Greece’s second bailout depending on the results of an international progress report.

2) Germany to Vote on Euro Rescue Fund, Set Stage for Next Steps

German lawmakers are set to back an expansion of the euro-area rescue fund’s firepower as European officials turn to look at what next steps may be needed to stem the debt crisis.

The plan before the lower house in Berlin today would allow the fund to buy bonds of distressed states and offer emergency loans to governments, raising Germany’s guarantees to 211 billion euros ($287 billion) from 123 billion euros. The main opposition Social Democrats and Greens have said they will vote with Chancellor Angela Merkel’s government, assuring passage.

European and International Monetary Fund officials return to Greece today to try put in place a package that will help the country stave off default.

Analyst Comment: The German parliament is voting for too little, too late. Merkel can’t possibly believe this is the final point in a rescue package that will calm global markets and lead us out of the crisis.

3) Spain Suspends Lottery Share Sale That Aimed to Trim Bond Sales

Spain suspended the initial public offering of its lottery operator because of market conditions, depriving the deficit-laden nation of revenue to reduce this year’s bond issuance.

The banks “recommended a price range that had that value in the middle of the range, so there was a risk that the final price would have been below that book value,” Finance Minister Elena Salgado said in an interview last night with radio station Cadena Ser. “We didn’t want to run that risk.”

4) Portugal Fails to Curve Bond Yields Like Ireland: Euro Credit

Portugal has been trying to convince investors for months that it’s not Greece. The nation’s yield curve indicates it’s not Ireland either.

Portuguese two-, five- and 10-year bond yields have climbed since the end of June, while Irish rates fell. The country’s two-year securities now yield 6.5 percentage points more than its 10-year debt, about twice the rate of three months ago.

Analyst Comment: Ireland is a darling of the market. Its economy is doing well. My sense is that the market will come to terms with Portugal and I suspect its yields will come down with the 2012 budget discussion.

5) Euro Area’s Rescue Options Are Shrinking Fast: Anil K Kashyap

-- There is wide agreement that the status quo is unsustainable, and no one is optimistic about the future. The elevated cost of borrowing for banks and some governments must be addressed within weeks or at most a couple of months.

-- The euro area needs more integration and cooperation or it will dissolve.

-- The prescription for what needs to be done has evolved in recent months. Many outside experts long believed that the largest European banks were seriously undercapitalized. The core of the problem was the high levels of sovereign debt that had not been marked to market that are held by banks in many countries.

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2011-9-29 13:10:06
3. Central Banks
1) EU Proposes Financial-Transactions Tax to Start in 2014
The European Union proposed a financial-transactions tax that would take effect in 2014 and raise about 57 billion euros ($78 billion) a year, prompting renewed opposition from the U.K.
European governments are split over the merits of a transactions tax, while British banks warn that an EU-only measure would drive business to other regions.

2) JPMorgan Says RBA to Hold Interest Rates at 4.75% to End of 2012
The Reserve Bank of Australia will hold borrowing costs through next year, JPMorgan Chase & Co. said in a research note today, changing its previous forecast of two interest-rate increases next year.

3) Taiwan `Death Cross’ Signals End to Rate Rises: Chart of the Day
Taiwan’s central bank may end a run of five interest-rate increases today as money-supply data shows a sudden outflow of cash on bets the economy will slow.
The government last month cut its forecast for 2011 growth to 4.81 percent from 5.01 percent and said gross domestic product will increase 4.58 percent in 2012. Both predictions are less than half of last year’s 10.9 percent expansion.
Policy makers in South Korea, Indonesia and the Philippines all left borrowing costs unchanged this month on concern a stagnant U.S. economy and Europe’s debt crisis will damp demand for Asian exports. Taiwan’s central bank will hold borrowing costs unchanged according to a Bloomberg survey.
Analyst Comment: The death cross shows money is leaving Taiwan, or locals have decided to save more. Taiwan inevitably will have to put an end to its tightening cycle as the economy is not looking great.

4. ECO
1) China Economic Growth Seen Less Than 5% by 2016 in Global Poll
Most global investors predict Chinese growth will slow to less than half the pace sustained since the government began dismantling Mao Zedong’s communist economy three decades ago, a Bloomberg poll indicated.
Analyst Comment: A potential Chinese real-estate bubble and elevated inflation, along with weakening American and European expansions, as warning signals for the Chinese.

2) Japan Retail Sales Drop for Second Month in Sign Rebound Waning
Japan’s retail sales slumped for a second month in August as demand for appliances and autos fell, a sign that consumers’ concern about looming tax increases may be weighing on spending.
With consumers unable to boost demand, the export-led recovery is vulnerable to a global slowdown spurred by the European debt crisis and a weakening U.S. economy.
Analyst Comment: Consumer spending was recovering after the quake, but that rebound is pretty much over. Spending may begin to be a drag on the economy in the long term as households refrain from spending in anticipation of higher taxes.
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2011-9-29 13:10:19
5. FRX
1) Yen, Dollar Climb as European Concern Boosts Demand for Safety
The yen and dollar climbed against most of their major peers as concern that Europe’s debt crisis will hurt global growth bolstered demand for haven currencies.
The euro was poised for a third monthly decline against the dollar before Italy sells bonds and German lawmakers vote on changes to a European bailout fund. The Australian dollar slid for a second day versus the greenback as Asian stocks extended a drop in equities globally, reducing demand for higher-yielding currencies.
Italy will auction as much as 9 billion euros ($12.2 billion) of bonds today. Italy’s five-year credit-default swaps were at 462.5 basis points yesterday, showing traders see a 34 percent chance for the nation’s nonpayment.
Analyst Comment: When things are very uncertain, at the end of the day people will still always run back to the greenback and yen. The global economy is slowing, and we know that risks are to the downside.

2) White House Reviewing Bill on China Currency, Carney Says
The Obama administration views China’s currency as “substantially undervalued” and is reviewing legislation that aims to penalize the world’s second- largest economy, White House press secretary Jay Carney said.
China’s yuan rose after the central bank set a record daily reference rate, fueling speculation policy makers will favor currency gains as a means to tame inflation and support global exports.
Schumer proposed similar measures in each of the past six years. None has received a Senate vote.

3) Canadian Dollar Falls Against Greenback on Global Growth Outlook
Canada’s dollar weakened versus its U.S. counterpart for the first time in four days, headed for monthly and quarterly losses, on concern the European debt crisis will hamper global economic growth.
Analyst Comment: There are still ongoing issues about the weakness of the U.S. economy and the flow-through that that has into Canada. A split in prospects between stressed developed nations and Asian markets, which may be able to decouple from a western slowdown might see some relative Canadian-dollar underperformance.

6. Stock Market
1) Asian Stocks Drop as Concern Over European Debt Crisis Grows
Asian stocks dropped for the first time in three days amid growing concern that divisions among European leaders will hamper efforts to solve the region’s debt crisis, damping the earnings outlook for exporters.
Japanese and Australian stock futures fell as well.
Analyst Comment: The European situation continues to drag on markets around the world. It’s going to stay with us for a quite number of months to come, well into 2012.

2) U.S. Stocks Retreat as Concern Grows Over European Debt Crisis
U.S. stocks declined, halting a three-day rally for the Standard & Poor’s 500 Index, amid growing concern that European leaders are divided over how to handle Greece’s debt crisis.
Analyst Comment: Europe is the issue that is first and foremost in everyone’s mind, so any news that comes out on that does have a strong impact on the market. Any weakness there is going to be a drag worldwide.

3) China Stocks Sink to 14-Month Low as Investors Predict Slowdown
China’s stocks fell, sending the benchmark index to a 14-month low, on concern economic growth will slow as the government maintains measures to curb inflation and demand for exports falters in Europe and the U.S.
Analyst Comment: The European debt problem will remain hanging over the market as there’s no possibility of solving it in the near future. That’ll continue to bring turmoil to global financial markets as the appetite for risky assets is falling.

4) Japan Stocks Fall as European Divisions Dims Earnings Outlook
Japanese stocks fell, snapping a two-day rally, amid concern that divisions among European leaders will hamper efforts to solve the region’s debt crisis, damping the earnings outlook for Asian exporters.
Analyst Comment: It’s all about Europe. The focus is whether they can establish unity, and the market’s going through ups and downs according to developments.

5) Emerging Market Hedging Prices Jump on Europe Infection: Options
The price of options to protect against losses on equities from China to India and Brazil has surged to its highest since 2009 relative to U.S. contracts.
Analyst Comment: The fear of a second Lehman is clearly affecting all markets. The more the fear persists and there is no resolution to the underlying issues in Europe, then the more selling of any risk assets will occur.
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2011-9-29 13:10:33
7. Commodity
1) Gold Slumps as Investors Sell to Cover Equity, Commodity Losses
Gold fell for a second day, paring a 12th quarterly gain, as concern European leaders may not stem the region’s debt crisis hurt stocks and commodities, forcing some investors to sell the metal to cover losses elsewhere.
Analyst Comment: Gold has fallen on traders needing cash for margin calls on weak equity prices and newfound strength in the U.S. dollar. The turmoil in Europe only seems to be getting worse.

2) Rare Earths Fall as Toyota Develops Alternatives: Commodities
Rare-earth prices are set to extend their decline from records this year as buyers including Toyota Motor Corp. and General Electric Co. scale back using the materials in their cars and windmills.
Analyst Comment: If you think you can keep raising the prices for those materials and still keep your customers, you’re crazy. The principal customer for rare-earth metals is a global automotive industry using rare-earth permanent magnets. That industry will engineer this stuff out.

8. Credit Market
1) Pimco, Neuberger Defy Bank Bond ‘Pain Threshold’: Credit Markets
Bond managers from Pacific Investment Management Co. to Neuberger Berman Management LLC are sticking with bets that U.S. banks will withstand a European crisis that’s triggered the biggest losses since early 2009.
Analyst Comment: We understand and are respectful of the volatility due to issues out of Europe and concerns about U.S. economic growth, but for long-term value, U.S. money-center banks are a good option. They’ve done a great job improving their capital position and their asset quality has continued to improve.

2) Treasuries Head for Quarterly Gain Before Pending Home Sales
Treasuries headed for their biggest quarterly gain since the end of 2008 before an industry report today that economists said will show U.S. pending home sales fell for a second month in August.
Benchmark 10-year yields were about 30 basis points away from the record low set this month, reflecting demand for the relative safety of American debt as the economy slows and Greece struggles to avoid a default.
Analyst Comment: Operation Twist will stop yields from rising. The economy isn’t expanding. There’s no other place to park money.

3) Corporate Bond Sales Rebound on Crisis Concerns: Japan Credit
Sales of Japanese corporate bonds rebounded this quarter from the weakest first half in five years as concerns that the European debt crisis may stifle funding and the lowest yields since October lured borrowers. By comparison, sales of corporate Eurobonds plunged 50 percent to $253 billion.
Analyst Comment: There’s uncertainty over the global financial system, which may make funding more difficult in the future. Borrowers want to take advantage of the good market conditions now by bringing sales forward.
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2011-9-29 13:10:44
9. US Economic Releases
1) U.S. durable goods orders down 0.1 percent in August
Orders for U.S. manufactured durable goods dipped 0.1 percent in August, fresh evidence of a shaky economic recovery.
Inventories of manufactured durable goods in August, up twenty straight months, increased 0.9 percent to 365.3 billion dollars.
The manufacturing sector in the world's largest economy was hit hard by the worst recession since the Great Depression. For all of 2009, durable goods orders plunged 20.2 percent, the largest drop on records that go back to 1992. The sector had been a bright spot that helped drive growth during the early stages of the U.S. economic recovery.

2) Demand for U.S. Capital Goods Rises by Most in Three Months
Orders for U.S. capital goods climbed in August by the most in three months, a sign business investment continues to support the recovery. Bookings for goods like computers and communications gear, excluding military hardware and aircraft, climbed 1.1 percent, the most since May.
Manufacturers like General Electric Co. continue to benefit from sales to China, India and other emerging markets even as they face a slowdown in domestic spending. Gains in business investment in the U.S. indicate companies are looking beyond the plunge in stocks and concern over the European debt crisis and are seeking to expand.
Economists at Barclays Capital Inc. and JPMorgan Chase & Co. were among those who raised their tracking estimate for third-quarter growth after the figures showed stronger investment and inventory building.
Analyst Comment: Companies are still willing to continue with their investment intentions despite the recent financial-market volatility. The risk was always that the recent volatility would prompt a pullback among businesses. At the moment there are no signs of that happening in any meaningful way.
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