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2011-10-10

1. Euro zone Crises

1) Merkel, Sarkozy Pledge Bank Recapitalization in Next Crisis Plan

Angela Merkel and Nicolas Sarkozy, racing to stamp out the euro debt crisis threatening to engulf the financial system, gave themselves three weeks to devise a plan to recapitalize banks, get Greece on the right track and fix Europe’s economic governance.

German Chancellor Angela Merkel said European leaders will do “everything necessary” to ensure that banks have adequate capital, joining French President Nicolas Sarkozy to persuade investors they can stamp out the debt crisis roiling global markets.

At a joint press conference in Berlin, Sarkozy set a deadline of the Nov. 3 Group of 20 summit to deliver a response that addresses the immediate crisis in Greece and what he called the structural defects in the 17-nation euro area.

European leaders are coming under increasing pressure from international counterparts to end the debt contagion that President Barack Obama said last month was “scaring the world.”

Analyst Comment: Maybe they’re still running one step behind, but they are at least discussing the right things.

2) Merkel, Sarkozy Meet as Debt Crisis Threatens to Engulf Banks

German Chancellor Angela Merkel and French President Nicolas Sarkozy met in Berlin to discuss ways to staunch the European debt crisis threatening to engulf the region’s banks.

Merkel may be more willing to accede to French proposals to increase the flexibility of the EFSF in return for greater scope for a Greek debt restructuring, Welt reported. European Union leaders will also formulate a bank-recapitalization plan for the region in time for an EU summit scheduled for Oct. 17 and 18, the newspaper said.

3) Belgium’s Dexia Woes Echo Irish Bank Rescue Crisis: Euro Credit

Dexia SA’s collapse is driving up borrowing costs for Belgium, echoing Ireland’s predicament and presaging what other nations forced to provide yet more funds to their banks may encounter.

Fitch Ratings lowered its viability rating on Dexia to b+, or “highly speculative,” citing a deterioration of the bank’s access to funding.

Investors are selling Belgium’s bonds amid concern that any effort to rescue Dexia through a state takeover or guarantees for depositors will add to the national debt, raising the possibility the nation will have to seek an international bailout.

Analyst Comment: We had the rally, with Belgium following everyone else, but Dexia is leading them clearly down. Guaranteeing a certain amount of liabilities -- isn’t that where Ireland went? It’s never going to be the size of Anglo Irish but it is something that’s concerning the market in terms of what the underlying risk of the sovereign really is.

4) Dexia Breakup Nears as Belgium Seeks to Buy Consumer Unit

Dexia SA’s breakup gained momentum as Belgium got approval from France to buy as much as 100 percent of the Belgian consumer-lending unit, three people with knowledge of the talks said.

Analyst Comment: Dexia is not an isolated problem. The question for all investors in Europe is how politicians are going to handle this, and what they want to see is a coordinated and professional solution. That would be a good opportunity to restore calm.

5) Dexia Agreement Reached by France, Belgium as Bank’s Board Meets

France and Belgium reached an accord on Dexia SA as the lender’s board meets to approve the proposals, paving the way for a dismantling of the French- Belgian bank.

6) BNP, Societe Generale Deny Report That They May Seek Funds

BNP Paribas SA, France’s largest bank, and Societe Generale SA denied a report in today’s Le Journal du Dimanche that they may seek to raise billions of euros to shore up their capital as part of a Europe-wide plan.

2. Central Banks

1) Trichet Throws Away Script as He Reminds U.S. Euro Built to Last

“The overall picture when you look at the euro area as a whole is very, very different from the perception,” Trichet said in his Washington speech to a conference organized by the Bretton Woods Committee.

Trichet says that the euro-area’s strengths are too often “overlooked,” as are its similarities with the U.S., and he suggests the region’s monetary and fiscal policies are misunderstood. His argument resonates because naysayers were taking potshots at the euro even before it began trading in 1999.

2) Stevens Rate Cut Bets Smallest in Two Months: Australia Credit

European efforts to avert a banking crisis are reducing expectations for lower interest rates in Australia, bond market measures show.

Analyst Comment: The market has now got it into its head that there’s going to be some sort of solution. There are some serious headwinds playing out there, so I don’t really see the market moving away from pricing in rate cuts because the RBA is now talking about it as well.

3) Tumbling Rupiah May Force Indonesia to Delay Interest-Rate Cut

Indonesia will probably leave interest rates unchanged for an eighth month, after a tumble in the nation’s currency curbed scope for lower borrowing costs to bolster expansion as global economic growth weakens.

Analyst Comment: The currency’s fall is the reason they will leave the benchmark rate unchanged. But Bank Indonesia will have room to cut in December. We need low interest rates to support growth next year because the problems in the U.S. and Europe may affect Indonesian exports.

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2011-10-10 13:09:24
3. ECO
1) No Recession for U.S. as Forecasts Improve to Weakest Expansion
The U.S. has likely dodged a recession for now, even though it’s too early to sound the all- clear for the economy.
A string of stronger-than-projected statistics -- capped by the news on Oct. 7 of a 103,000 rise in payrolls last month -- has prompted economists at Goldman Sachs Group Inc. and Macroeconomic Advisers LLC to raise their forecasts for third quarter growth to 2.5 percent from about 2 percent. That’s nearly double the second quarter’s 1.3 percent rate and would be the fastest growth in a year.
Analyst Comment: The U.S. economy doesn’t look like it’s double-dipping at all. But it is a crummy recovery. That recovery still faces a lot of headwinds. These range from the sovereign-debt crisis in the euro zone -- and increasing likelihood of a recession there -- to political gridlock in the U.S. over the budget.
We can skirt a recession. But if headlines worsen in Europe and cause a major stock-market rout, it could lead to a loss of confidence here on the part of businesses and consumers and make forecasts for a recession a reality.

2) Hedge Funds Cut Bullish Oil Bets for Third Week: Energy Markets
Hedge funds cut bullish bets on oil for a third week as concern that slowing economic growth will reduce fuel demand sent crude to a one-year low just before it rallied for three straight days.
Federal Reserve Chairman Ben S. Bernanke told Congress last week the U.S. economic recovery is “close to faltering.” Investors in a Bloomberg survey predicted a slowdown in China, the world’s fastest-growing major economy. Moody’s Investors Service lowered the credit rating of Italy, the euro region’s third-largest economy.
Analyst Comment: Oil is still very subject to the macro trading environment. The downside is wide open.

3) Tusk Best to Pimco as Re-election Means Debt Cuts: Poland Credit
Prime Minister Donald Tusk’s lead in election exit polls is encouraging bondholders on expectations his next administration will cut the budget deficit he allowed to quadruple since 2007.
Tusk, 54, on track to become the first re-elected prime minister since communism ended in 1989, promised to cut the budget gap to below 3 percent of gross domestic product next year after it widened to a record 7.9 percent in 2010. Under his stewardship, Poland was the only European Union economy to keep growing through the global credit crisis helped by tax cuts and construction projects funded in part by EU aid.
Analyst Comment: Investors can look forward to the government continuing and perhaps even accelerating fiscal reforms. There’s so much global risk and pan-European risk, the last thing investors need in Poland is an extra dose of uncertainty. It appears that the election has put those concerns to rest.

4) Deposit Rates Jump as Banks Pursue Cheaper Money: Russia Credit
Banks in Russia are increasing deposit rates by the most in at least two years to attract savers as money gets more costly to raise from the bond market.
Analyst Comment: Lifting rates for deposits is justified as a way to make this instrument more appealing. The current increase in rates reflects the significant rise in the cost of money, particularly in rubles, as well as the future prospects for the market.

5) Corporate Profit Rebound Loses Steam in ‘Grind-It-Out’ Economy
This year’s rebound in corporate earnings is losing steam as slower economic growth and greater strain on consumers threaten sales and profit margins at companies from Texas Instruments Inc. to Google Inc.
Earnings per share for the Standard & Poor’s 500, excluding financial companies, rose 14 percent in the third quarter, the smallest gain since the end of 2009, analysts’ estimates compiled by Bloomberg show.
Analyst Comment: What started in August as a crisis of confidence hasn’t been resolved. This is a grind-it-out economy. We’re in a situation where it’s still going to take several years to rebuild our economic house.

6) OPEC Divisions Are ‘Destabilizing’ Oil Prices, Ramirez Says
Venezuelan Oil Minister Rafael Ramirez said that there are growing divisions within the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries regarding production, and that developed countries are pressuring member states to increase output.
“A strategy to fragment OPEC is under way,” said Ramirez, who is also president of state-oil company Petroleos de Venezuela SA. “Some Gulf countries are playing the sad role of noncompliance with production quotas, which is destabilizing the price.”

7) China Cuts Fuel Prices First Time in 2011 to Tackle Inflation
China cut fuel prices for the first time this year after crude oil costs plunged and the government aims to tame inflation.
Analyst Comment: China’s two biggest oil refiners, China Petroleum & Chemical Corp. and PetroChina Co., are being asked to perform national service by offering cheap fuels amid the domestic inflation clampdown. These fuel price cuts do not surprise us and more could come if the Brent crude price falls below $100 per barrel this winter.
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2011-10-10 13:09:40
4. FRX
1) Euro Holds Losses as Sarkozy, Merkel Fail to Reassure on Crisis
The euro maintained declines from last week against the dollar as pledges by the French and German leaders failed to reassure investors that Europe’s debt crisis will be resolved.
Analyst Comment: I would certainly be looking lower multi-week for the euro. It is our base case that the euro zone returns to recession next year.
It’s positive that there are a lot of meetings ahead, that Merkel and Sarkozy are committing to some plan in the next three weeks. But I’m not sure that they’re ready for the ultimate end game.

2) Yen Weakens as Stock Gains Damp Demand for Safety; Euro Advances
The yen fell against the majority of its most-traded counterparts as optimism Europe can contain its debt crisis spurred a climb in U.S. equity futures, damping demand for haven currencies.
The Australian dollar gained for a fifth day against the U.S. currency before a report this week that may show employment in the South Pacific nation increased.
Analyst Comment: People are cautiously optimistic. The European economy is probably going to strengthen over the third quarter. The yen will probably weaken a little bit as funds maybe start to trickle out of Japan into risk assets.

3) Korean Won Climbs as U.S. Jobs Data Spurs Demand; Bonds Decline
South Korea’s won climbed to its highest level in more than one week and government bonds fell as an improvement in the U.S. labor market revived demand for higher-yielding assets.
Analyst Comment: Asian currencies including the won will show a limited gain as the market prices in upbeat U.S. data. Still, Europe won’t see its troubles fading away easily, which will weigh heavily on traders’ minds.

4) Best Forecasters Say Yuan to Gain Boosting Bonds: China Credit
The yuan will extend gains as China seeks to avert a trade war with the U.S., its most-accurate forecasters predict, bolstering demand for Chinese bonds.
China’s central bank said on Oct. 4 that the U.S. risks triggering a trade war through legislation that would punish the Asian nation for undervaluing its currency. Policy makers said they would continue to increase exchange-rate flexibility. Commonwealth Bank recommended investors buy yuan debt in Hong Kong, known as Dim Sum bonds, after an emerging-market selloff prompted average yields to almost double in seven months.
Analyst Comment: Especially with pressure from the senators, Chinese authorities can still afford to set a stronger yuan for now. We are very Asian-currency bearish in the short term. One gift China can give to the rest of the world through the end of this year is to allow the yuan to be a bit stronger.
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2011-10-10 13:09:50
5. Stock Market
1) U.S. Stock Futures Climb After Merkel Pledges Support for Banks
U.S. stock futures gained, indicating the Standard & Poor’s 500 Index will extend last week’s rally, after German Chancellor Angela Merkel said European leaders will do “everything necessary” to ensure that banks have adequate capital.
Federal Reserve Chairman Ben S. Bernanke signaled last week that he’ll push forward with further expansion of monetary stimulus if needed. Bernanke said in testimony to Congress’s Joint Economic Committee that the Fed is “prepared to take further action as appropriate” after using unconventional tools to boost growth in August and September.
Analyst Comment: We are focusing on major U.S. equities now, looking past the European stock markets because there’s too much volatility there. The Fed is still accommodative and we’re entering into an election year, when politicians are usually pulling various levers to make the economy grow.

2) China’s Stock Futures Rise as Retail Sales Jump During Holiday
China’s stock futures rose, signaling gains for the benchmark index, after retail sales jumped during a week-long holiday and the biggest two-day rally in Hong Kong-traded shares of Chinese companies since 2008.
Analyst Comment: Retail sales growth may help boost companies earnings and be viewed as a positive factor to sustain China’s growth through consumption. The market also will catch up with gains it missed last week. The government’s policies can’t be any tighter and this may serve to ease investors’ concerns.

3) Asian Stocks Rise as Europe Leaders Ease Sovereign-Debt Concern
Most Asian stocks rose, led by exporters and mining companies, after the heads of Europe’s two biggest economies pledged to shield banks from a debt crisis, easing concern the region’s troubles will derail a global economic recovery.
Analyst Comment: The Europeans have been talking a lot about doing everything they can to solve the debt crisis. But we still haven’t seen any detail. U.S. data has been coming in better than expected recently, easing fears of another recession, but we’re still in a very slow-growth environment.

4) Short Selling Rises Most Since ’06 as Stocks Erase $11 Trillion
Investors are increasing bearish trades around the world by the most in at least five years, convinced the lowest valuations since 2009 will prove no barrier to losses after $11 trillion was erased from equities.
Slowing economies are spurring short sellers after indexes in 37 out of 45 major countries tumbled 20 percent, the common definition of a bear market.
Analyst Comment: The Lehman collapse is way too clear in people’s minds. They don’t want to get burned as much again. They know either they get some protection or get out altogether.

5) RTS Futures Decline on ‘Extreme Nervousness’: Russia Overnight
RTS futures dropped, indicating Moscow stocks may end a two-day rally, as concern a new global financial crisis is looming trumped faster-than-estimated growth in U.S. jobs and pushed OAO Gazprom and OAO Mechel lower.
A report showing U.S. employers added a more-than-forecast 103,000 jobs in September, compared with a gain of 57,000 in August, failed to lift the Standard & Poor’s 500 Index after Fitch Ratings cut Italy and Spain’s credit rankings, and Dennis Lockhart, president of the Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta, said U.S. regulators haven’t yet devised a system allowing banks to fail without taxpayer rescues.
Analyst Comment: The jobs number today wasn’t too bad but the underlying sentiment is one of extreme nervousness. The key thing for Russia is to get a resolution of the European debt crisis. Until we get that, everything gets tarred with the same brush. And that’s what’s been happening lately.
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2011-10-10 13:10:00
6. Commodity
1) Hedge Funds Miss Biggest Rally as Short Bets Rise: Commodities
Speculators cut wagers on higher commodity prices to the lowest since July 2010 just as raw materials had the biggest three-day rally of the year, as European leaders increased efforts to contain the region’s sovereign-debt crisis. U.S. reports on job growth, manufacturing and construction spending also eased investor concerns that the world’s largest economy is tipping back into recession, buoying demand for everything from copper to crude to corn.
Analyst Comment: Investors waited on the sidelines because of the fears of a global recession and got left out of this rally. Investors who viewed commodities as oversold and due for a bounce took advantage.

7. Credit Market
1) Deutsche Bank Overtaking Barclays in Bond Sales: Credit Markets
Deutsche Bank AG is poised to topple Barclays Bank Plc from its three-year reign as the biggest underwriter of bond sales outside the U.S. as emerging-market deals help offset stagnant issuance in developed countries.

2) Max Bank Will Fail Under Danish Bail-In Law, Government Says
The Danish government’s winding-up unit said it will probably take over regional lender Max Bank A/S, which would become the third failure this year to fall under the European Union’s toughest resolution laws.
Denmark enacted a law in October last year making it the first EU member to force senior bank creditors to bear losses within a resolution framework. Since then, two regional lenders have collapsed and international investors have withheld funding for most of the nation’s roughly 120 banks.
“If the bank can’t meet the deadline set by the FSA to raise sufficient capital, or find another resolution to the bank’s situation, it will allow itself to be settled under the resolution laws,” Max Bank said in yesterday’s statement.
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