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Showing posts with label Swift. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Swift. Show all posts

Wednesday, August 31, 2016

Dilma’s Demise

Financial Review

Dilma’s Demise


DOW – 53 = 18,400
SPX – 5 = 2170
NAS – 9 = 5213
10 Y + .01 = 1.58%
OIL + .20 = 44.90
GOLD – 2.00 = 1309.50

Since the Dow Jones Industrial Average was created in the late 1890s, September has produced an average loss of 1.1%. The 11 other months of the calendar, in contrast, have produced an average gain of 0.8%. September has an impressively consistent record at or near the bottom of the rankings, not just one or two really horrible years. Just a reminder – correlation is not the same as causation.

The S&P 500 lost 3 points for the month of August. The Dow Industrials dropped 56 points for the month, but both indices hit record highs during the month. Speculative long contracts, or bets that stocks are going higher, on the Dow at the Chicago Board of Trade recently hit a record of 38,382; with long bets on the S&P 500 rising to the highest level in three years.

Gold fell again today, holding ground at the lowest levels in two months and down about $40 for the month, the first monthly loss since May.

Oil futures slid to their lowest levels in nearly three weeks, then recovered to post a small gain at the close. Data by industry group American Petroleum Institute late Tuesday showed U.S. crude stocks rose by 942,000 barrels in the week ended Aug. 26.

The EIA report Wednesday showed crude-oil and product exports totaling an estimated 4.976 million barrels a day, up from 4.578 million a week earlier. The report also showed a bigger-than-expected rise in crude supplies.

U.S. Treasuries posted
 their largest monthly loss since June 2015 after a slew of hawkish rhetoric from Fed officials almost doubled the probability of a September rate hike to 34% in the futures market. Fed Vice Chairman Stanley Fischer said that any increase will be data dependent, having previously pointed to employment figures on Friday as being of key importance.

ADP reports private-sector hiring stayed strong in August, as employers added 177,000 jobs.  ADP’s data gives us a hint about the Labor Department’s employment report, which will be released Friday and covers government jobs in addition to the private sector. The ADP report is not an exact match to the government report, and there can be significant differences in any given month, but they are usually pretty similar.

Fed Chair Yellen cited 190,000 as a three-month average in her speech and is likely a key number needed to see a rate hike in September. On August 5, just before the release of the July Jobs Report, the Wall Street Journal, reported the following: “The magic number in Friday’s jobs report is 200,000.

If the Labor Department reports that employers expanded payrolls by 200,000 or more in July, then that will likely keep alive the possibility of a Federal Reserve interest rate increase at its September policy meeting.”

We know the jobs reported last month came in way above 200,000 at 255,000. If above 200,000 for July’s NFP had a rate hike “alive” then another 200,000 for an additional month (August) should have it as a near “lock.”

The National Association of Realtors reports its pending home sales index rose 1.3% in July. It’s 1.4% above year-ago levels and the second-strongest reading since April. The index for the west rose to the highest level in over three years. A sale is listed as pending when the contract has been signed but the transaction has not closed.

The pending-home sales index typically represents about 20% of the transactions for existing-home sales so is a leading indicator for that series. The NAR forecast that existing home sales will reach 5.38 million this year, up 2.8% and the highest level since 2006.

Consumer price inflation in the Eurozone was stuck at 0.2% in August, leaving the ECB no closer to its inflation target than when it launched the first of a series of stimulus measures more than two years ago. Other data released by Eurostat showed the bloc’s unemployment rate unchanged at 10.1% (more than double the U.S.). The figures could push the ECB to launch additional stimulus at its next policy meeting on Sept. 8, like extending the duration of its bond-buying program by at least another six months.

Donald Trump will deliver his immigration policy in a speech in Phoenix later today. Earlier today he traveled to Mexico City to meet with Mexican President Enrique Peña Nieto. Standing on stage with Mexican President Enrique Peña Nieto after their brief meeting, Trump described the encounter between the two men as a “great honor” and sang the praises of Mexican-Americans.

Trump ticked off a list of five things that he described as shared goals between the US and Mexican governments. For his part, Peña Nieto emphasized the importance of the historic alliance, but did not hesitate to acknowledge the areas where the two leaders differ. In response to questions from reporters, Trump said, “We did discuss the wall. We did not discuss payment of the wall.”

Brazil’s Senate voted to impeach suspended President Dilma Rousseff. Rousseff is accused of mishandling Brazil’s budget and misrepresenting the state of the economy. Some of her accusers, as Rousseff noted in her testimony, are themselves accused or convicted of serious corruption charges.

She testified for 14 hours straight on Monday. Rousseff defended her innocence and characterized the impeachment as a coup. The most remarkable aspect of all of this – and what fundamentally distinguishes this process from impeachment in, say, the US – is that Dilma’s removal results in the empowerment of a completely different party that was not elected to the presidency.

Michel Temer the interim president who served as Ms. Rousseff’s vice president before breaking with her this year, is now expected to remain in office until the end of the current term in 2018. Several of the men Temer named to his cabinet have already resigned under the cloud of scandal, including his anticorruption minister and his planning minister, because of claims that they were trying to stymie investigations into the bribery engulfing the national oil company, Petrobras.

Temer is accused of accepting bribes and was recently found guilty of violating campaign finance limits, a conviction that could make him ineligible to run for office for eight years.

The first regularly scheduled commercial flight between the U.S. and Cuba since 1961 is set to fly today, as a JetBlue plane departs Fort Lauderdale for Santa Clara. Transportation Secretary Anthony Foxx will be on board. Other U.S. air carriers that are planning to begin airline service to Cuba include American Airlines, Frontier Airlines, Silver Airways, Southwest Airlines and Sun Country Airlines.

A seven-member board has been appointed to oversee a financial restructuring for Puerto Rico, which has been crippled by a $70 billion debt crisis. The idea of a fiscal control board, known colloquially as La Junta in Puerto Rico, is largely reviled on the island, which has a 45 percent poverty rate and whose chronic economic slump has helped spur rampant out-migration.

The board was created under the federal law known as PROMESA, passed earlier this year, which will bring Puerto Rico’s finances under federal oversight and give it the authority to restructure some of its debt. The board will be tasked with assessing and certifying annual budgets and a fiscal recovery plan presented by the island’s government, as well as facilitating debt restructuring talks on the island, possibly through a bankruptcy-like process.

SWIFT has disclosed new hacking attacks on its member banks as it pressured them to comply with security procedures instituted after February’s $81 million heist at the central bank of Bangladesh. The global financial messaging system said it might report institutions if they failed to meet a November 19 deadline for installing the latest version of software which includes a host of new security features.

A former Monsanto executive who tipped the Securities and Exchange Commission to accounting improprieties involving the company’s top-selling Roundup product has been awarded more than $22 million from the agency’s whistle-blower program. The award was tied to an $80 million settlement between the SEC and Monsanto in February.

The SEC said Monsanto lacked sufficient internal controls to account for millions of dollars in rebates that it offered to retailers and distributors. It ultimately booked a sizeable amount of revenue, but then failed to recognize the costs of the rebate programs on its books. That led Monsanto to “materially” misstate its consolidated earnings for a three-year period.

For-profit educator ITT Technical Institute announced today that it will no longer accept any new enrollments. The news came four days after the US Department of Education imposed sanctions on ITT Education Services, the college chain’s parent company, barring the school from enrolling students who use federal financial aid and requiring ITT to provide a letter of credit showing it’s sufficiently funded.

The sanctions prohibiting the enrollment of students who use financial aid struck such a blow to ITT Tech because, like most for-profit colleges, it’s highly dependent on federal aid. Last year, ITT fell into hot water with the Education Department because of its refusal to provide the proper accounting of federal grants it distributes to students dating back to 2009. The department then placed restrictions on federal financial aid at ITT. ITT Tech is under multiple federal and state investigations relating to the way the for-profit organization runs its operations.

“All hands on deck” may soon be a thing of the past. Ship designers, their operators and regulators are gearing up for a future in which cargo vessels sail the oceans autonomously with minimal or even no crew. British engine maker Rolls-Royce is among those leading the pack, with its Advanced Autonomous Waterborne Applications initiative involving other companies and universities. It predicts unmanned shipping to cut transport costs by 22%.

Tuesday, May 24, 2016

Go Figure

Financial Review

Go Figure


DOW + 213 = 17,706
SPX + 28 = 2076
NAS + 95 = 4861
10 Y + .02 = 1.86%
OIL + 1.02 = 49.10
GOLD – 21.30 = 1227.90

Yesterday, Wall Street couldn’t figure out which way to go; today stocks rallied for their best day since March 11. The S&P 500 rallied back above its 50 day moving average; we’ll have to see if it can hold on.

What was behind the rally? Who knows? Jeffrey Gundlach, CEO of DoubleLine Capital, said the rally feels like a short squeeze and characterized U.S. stocks as “dead money.” Gundlach says the market is not healthy and earnings have come in weak. On the Federal Reserve, Gundlach says the odds of a rate hike in June are 50-50, and it is Janet Yellen’s opinion that matters the most.

Expectations are rising for a rate hike next month after Philly Fed President Patrick Harker reinforced the central bank’s message that it’s getting ready to act now that the U.S. economy has recovered from a weak winter. Harker says he “can easily see the possibility of two or three rate hikes over the remainder of the year,” he told an audience in Philadelphia. “If the data comes in… I think a June rate increase is appropriate.” Markets are also awaiting this week’s main event – a speech from Janet Yellen on Friday.

The Census Bureau reports New Home Sales in April increased to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 619,000 – an 8 year high; that’s an increase of 16.6% from March, and a 23.8% increase from April 2015. The median price also jumped, rising 9.7% from 12 months ago to $321,100. The big increase in sales took supply sharply lower. At the current pace, it would take 4.7 months to exhaust all inventory.

French investigators raided Google’s Paris headquarters this morning as part of a tax evasion inquiry. Google has based its regional headquarters in Dublin where corporate tax rates are lower than elsewhere in Europe. The company, now part of Alphabet, has been under pressure in recent years over its practice of channeling most profits from European clients through Ireland to Bermuda, where it pays no tax on them.

The raid was part of an investigation to determine if Google Ireland Ltd has a permanent base in France and if, by not declaring parts of its activities carried out in France, it failed its fiscal obligations, including on corporate tax and value added tax.  The raid was carried out as part of an investigation into aggravated tax fraud and the organized laundering of the proceeds of tax fraud. If Google is found guilty, it could face fines up to 10 million euros or a fine of half of the value of the laundered amount involved.

Separately, attorneys for Oracle and Google presented their closing arguments in a lawsuit over Google’s use of Java APIs owned by Oracle in Android. Oracle accused Google of stealing a collection of APIs, while Google suggested that Android transformed the smartphone market and Oracle sued out of desperation when its own smartphone attempts failed to launch. If the jury finds that Google did indeed steal code from Oracle, it could disturb the way engineers at small startups build their products and expose them to litigation from major companies whose programming languages they use.

By the way, API refers to application program interface, which is the set of tools for building software applications. Google has argued that Sun Microsystems, which created Java, always intended for its programming language and accompanying APIs to be used freely. Oracle purchased Sun in 2010 and claimed that Sun executives believed Google had infringed their intellectual property and simply hadn’t brought legal action.

An appeals court has already decided that the Java APIs in question are copyrightable. This case, which has stretched over two weeks in a district court in San Francisco, aims to determine whether Google’s implementation of the APIs can be considered fair use. Now we wait for the jury.

The head of SWIFT will present a plan today to fight back against a wave of recent cyber thefts at members of the world’s top payments network. The speech follows three high profile hacks since the beginning of last year: an $81 million heist at the Bangladesh central bank, a $12 million theft from Banco del Austro in Ecuador, and an attack on a Vietnamese lender that was unsuccessful.

Deutsche Bank was downgraded. Moody’s cut Deutsche Bank’s credit rating to “Baa2,” down from “Baa1.” The credit-rating agency said the downgrade was a result of the bank’s difficulty in stabilizing itself amid a world of low growth and low interest rates. Moody’s said, “Deutsche Bank’s performance over the last several quarters has been weak, and substantial operating headwinds, including continuing low interest rates and macroeconomic uncertainty, will challenge the firm.”

Monsanto has rejected Bayer’s $62 billion takeover offer as too low while saying it’s still open to further deal talks. Bayer will likely come back with a higher bid. Buying Monsanto would create the world’s biggest supplier of farm chemicals and seeds, so even if they can agree on a price, they face regulatory scrutiny and will likely have a hard time making the case that this deal will make for a more competitive market. The consolidation of two big industry players may also limit farmer choice and bargaining power, with increasing seed prices expected to be passed on to the grocery aisles.

There is also a question about biodiversity and the potential risks to food safety. As Monsanto rejected the Bayer bid, they left the door open, saying they “believe in the substantial benefits an integrated strategy could provide to growers and broader society, and we have long respected Bayer’s business.”

ExxonMobil will face a revolt from some of its biggest and most influential shareholders on Wednesday as they fight to force the world’s largest oil company to open up about the effect of climate change on its future profits. Investors, including pension funds of the governments of Norway, Canada, California, New York, and even the Church of England are expected to vote in favor of a resolution calling on Exxon to “publish an annual assessment of long term portfolio impacts of public climate change policies.” The resolution is also supported by ISS and Glass Lewis, the world’s leading proxy advice services which advise institutional investors how to vote on such issues.

The resolution states that the company “should analyze the impacts on ExxonMobil’s oil and gas reserves and resources under a scenario in which reduction in demand results from carbon restrictions and related rules or commitments adopted by governments consistent with the globally agreed upon 2-degree target”. ExxonMobil has tried to block the resolution.

Exxon is currently under investigation by New York’s attorney general over claims that it lied to the public and shareholders about the risks of climate change. It follows reports that internal company documents from the 1980s and 90s show Exxon’s in-house scientists were warning company executives about the dangers of climate change, while Exxon was publicly claiming that climate science was not proven.

The strongest El Nino in nearly 20 years has ended, according to the Australian Bureau of Meteorology, as sea surface temperatures across the Pacific Ocean cool to their neutral levels. El Niño led to damaged crop production (such as wheat, palm oil and rice) due to scorching weather across Asia and east Africa, and heavy rains and floods in South America. A majority of climate models suggest that the climate pattern La Niña will develop in the wake of El Niño, according to the Bureau of Meteorology. La Niña—a climate phenomenon characterized by significantly below-average temperatures in the Equatorial Pacific—brings dry and warm weather to the southern U.S. and Mexico, and wet weather throughout much of the Pacific.

Mandatory evacuation orders were lifted yesterday for the last of Alberta’s oil sands production sites endangered by wildfires, starting the process of inspections by forestry and health officials to make sure the facilities are safe for workers to return. Since late Friday, Alberta has removed orders that had prevented all but critical staff from remaining on sites.

Deere & Co. is tightening conditions for renting equipment as a slump in farming incomes has led customers to prefer leasing rather than buying its agricultural machinery. In the face of lower crop prices, farmers in the U.S., South America and elsewhere have cut back sharply on equipment spending despite planting big crops.

For nine straight quarters, the slump has eaten into Deere’s sales and profits, and it is now bleeding into the company’s customer-finance arm. Leases now account for about a quarter of Deere’s customer-financing deals, compared with about 15% in the past. But Deere’s finance unit and dealers have been burdened with used equipment as customers walk away when short-term leases expire. That has forced the company to tighten the terms for renting equipment that has rapidly depreciated in value.

Deere took a write-down on used equipment in the latest quarter. It is restructuring leases to share more of the risk of further declines with dealers and new leases will likely cost farmers more as the company lowers residual equipment values at the end of the leases to reflect the depressed prices for used equipment.

Toyota is recalling almost 1.6 million additional American vehicles for front passenger side Takata air bag inflators that could rupture. Toyota said the new recall includes some but not all Corolla, Matrix, Yaris, 4Runner, Sienna, Scion xB, Lexus ES, GX and IS vehicles built between 2006 and 2011. Other reports from 17 automakers recalling Takata’s faulty devices are also due this week.

Wednesday, May 18, 2016

Don’t Fight the Fed

Financial Review

Don’t Fight the Fed

Sinclair Noe

DOW – 3 = 17,526
SPX + 0.42 = 2047
NAS + 23 = 4739
10 Y + .12 = 1.88%
OIL – .12 = 48.19
GOLD – 20.80 = 1259.00

There’s an old saying “don’t fight the Fed.” The Fed has indicated that if the data points to a rate hike, they would be prepared to hike rates in June. The markets have not reflected the Fed’s position.

The CME’s Fed Watch tool, which uses fed fund futures trading levels to determine the likelihood of a hike at each meeting, indicates that a better than 50 percent chance of a move doesn’t happen until the December FOMC session. Within the past week, futures trading indicated almost zero chance of an increase in June.

Yesterday, Atlanta Fed President Dennis Lockhart and San Francisco Fed President John Williams agreed that up to three rate hikes this year “seemed reasonable,” while Dallas President Robert Kaplan said he would call for a rate rise in June or July.

Today, the Fed released minutes from the April FOMC meeting. June is definitely on the table. The minutes indicated that members of the Federal Open Market Committee were worried that markets were underestimating the possibility of an early rate hike. Fed officials sought to correct this misconception, by spelling out what they need to see to raise rates in June. They expect to see continued improvement in the labor market.

The April jobs report was weak, and it was published after the FOMC meeting, but it wasn’t like the labor pool has dried up; the economy is still creating jobs and the unemployment rate is still low. Inflation continues to show signs of life, as evidenced by yesterday’s CPI report, which was stronger than expected. The broader economy had a rough first quarter, but it is perking up in the spring.

The domestic outlook was further enhanced by significant improvements in US and international financial conditions. The global risks are still out there. Japan and Europe are still weakened economies. One question mark on the international stage is the June 23 referendum on the UK exit from the Euro Union. That is a very big question mark.

So, the Fed did not take an unequivocal hawkish stance in the minutes, but they have largely abandoned the dovish position. In anticipation of the release, traders had started to reprice the probability of a Fed hike. According to CME Group, prices for futures contracts on the Fed’s benchmark overnight lending rate implied that investors saw a 34 percent chance of a rate increase next month, up from 19 percent shortly before the release of the minutes.

This was reflected in the upward move in yields on 2-year Treasuries, the maturity most sensitive to Fed action, the probability rise indicated by the Fed funds futures, or the flattening of the yield curve, led by the front end and to an extent not seen since December 2007. This repricing accelerated into the afternoon, with large yield spikes, particularly for 2-year and 5-year Treasuries. And to punctuate the point, the Dollar Index closed up, just a whisker above 95, the biggest jump for the dollar in 6 months, which in turn put the brakes on the recent rally in oil.

It is clear that Fed monetary policy has been a major source of support for the markets. And as the Fed moves further away from its Zero Interest Rate Policy, you have to wonder what catalyst can push the markets higher from these levels.

Japan’s economy dodged a recession last quarter as gains in government and consumer spending compensated for a slide in business investment. Gross domestic product expanded by an annualized 1.7%, exceeding all forecasts and recording the nation’s fastest pace of growth in a year. Prime Minister Shinzo Abe is widely expected to announce new fiscal stimulus during the G7 Summit this month as part of his “Abenomics 2.0” program.

Iran’s oil exports are set to surge in May, climbing nearly 60% from a year ago, with European shipments recovering to about half of pre-sanction levels, according to Reuters. This shows that Tehran is regaining market share at a faster pace than analysts had projected as it battles with Saudi Arabia for customers by lowering its prices. April loadings at 2.3-million barrels per day were around 15% higher than the International Energy Agency estimated earlier this month.

Goldman Sachs has downgraded its outlook on equities to “neutral” over the next 12 months, saying there’s no particular reason to own them. In a research note to clients, Goldman analysts wrote: “Until we see sustained signals of growth recovery, we do not feel comfortable taking equity risk, particularly as valuations are near peak levels.”  Goldman also upgraded commodities to “neutral” on a three-month basis, stayed “overweight” on credit over both 3- and 12-month horizons, and remained “underweight” on bonds.

The Chair of the Securities and Exchange Commission says cyber-security is the biggest risk facing the financial system. Banks around the world have been rattled by an $81 million cyber theft from the Bangladesh central bank that was funneled through SWIFT, a member-owned industry cooperative that handles the bulk of cross-border payment instructions between banks.

SEC Chair Mary Jo White says some major exchanges, dark pools and clearing houses did not have cyber policies in place that matched the sort of risks they faced. Cyber security experts said her remarks represented the SEC’s strongest warning to date of the threat posed by hackers.

The U.S. Senate passed legislation that would allow families of Sept. 11 victims to sue Saudi Arabia’s government for damages. The “Justice Against Sponsors of Terrorism Act,” or JASTA, passed the Senate by unanimous voice vote. If it became law, JASTA would remove the sovereign immunity, preventing lawsuits against governments, for countries found to be involved in terrorist attacks on U.S. soil.

More than 4 million U.S. workers will become newly eligible for overtime pay under rules issued today. Under the new rules, the annual salary threshold at which companies can deny overtime pay will be doubled from $23,660 to nearly $47,500. That would make 4.2 million more salaried workers eligible for overtime pay. Hourly workers would continue to be mostly guaranteed overtime.

The United States has ramped up import duties on Chinese steel makers by 522%, accusing Beijing of anti-competitive behavior by selling steel below cost. Last year, U.S. Steel, AK Steel, ArcelorMittal, Nucor and Steel Dynamics, all filed a complaint to the International Trade Commission, alleging foreign companies were selling steel at unfairly low prices. The industry claims it has had to lay off 12,000 workers as a result of the unfair competition.

Google introduced its answer to Amazon’s Alexa virtual assistant along with new messaging and virtual reality products at its annual developer conference today, doubling down on artificial intelligence and machine learning as the keys to its future.

The new offerings include Google Assistant, a virtual personal assistant, along with the tabletop speaker appliance Google Home; plus, Allo, a new messaging service that will compete with Facebook’s WhatsApp and Messenger products and feature a chatbot powered by the Google Assistant; plus, a new virtual reality platform called Daydream designed to work with the Android mobile operating system.

Google Assistant can search the internet and adjust your schedule, and it can use images and other information to provide more intuitive results. For Google Home, the Google Assistant merges with Chromecast and smart home devices to control televisions, thermostats and other products. Google did not offer a specific release date or pricing for Google Home, saying only that it will be available later this year.

Target reported a lower-than-expected increase in quarterly sales at established stores and gave a cautious outlook for the current period, citing volatile weather and weaker demand for electronics and groceries. Shares of the company, which also reported slower digital sales growth, fell more than 9 percent in early trading.

Home improvement chain Lowe’s followed larger rival Home Depot in reporting better-than-expected quarterly sales as strength in the U.S. housing market and favorable weather led to strong demand for building and home renovation products. Results from the home improvement chains stand in stark contrast to grim quarterly sales reports from retailers such as Macy’s and Target, as consumer spending shifts away from apparel and accessories to big-ticket items including cars and homes.

San Francisco is set to become the first U.S. city to require health warnings on advertisements for soda and other sugar-added drinks after the beverage industry failed to get a court order to stop it. The law goes into effect July 25 and will require that billboards and other public advertisements include the language, “WARNING: Drinking beverages with added sugar(s) contributes to obesity, diabetes, and tooth decay.”

GrubHub shares hit a 2-month low yesterday, after Amazon announced it would expand restaurant delivery service into New York and Dallas. The offering is free with Prime membership and promises no markups from online menus. Where’s the profit? According to the NY Post, Amazon is reportedly charging restaurants 27.5% of each delivery order, compared to the 12-24% charged by GrubHub and Seamless, which merged in 2013.

Fedex has declared its recommended all-cash public offer for TNT Express unconditional, with all requirements having been satisfied or waived. Settlement will take place in one week.

Peabody Energy has won final bankruptcy-court approval for an $800M financing package after lenders made concessions to appease creditors. Peabody said final approval on the Chapter 11 financial arrangements ensures the company can continue operating as usual while it works through a load of debt that it can’t support given the declines in coal demand and prices.