Thursday, June 28, 2012

JPMorgan Slips on Report Trading Loss Widened to $9 Billion


JPMorgan Chase & Co. (JPM) fell more than 6 percent in European trading after the New York Times (NYT) reported the lender’s trading losses from credit derivatives may total as much as $9 billion, exceeding the firm’s initial estimate.
The shares fell to $34.50 as of 1 p.m. in Frankfurt trading from their $36.78 close in New York yesterday.

JPMorgan Chief Executive Officer Jamie Dimon said on May 10 the bank lost more than $2 billion on bets in credit markets taken by its chief investment office in London and that the loss could increase by as much as $1 billion this quarter. Dimon, 56, has said JPMorgan is in no rush to unwind the trades, even if adverse market moves produce bigger losses in the short term.

The firm’s losses have increased in recent weeks as JPMorgan sought to exit its holdings, the New York Times reported today, citing unidentified former traders and executives at the bank. The company has already closed out more than half of its positions, the newspaper said.

“We are now in the realms of speculation in terms of the sheer scale,” said Christopher Wheeler, a London-based analyst at Mediobanca SpA, who has a ‘neutral’ recommendation on JPMorgan. “The final loss will be offset by a number of items including a debt-valuation adjustment gain and gains on the sale of some of their treasury securities. However, the larger the number, the more difficult it is to reduce the impact.”

Dimon told lawmakers this month the company would be “solidly profitable” when it reports second-quarter earnings on July 13. Although the trading loss had grown to $2 billion for the quarter when the company disclosed it in May, the net loss for the CIO division at that time was $800 million. Dimon said the bank had $8 billion in gains in another trading portfolio within the CIO and had used $1 billion of that to offset the loss on the credit derivatives portfolio in London.
Patrick Burton, a spokesman for JPMorgan in London declined to comment on the New York times story.

 Asad Khan
Financial Analyst  (CFB)
050-8774861
asad@cfb.ae

Google Fundamental Report

With Google (GOOG) being the number one search engine, as well as a powerhouse in mobile technology, and nearly anything of an internet-related product, the decline in its stockover the past few months has come as a surprise to some investors and financial analysts. This has raised the question, is this just temporary or is this is a sign of the dark times that lie ahead for this company?
Last April, Google announced a new device that it has been working on. Called "ProjectGlass," the project is a pair of eyeglasses that has the capabilities of a Smartphone. This project, however, is still in the early stages of development and Google has unveiled it only to gather some feedback from its target audience. As expected, this futuristic device has received a lot of positive feedbackfrom consumers who can't wait to get this amazing technology in their hands- a sign that when this project is finally released to the public, it may give Google a huge boost. The development of Project Glass is slow, with Google making sure to keep its press spread out and managed. Still, some wonder if this is the only thing on Google's horizon to save the stock from stagnation. In my opinion, this is wrongful thinking - as Google has been busy with acquisitions and other developments.
Just recently, Google has made another announcement, which is the acquisition of Meebo, a social platform that connects thousands of users on the internet. This program supports Face book (FB), Yahoo! (YHOO) Messenger, and Google Talk to name a few. But how will this affect its performance in the stock market? Well, it actually had an immediate effect on the stock. Just after the announcement was made, its price shot up 1.3% (no small feat when shares trade for as high as they do).
This is basically a way for Google to counter Face book or to compete with the company by continuing to develop Google Plus. But as you already know, Face book has already gone publiclast month and its stock has struggled, to say the least. But in Google's case, this is not really its main concern. The decision or the motive behind buying Meebo stems from the goal of snatching away the more than 1 billion Face book users and lure them to use Google Plus instead. After all, Google has shown that it is more apt in turning profits from advertising than Face book is, and with the increase in users, the competition would really be muted. The question for Face book remains how to makemoney, the question for Google is how to grab users.
Moreover, with regard to the acquisition, the Google team also wants to acquire the pool of talented developers that work for Meebo to actually help it create a powerful social networking site in Google Plus, as clearly its plans so far have been unsuccessful.
And when it comes to building internet relationships, Meebo is not a company to beunderrated. It has reportedly earned more than $70 million since the company came into existence in 2005. Furthermore, Meebo has a positive reputation that can bring more credibility to Google Plus. And, with what's happening to face book right now, it is expected that by the end of 2012, there will be more userson Google than on Face book. The question, then, is how active these users are on the sites, a point in which Face book still has a clear advantage.
Google's acquisition tear hasn't stopped with Meebo, just as it didn't stop with its taking over of Motorola earlier this year. Google recently boughtthe Mobile Transmit Delivery (MTD) patent portfolio of Magnolia Broadband, a move that continues along the trend of large tech companies buying up patents to secure its own standing, as well as give it an offensive possibility in future court cases. Already this year we've seen Google defend itself in court as well as take other companies to court over patents (the Oracle (ORCL) casebeing the biggest, in which Google emerged as the victor), and with the ambiguous lines in technology these days, this trend could go on for years to come.
In its other arenas, Google has managed to extend its search engine lead over competitor Yahoo! and any other search engine websites out there (with the exception of Baidu.com (BIDU)in China). The search engine aspect has long since been the driving force behind Google stock, yet it remains the calling card of the entire operation. Recent news has broken with some uncomfortable news regarding Google's search engine and the power it wields. Google has reportedthat in just the last six months it has received over 1,000 requests to remove content from governments. The news is unsettling not only because it challenges the free speech of the World Wide Web, but also because Google has become the singular go-to point for contention between large government institutions and people like bloggers, video posters and analysts.
The censorship is expected with Baidu's filtering of search results, but the large amount of requests that Google handles is something of a shocker. The worry here is twofold: the fear of either the large institutions turning on Google for its refusal to censor, or the turning away of users who believe Google is acting as a proxy for those trying to limit speech. Either way, this is a perfect example of the problems that come with power. Google, being as large as it is, will have to deal with issues like this moving on, and the handling is particularly tricky.
Watch Google's developments closely. At this point, the company is so large that some setbacks will obviously occur. However, with projects on the horizon and acquisitions opening new doors everyday, Google should continue to make its investors happy

 Asad Khan
Financial Analyst  (CFB)
050-8774861
asad@cfb.ae

Germany slams EU debt-sharing plan


European proposals to reshape the crisis-struck euro area ran into immediate criticism from Germany for putting too much emphasis on debt sharing and too little on controlling national budgets.
The 10-year roadmap, released Tuesday by four officials led by European Union President Herman Van Rompuy, centered on common banking supervision and deposit insurance and a “criteria-based and phased” move toward joint debt issuance. It also suggests that the EU could impose upper limits on annual budgets and debt levels of nations that use the euro.
 “Parts of it read like a wish list,” German Deputy Foreign Minister Michael Link told reporters in Luxembourg. The proposals lean “toward various models for mutualizing debt. What comes up short is improved controls,” he said.
Angela Merkel was quoted as telling a meeting of one of the parties in her coalition on Tuesday that Europe would not have shared total debt liability “as long as I live.”
The chancellor said there would be no shared liability of debt in Germany either — after her government agreed plans with federal states to issue joint “Deutschland bonds” — in comments reported by participants in a meeting with the Free Democrats (FDP), junior partners in her centre-right coalition.
Germany’s instant opposition lessened the chances that a June 28-29 summit — the 19th since the debt crisis broke out in early 2010 — will point the way out of the turmoil that threatens to splinter the euro currency.
Van Rompuy collaborated on the proposals with European Central Bank President Mario Draghi, European Commission President Jose Barroso and Luxembourg Prime Minister Jean-Claude Juncker, who manages meetings of euro finance ministers.

Asad Khan
Financial Analyst  (CFB)
050-8774861
asad@cfb.ae

A Quick Glance at News (28/06/2012)



Chicago Federal Reserve Bank President Charles Evans, one of the U.S. central bank's strongest advocates for further monetary policy easing, Top Federal Reserve officials differed on whether the U.S. central bank needs to be more aggressive in spurring economic growth, indicating another round of easing is far from certain.
Euro-area finance ministers set the stage for today’s gathering in Brussels of the European Union’s 27 chiefs, approving Cyprus’s bailout and detailing how they would aid Spanish banks. Consensus breaks down on safeguarding governments in Spain and Italy, with German Chancellor Angela Merkel rejecting calls to do more to cut their borrowing costs.
Merkel is increasingly isolated as French President Francois Hollande, Italian Prime Minister Mario Montiand Spanish Premier Mariano Rajoy unite to push for quicker action to ease the crisis that emerged in Greece in late 2009.
Asian stocksrose a second day and oil climbed after bigger-than-expected gains in Japanese retail sales and U.S. housing boosted confidence in global growth. The dollar fell before a European summit on the debt crisis.
China’s benchmark stock index slid for a seventh day, the longest stretch of losses in 13 months, as concern the nation’s economic slowdown is curbing earnings growth overshadowed an improving outlook for exports to the U.S.
Gold edged up on Thursday after the euro showed some resilience ahead of a European Union summit, which is unlikely to deliver new measures to tackle the region's debt crisis and may prompt investors to turn to the safety of the U.S. dollar
Brent crude advanced a fourth day in Londonas a strike by Norwegian energy workers over pensions halted 15 percent of the country’s oil output. Futures climbed as much as 0.6 percent after closing at the highest price in a week yesterday. U.S. home sales and durable- goods orders beat forecasts in May, as a European Union ban on Iranian oil takes effect, central banks act to protect growth and on speculation OPEC will curb some of its excess supply.
Rupee, euro crisis hits gold demand in India, Weaker local currencies are weighing on golddemand from India, the world's largest consumer of the precious metal, and Indonesia, another leading Asian buyer, as traders also favour cash on concerns over deterioration in the euro zone crisis.
Japan’s retail sales rose more than forecast in May, a sign that consumer spending will help sustain a rebound in the world’s third-largest economy.
Treasuries extended a monthly loss on concern yields that are within 20 basis points of the record low will curb demand when the U.S. sells $29 billion of seven- year notes today
India may spend 300 billion rupees ($5.3 billion) tripling the length of its expressway network to ease traffic jams that are slowing trade, wasting fuel and sapping economic growth.
Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh pledged to restore confidence in Asia’s third-largest economy as he resumed control of the finance ministry after growthslowed to the weakest in almost a decade and the rupee slumped.
Amazon.com Inc. (AMZN) will make it easier for developers to add social features to games for the Kindle Fire tablet, a person with knowledge of the matter said, working to narrow Apple (AAPL)Inc.’s lead in the market for tablets.
Apple Inc. (AAPL) plans an overhaul of iTunes that would mark one of the largest changes to the world’s biggest music store since its 2003 debut, according to people with direct knowledge of the matter.
Google Inc will sell its first tablet from mid-July for $199, hoping to replicate its Smartphone success in a hotly contested market now dominated by Amazon.com Inc's Kindle Fire and Apple Inc's iPad.
Google Inc expects to roll out a consumer version of its electronic eyewear that can live-stream images and audio and perform computing tasks in less than two years, though it stopped short of putting a price tag on the "smart" glasses.
Asad Khan
Financial Analyst  (CFB)
050-8774861
asad@cfb.ae

Friday, June 22, 2012

A Quick Glance at News (22/06/2012)


Asian stocksfell, nearly erasing this week’s gain, and the Indian rupee slid to a record low as data added to signs of a U.S. economic slowdown. Bond risk rose after Moody’s Investors Service cut ratings for global banks.
Wall Street suffers worst loss in three weeks, Stocks posted the worst day in three weeks on Thursday on mounting evidence that slowing manufacturing growth worldwide threatened corporate profits.
Ratings agency Moody's downgraded many of the world's biggest banks on Thursday, lowering credit ratings of 15 companies by one to three notches.
The Indian rupee weakened beyond the psychologically important 57 per dollar mark on Friday, hitting a record low for a second consecutive session, with traders seeing no signs of any central bank intervention yet.
Morgan Stanley, one of the most closely watched firms, had its long-term debt rating lowered by just two notches, one level less than had been expected, and its stock rose in after-hours trading. The downgrade left Morgan Stanley more highly rated than Bank of America Corp (BAC.N) and Citigroup (C.N) but a step below Goldman Sachs Group (GS.)
Crude-oil prices bounced off October lows but stayed below $80 a barrel in electronic trading Friday, as the dollar weakened and U.S. equity futures edged higher.
Gold gave up early gains on Friday and was heading for its biggest weekly loss since December after growing fears of a global economic slowdown hit commodities, prompting investors to seek safety in the U.S. dollar.
Lower gold prices prompted buying by jewelers in Hong Kong, although the low volume suggested consumers were waiting for further declines
Money managers raised their net length in gold by 1,258 lots, or about 1 percent, to 99,684 lots in the week to June 12, as signs of slowing U.S. economic recovery and the euro zone debt crisis fuelled speculation of monetary stimulus from central banks around the world.

Euro's big four seek way out of crisis in Rome. The leaders of Germany, France, Italy and Spain will try to find common ground in Rome on Friday to restore confidence in the euro zone ahead of a full EU summit next week, with German Chancellor Angela Merkel likely to be outnumbered.
Prices of U.S-Treasuries edged down in Asia on Friday as investors took profits after an overnight rise, but concerns about slowing U.S. growth kept bonds in recent ranges.
China and Brazil have agreed a currency swap arrangement that enables each country to access up to $30 billion as part of efforts to build a financial buffer to help guard against a freeze up in global markets.
Microsoft Corp is looking at making its own Smartphone to kick start sales of its Windows mobile software, according to a Wall Street analyst who has followed the company for many years.
Samsung Electronics Co. said it will investigate a complaint that a new Galaxy S III Smartphone overheated, the same day the world’s top mobile-phone maker began U.S. sales of the latest model in its best-selling series.

 Asad Khan
Financial Analyst  (CFB)
050-8774861
asad@cfb.ae

GOLD FUTURE

Demand for physical gold in key markets remained lackluster, meanwhile. Gold imports to India, historically the world's largest buyer, fell by $6.2 billion in the first two months of the fiscal year that began in April, compared with a year before, finance secretary R.S. Gujral said on Friday.
Gold buying in India has been hurt by weakness in the rupee, which pushed local prices to record highs, and the federal government's decision to double import duty on gold to 4 percent. Gold imports have been widely blamed as one of the reasons for the country's widening current account deficit.
The market remained underpinned by demand from central banks, meanwhile. Russian newswire Interfax reported a 15.6 tone rise in Russia's gold reserves in May.

Asad Khan
Financial Analyst  (CFB)
050-8774861
asad@cfb.ae

Wednesday, June 20, 2012

Who Will Take First Swing at Euro Crisis—Fed or ECB?

Traders are handicapping which central bank will come out swinging first — and the odds right now are not on the European Central Bank.

 So it would be a surprise if the European Central Bank takes action at its rates meeting Wednesday morning. The meeting is followed by an 8:30 a.m. ET press briefing by ECB President Mario Draghi.
Later in the day, the release of the Fed’s beige book, a roundup of economic activity region by region, at 2 p.m. ET could provide clues on the strength of the U.S. economy, and therefore on whether the Fed sees enough weakness to consider a new round of easing, either at its June meeting or later. 

But more importantly, Fed watchers await the words of Fed Vice Chair Janet Yellen, who speaks in Boston at 7 p.m. Wednesday evening, and also Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke, who testifies Thursday morning before the Joint Economic Committee. 

“I actually think Yellen says more than Bernanke. I think Bernanke just gives an update on the economy,” said J.P. Morgan economist Michael Feroli. Yellen is one of the more dovish voices on the Fed, so the market listened several weeks ago when she said there was a high threshold for quantitative easing .
Since then, a weaker stream of economic data and in particular, the poor May jobs report, has brought back the idea of more Fed easing. Economists have been shaving GDP expectations in the last several days, and J.P. Morgan now sees 2012 GDP at 2.1 percent, from 2.3 percent. 

The Fed’s quantitative easing programs have involved purchases of Treasury securities, but another round could also include mortgages. The Fed also may just extend its “Operation Twist,” which expires at the end of the month. That program involves the sale of shorter-dated Treasurys and the purchase of a similar amount of longer-dated notes and bonds. Unlike QE, Twist does not expand the Fed's balance sheet.
“I’m not so convinced we see a large QE announced. If we do see anything, I think it’s an extension of Operation Twist and perhaps pushing back the rates guidance,” said Feroli. 

RBS senior Treasury strategist John Briggs says the bond market is already pricing in an extension of Operation Twist, and he believes the Fed would extend it until the end of the year.
The Treasury market Tuesday saw some selling and rates moved higher. The 10-year yield, which sunk below 1.5 percent last week for the first time, rose to 1.56 percent. 

“Yields are rising. For once, we didn’t have the steady drip of bad news that is required to keep 10-year yields below 1.5 percent,” said Briggs. “I don’t’ think anyone thinks Europe is resolved but for once we didn’t have data in the U.S. disappoint.” 

The ISM nonmanufacturing survey, reported Tuesday, was slightly better than expected at 53.7, up from 53.5 in April. It is the first in a recent string of economic reports that didn’t come in below expectations, a pattern that has raised concerns the effects of the European sovereign crisis are hurting U.S. growth.
“It feels like we’ve taken the first part of the storm, and we’re sitting in the eye waiting for the winds to pick up,” said Briggs. 

The Dow Tuesday snapped a four-day losing streak, ending up 26 points at 12,127, and the S&P 500 rose 7 to 1285. The euro lost ground against the dollar, ending the day at 1.2453. 

Year of the Draghi
The ECB is widely expected to hold back on rate cuts or other actions until after the Greek election June 17 and the European leaders summit at the end of the month.
“There’s no reason or them to wait, but we do think they hold out until July,” said Feroli.
Alan Ruskin, G-10 currency strategist at Deutsche Bank, also expects the ECB to hold off on any move. “I wouldn’t be too carried away with expectations, given that it all revolves around events,” he said. “They’re going to be inclined to keep their power dry, and just wait on events in Greece and to some extent, events in Spain.” 

Euro-zone politicians are now the ones who should act, he said. “There’s a feeling the ball is more being hoisted into the politicians’ court," Ruskin said. "They’ve got to make some decisions on things like a banking union, deposit insurance and bank recapitalizations. Those issues are best addressed at the political level.”
Ruskin said Draghi may sound more dovish when he speaks Wednesday. “He can certainly make clear they have a number of tools at their disposal, without expanding too much on it. Clearly, they have a mixture of a different things they could do. They could still cut official rates. They could still come up with another LTRO (liquidity program). They could use their strategic market program to buy bonds. They could ease collateral rules.” 

But Marc Chandler, chief currency strategist at Brown Brothers Harriman says there’s a case to be made for an ECB move as early as Wednesday. “I suspect there’s a greater chance they do something tomorrow,” he said. Chandler said Draghi may prove to be more proactive than the market is expecting.
“He cut interest rates in his first two meetings, and in his second meeting, he told us about the LTRO. The market confuses Draghi and (former ECB President) Trichet,” Chandler said.
In addition to the ECB, the Bank of England holds its rate meeting Thursday and it could take further easing actions. Chandler said there is also speculation China may move on rates. 

Asad Khan
Financial Analyst  (CFB)
050-8774861
asad@cfb.ae
 

Tuesday, June 19, 2012

Fed Will Ease Monetary Policy This Week: Goldman’s Hatzius

The U.S. central bank will most likely ease monetary policy when it meets this week as recent data point to a worsening labor market and the crisis in Europe intensifies, Goldman Sachs said.

 The Federal Open Market Committee will likely say it would buy assets such as mortgage-backed securities and U.S. Treasurys when it meets for a two-day meeting starting Tuesday, Jan Hatzius, the investment bank’s Chief U.S. Economist said in a report on Monday.


“We would be quite surprised if we saw no easing this week,” Hatzius wrote in the report.
The Federal Reserve may also extend Operation Twist, he added, although he does not find the “strategy very attractive.” The program – which involves the Fed selling medium-term bonds and using the proceeds to buy longer-term ones, such as 10-year Treasurys, effectively driving down longer-term interest rates – runs out at the end of June.
“We believe that an extension of Operation Twist could well be insufficient on its own and could thus be followed by additional easing action before long,” Hatzius said.
Instead, a “sufficiently large program” that involves mortgage-backed securities would help, he said, adding that while “it is unlikely to be very powerful, that doesn't mean Fed officials shouldn't do it.” 
“The risk of inflation is remote, and even when it becomes less remote Fed officials should be easily able to tighten policy sufficiently,” Hatzius wrote.
In addition, the Fed could opt for unconventional means such as promising not to raise rates until the unemployment rate has fallen to a specific level and a nominal GDP level target, according to the report.
While analysts agree that the U.S. economy faces deep problems, not everyone is expecting measures beyond extending Operation Twist.
“I think it probably wants to save some bullets for later on in the year, once we get some clearer sense of where Europe is going and the impact that it has,” Rob Rennie, Global Head of FX Strategy with Westpac Bank in Sydney, told on Tuesday. “So our expectations are only for an extension of Operation Twist, no more.” 
Gerald Hanweck, Professor of Finance at George Mason University, said what’s more likely to happen is that the Fed would hold off on easing until the next meeting. 
“I think the Fed has pretty much spent its bullets. It’s run out of steam; its QEs are having less and less impact on the real economy,” Hanweck told CNBC. “There are members who are really not in favor of having any more expansion, any more quantitative easing, including Operation Twist. So it is very likely that what might happen is they’ll put it off until the next meeting because they’re supposed to be done with the current operation Twist by the end of June.”
Tax cuts to help individuals and the corporate sector, as well as incentives to get businesses to invest are what will help the U.S. economy, Hanweck said. The Fed could also adopt “extreme” measures such as boosting demand for corporate bonds. 
“It can buy, if it wants to go to an extreme, it can start buying short-term commercial paper. And that’s certainly one of the areas where it has an option. It’s an extreme option but they could do it,” he added.
Asad Khan
Financial Analyst  (CFB)
050-8774861
asad@cfb.ae

A Quick Glance at News (19/06/2012)


European stock-index futures rose as Group of 20 leaders debated the region’s financial crisis, Asian shares edged down on Tuesday as rising Spanish bond yields stoked fears its tottering banking system is dragging Madrid deeper into crisis, snuffing out a relief rally that followed a win for mainstream parties in Greece's weekend election.
Crude oil futures slid as much as 0.4 percent after declining for the first time in three days yesterday. Spanish bad loans in April jumped to 8.72 percent of lending, the highest level since 1994, and data from the Bank of Spain showed. That overshadowed election wins by pro-bailout parties in Greece. International talks with Iran resume today in Moscow over the country’s nuclear program, with President Barack Obamasaying there is still time for a diplomatic resolution.
All the sanctions that are supposed to come into force on July 1 will come into force on July 1,” EU foreign-policy spokesman Michael Mannsaid in an interview today in the Russian capital. “We’ve taken a political decision that this is an important measure to put pressure on the Iranian regime.
The Australian central bank's decision to cut the cash rate in June was "finely balanced," according to the minutes from the latest interest-rate meeting, released Tuesday. The Reserve Bank of Australia minutes showed members weighed up relatively strong domestic data with "clear evidence suggesting a softening in global conditions." Uncertainty about the future in Europe had increased significantly, the RBA said.
The dollar slid against the euro and yen before the Federal Reserve begins a meeting today amid prospects policy makers will consider further monetary easing steps to sustain the U.S. economy.
Leaders at the Group of 20 major economies' summit will promise to take "all necessary measures" to resolve the European debt crisis, according to several reports citing a draft version of the group's communique

Gold rose for an eighth consecutive session on Tuesday, the longest winning streak since July last year, after a weekend victory for pro-bailout parties in Greek elections failed to shake off worries about a worsening debt crisis in Europe.
Treasury bonds firmed slightly in Asia on Tuesday, ahead of a U.S. Federal Reserve meeting at which the central bank could decide on more monetary stimulus to blunt the impact of Europe's debt crisis on the struggling U.S. economy.
Foreign investors' holdings of Japanese government bonds (JGB) rose to a record of nearly $1 trillion, Bank of Japan data showed on Tuesday, reflecting their flight to safety as the debt crisis in Europe shows no sign of letting up.
China Leads Nations Boosting IMF’s Firewall to $456 Billion. Emerging-market nations including China and Brazil formalized funding pledges to the International Monetary Fund, helping to almost double its lending power to protect the world economy from Europe’s debt turmoil.
China’s commerce minister said his nation’s economy is heading for a rebound this month following government measures to support growth, adding to signals of confidence among officials that the slowdown is ebbing.
Microsoft Corp. unveiled its own family of tablet computers Monday, using the brand of its Surface computing project for the new line of portable devices.
Face book Inc is paying $55 million to $60 million to buy Face.com, according to people familiar with the matter, acquiring the company that provides the facial-recognition technology used by the world's largest social network to help users identify and tag photos.

Asad Khan
Financial Analyst  (CFB)
050-8774861
asad@cfb.ae