Posts Tagged ‘Gambling’
Is EVERY Market Rigged?

CNN reports:

The European Commission raided the offices of Shell, BP and Norway’s Statoil this week as part of an investigation into suspected attempts to manipulate global oil prices spanning more than a decade.

 

None of the companies have been accused of wrongdoing, but the controversy has brought back memories of the Libor rate-rigging scandal that rocked the financial world last year. (Read more…)

 

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A review ordered by the British government last year in the wake of the Libor revelations cited “clear” parallels between the work of the oil-price-reporting agencies and Libor.

 

“[T]hey are both widely used benchmarks that are compiled by private organizations and that are subject to minimal regulation and oversight by regulatory authorities,” the review, led by former financial regulator Martin Wheatley, said in August . “To that extent they are also likely to be vulnerable to similar issues with regards to the motivation and opportunity for manipulation and distortion.”

 

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In a report issued in October, the International Organization of Securities Commissions — an association of regulators — said the ability “to selectively report data on a voluntary basis creates an opportunity for manipulating the commodity market data” submitted to Platts and its competitors.

 

Responding to questions from IOSCO last year, French oil giant Total said the price-reporting agencies, or PRAs, sometimes “do not assure an accurate representation of the market and consequently deform the real price levels paid at every level of the price chain, including by the consumer.” But Total called Platts and its competitors “generally… conscientious and professional.”

 

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“Even small distortions of assessed prices may have a huge impact on the prices of crude oil, refined oil products and biofuels purchases and sales, potentially harming final consumers,” the European Commission said this week.

USA Today notes:

The Commission … said, however, that its probe covers a wide range of oil products — crude oil, biofuels, and refined oil products, which include gasoline, heating oil, petrochemicals and others.

 

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The EU said it has concerns that some companies may have tried to manipulate the pricing process by colluding to report distorted prices and by preventing other companies from submitting their own prices.

 

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Unlike oil futures, which set prices for contracts, the data used in the MOC process is based on the physical sale and purchase of actual shipments of oil and oil products.

 

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According to Statoil, the EU investigation stretches back to 2002, which is when Platts launched its MOC price system in Europe. The suspicion is that some companies may have provided inaccurate information to Platts to affect the oil products’ pricing, presumably for financial gain.

Fox points out:

At issue is whether there was collusion to distort prices of crude, refined oil products and ethanol traded during Platts’ market-on-close (MOC) system – a daily half-hour “window” in which it sets prices.

 

But the European Commission also is examining whether companies were prevented from taking part in the price assessment process.

The Guardian writes:

The commission said the alleged price collusion, which may have been going on since 2002, could have had a “huge impact” on the price of petrol at the pumps “potentially harming final consumers”.

 

Lord Oakeshott, former Liberal Democrat Treasury spokesman, said the alleged rigging of oil prices was “as serious as rigging Libor” – which led to banks being fined hundreds of millions of pounds.

 

He demanded to know why the UK authorities had not taken action earlier and said he would ask questions of the British regulator in Parliament. “Why have we had to wait for Brussels to find out if British oil giants are ripping off British consumers?” he said. “The price of energy ripples right through our economy and really matters to every business and families.”

 

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Shadow energy and climate change secretary Caroline Flint said: “These are very concerning reports, which if true, suggest shocking behaviour in the oil market that should be dealt with strongly.

 

“When the allegations of price fixing in the gas market were made, Labour warned that opaque over-the-counter deals and relying on price reporting agencies left the market vulnerable to abuse.

 

“These latest allegations of price fixing in the oil market raise very similar questions. Consumers need to know that the prices they pay for their energy or petrol are fair, transparent and not being manipulated by traders.”

 

Shadow financial secretary to the Treasury Chris Leslie said: “If oil price fixing has taken place it would be a shocking scandal for our financial markets.

The Telegraph reports:

97 per cent of all we eat, drink, wear or build has spent some time in a diesel lorry,” said a spokesman for FairFuel UK, the lobbyists. “If it is proved, they have been gambling with the very oxygen of our economy.”

 

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Platts – to determine the benchmark price – examines just trades in the final 30 minutes of the trading day. A group of half a dozen analysts gather round a trading screen and decide on the final price. As with much that goes on in the City, it is a surprisingly old-fashioned method, reliant on gentlemanly conduct. Critics say it leaves the market open to abuse, and the price can suddenly spike or fall in the final minutes of the day.

The New York Times notes of agencies like Platt and Argus Media:

Their influence is extensive. Total, the French oil giant, estimated last year that 75 to 80 percent of crude oil and refined product transactions were linked to the prices published by such agencies.

The Observer points out that manipulation of the oil markets has long been an open secret:

Robert Campbell, a former price reporter at another PRA, Argus – he is now a staffer at Thomson Reuters, which also competes with Platts and others on providing energy news and data – said this a few days ago in a little-noticed commentary: “The vulnerability of physical crude price assessments to manipulation is an open secret within the oil industry. The surprise is that it took regulators so long to open a formal probe.”

Reuters reports that the probe may be expanding to the U.S.:

In Washington, the chairman of the Senate energy committee asked the Justice Department to investigate whether alleged price manipulation has boosted fuel prices for U.S. consumers.

 

“Efforts to manipulate the European oil indices, if proven, may have already impacted U.S. consumers and businesses, because of the interrelationships among world oil markets and hedging practices,” Sen. Ron Wyden (D-Ore.), chairman of the Senate Energy and Natural Resources Committee, wrote in a letter to Attorney General Eric H. Holder Jr.

 

Wyden also asked Justice to investigate whether oil market manipulation was taking place in the United States.

Not only are petroleum products a multi-trillion dollar market on their own, but manipulation of petroleum prices would effect virtually every market in the world.

For example, the Cato Institute notes how many industries use oil:

U.S. industries use petroleum to produce the synthetic fiber used in textile mills making carpeting and fabric from polyester and nylon. U.S. tire plants use petroleum to make synthetic rubber. Other U.S. industries use petroleum to produce plastic, drugs, detergent, deodorant, fertilizer, pesticides, paint, eyeglasses, heart valves, crayons, bubble gum and Vaseline.

The India Times reports that:

The price variation in crude oil impacts the sentiments and hence the volatility in stock markets all over the world. The rise in crude oil prices is not good for the global economy. Price rise in crude oil virtually impacts industries and businesses across the board. Higher crude oil prices mean higher energy prices, which can cause a ripple effect on virtually all business aspects that are dependent on energy (directly or indirectly).

The Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco notes:

When gasoline prices increase, a larger share of households’ budgets is likely to be spent on it, which leaves less to spend on other goods and services. The same goes for businesses whose goods must be shipped from place to place or that use fuel as a major input (such as the airline industry). Higher oil prices tend to make production more expensive for businesses, just as they make it more expensive for households to do the things they normally do.

 

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Oil price increases are generally thought to increase inflation and reduce economic growth.

 

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Oil prices indirectly affect costs such as transportation, manufacturing, and heating. The increase in these costs can in turn affect the prices of a variety of goods and services, as producers may pass production costs on to consumers.

 

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Oil price increases can also stifle the growth of the economy through their effect on the supply and demand for goods other than oil. Increases in oil prices can depress the supply of other goods because they increase the costs of producing them. In economics terminology, high oil prices can shift up the supply curve for the goods and services for which oil is an input.

 

High oil prices also can reduce demand for other goods because they reduce wealth, as well as induce uncertainty about the future (Sill 2007). One way to analyze the effects of higher oil prices is to think about the higher prices as a tax on consumers (Fernald and Trehan 2005).

The Post Carbon Institute notes (via OilPrice.com) that high oil prices raise food prices as well:

The connection between food and oil is systemic, and the prices of both food and fuel have risen and fallen more or less in tandem in recent years (figure 1). Modern agriculture uses oil products to fuel farm machinery, to transport other inputs to the farm, and to transport farm output to the ultimate consumer. Oil is often also used as input in agricultural chemicals. Oil price increases therefore put pressure on all these aspects of commercial food systems.

Figure 1: Evolution of food and fuel prices, 2000 to 2009
Sources: US Energy Information Administration and FAO.

Economists Nouriel Roubini and Setser note that all recessions after 1973 were associated with oil shocks.

Interest Rates Are Manipulated

Unless you live under a rock, you know about the Libor scandal.

For those just now emerging from a coma, here’s a recap:

Derivatives Are Manipulated

The big banks have long manipulated derivatives … a $1,200 Trillion Dollar market.

Indeed, many trillions of dollars of derivatives are being manipulated in the exact same same way that interest rates are fixed: through gamed self-reporting.

Gold and Silver Are Manipulated

The Guardian and Telegraph report that gold and silver prices are “fixed” in the same way as interest rates and derivatives – in daily conference calls by the powers-that-be.

Everything Can Be Manipulated through High-Frequency Trading

Traders with high-tech computers can manipulate stocks, bonds, options, currency and commodities. And see this.

Manipulating Numerous Markets In Myriad Ways

The big banks and other giants manipulate numerous markets in myriad ways, for example:

  • Engaging in mafia-style big-rigging fraud against local governments. See this, this and this
  • Shaving money off of virtually every pension transaction they handled over the course of decades, stealing collectively billions of dollars from pensions worldwide. Details here, here, here, here, here, here, here, here, here, here, here and here
  • Pledging the same mortgage multiple times to different buyers.  See this, this, this, this and this.  This would be like selling your car, and collecting money from 10 different buyers for the same car
  • Pushing investments which they knew were terrible, and then betting against the same investments to make money for themselves. See this, this, this, this and this
  • Engaging in unlawful “Wash Trades” to manipulate asset prices. See this, this and this
  • Participating in various Ponzi schemes. See this, this and this
  • Bribing and bullying ratings agencies to inflate ratings on their risky investments

    



 
S&P 1666

Whoever orchestrated the last two hour closing ramp sure has a satanic sense of humor, opting to close the S&P at 1666 or exactly 1000 points above the “generational” low. A late-day desperation to buy-buy-buy, triggered by an avalanche of stops being triggered in the DAX futures market (as it broke all time highs), sent stocks soaring. Treasuries had been weak all day (giving back yesterday’s gains and more). The equity spurt was not accompanied by VIX or Credit or Oil or Copper but JPY’s break of 103 was another trigger supporting the rise. But that doesn’t matter. (Read more…) The release of weak IP and in-line CPI data on Wednesday seemed to trigger the ‘change’ as gold and silver diverged lower from copper and oil’s surge, Treasuries rallied, and stocks and the USD surged thereafter. WTI crude ends the week unchanged (against a USD gain of 1.37%) with PMs down 6-7%. Volume was light today but that doesn’t matter either.

 

It’s been quite a ride…

 

And everything enjoyed that last hour or so…

 

Financials smashed everyone else this week…

 

and JPM was the winner…

 

But financial stocks are now well ahead of financial credit…

 

Interestingly today did not see the ‘most shorted’ names get monkey-hammered instead just tracking higher in price with the market – it was Wednesday where the monkey-hammering occurred…

 

So what happened on Wednesday?

 

VIX didn’t like that late-day ramp at all..

 

Credit remains unimpressed…

Which, if we were gambling men, would suggest buying 3x HYG vs selling 1x SPY to take advantage of what is now a 6-sigma separation…

 

This was – perhaps surprisingly – the worst weekly drop in gold since Dec 2011 (worse than the crash week because we bounced so hard)… Gold closed -6.3%, Silver -7%.

 

And conveiently reminding us all that the markets are nothing but manipulated playing fields where roided up Barry Bonds hit homerun after homerun, and where central banks and algorithms toy with each other, one short second before the close, Anadarko traded from $90 to $0 in 50 milliseconds going from a $45 billion market cap company to $0. That’s a rate of $1 billion per millisecond and $1 trillion per second: just an advance notice. Charts from Nanex:

Still think you will be able to hit bids when the time to sell comes?

But “it doesn’t matter…”

Charts: Bloomberg and Capital Context

    



 
Frontrunning: May 17
  • Mine union threatens to bring South Africa to ‘standstill’ (Reuters)
  • Russia Raises Stakes in Syria (WSJ) – as reported here yesterday 
  • Japan buys into US shale gas boom (FT)
  • Bill Gates Retakes World’s Richest Title From Carlos Slim (BBG) – so he can afford a Tesla now?
  • (Read more…)

  • China Wages Rose Sharply in 2012 (WSJ)
  • Regulators Target Exchanges As They Ready Record Fine (WSJ)
  • Citi Takes Some Traders Off Bloomberg Chat Tool (WSJ)
  • After Google, Amazon to be grilled on UK tax presence (Reuters)
  • Apple CEO Cook to Propose Tax Reform for Offshore Cash (BBG)
  • French, German politicians to pressure Google on tax (Reuters)
  • Gold Bears Revived as Rout Resumes After Coin Rush (BBG)
  • A stretched Samsung chases rival Apple’s suppliers (Reuters)

 

Overnight Media Digest

WSJ

* Financial regulators are taking a harder line on exchanges amid concerns over their ability to police the markets they operate, as the SEC prepares to hit one with a record penalty. The deeper scrutiny has prompted some exchange officials to push back against a new regulatory stance that they say leaves them more vulnerable to potential penalties and sanctions.

* A so-so first quarter earnings season hasn’t dented investors’ enthusiasm for stocks. Profit at large U.S. companies modestly exceeded Wall Street analysts’ expectations, while revenue was weak and many companies ratcheted down growth projections. However stock prices have been rising, with the Dow Jones industrial average up 16 percent for the year and 4.2 percent since earnings season began April 8.

* The booming market for commercial-mortgage-backed securities (CMBS) is on the verge of passing a dubious milestone – losses on a class of bonds that have been popular with investors for the big returns they promised.

The securities, dubbed “AJ” have found favor with investors because they combine high payouts, or yield, and greater relative protection against losses than some other high-yielding securities. But now, the potential sale of a troubled Atlantic City luxury mall, named the Pier Shops at Caesars, could saddle investors with the first losses on AJ securities created during the U.S. housing boom. The property is on the block after an earlier sale fell through.

* The ousted chief executive of Tuesday Morning Corp , Kathleen Mason, is suing her former employer, alleging she was discriminated against after developing breast cancer.

* Eight members of Congress on Thursday asked Google Inc Chief Executive Larry Page to give assurances about privacy safeguards for the company’s high-profile Google Glass wearable-computing device.

The demands come as Google holds its annual developer conference in San Francisco, where it is coaching hundreds of developers on how to write programs for the device.

* Foreign-exchange traders at Citigroup Inc will soon move from Bloomberg LP’s chat tool to their own internal system, as part of a push to reduce data costs and migrate more people onto its own proprietary technology, people familiar with the bank’s plans said.

FT

George Osborne’s attempts to cut public spending by 11.5 billion pounds in election year has caused tensions in the cabinet as some ministers failed to provide the list of 10 percent departmental cuts he had ordered and another said he was “asking too much”.

Alternative asset manager Blackstone Group LP, is readying to launch a “super” hedge-fund, which will invite the numerous third-party hedge funds it invests with to submit their best trades in return for a fee.

Newly merged commodities group Glencore Xtrata Plc ousted its chairman on Thursday, replacing him with Tony Howard, the former BP Plc chief executive who was once known as the United States’ most hated man for his role in the Gulf of Mexico oil spill.

Dell Inc, which has been the subject of a takeover war between its founder Michael Dell and activist investor Carl Ichan, reported a 79 percent slide in first-quarter profit on Thursday, well below Wall Street expectations.

Citigroup Inc has stopped its foreign exchange traders from using chat rooms on their Bloomberg terminals but said that the decision was not related to the recent complaints regarding the access of private data by Bloomberg’s journalists.

ANA Holdings Inc, the world’s biggest operator of Boeing Co’s 787 Dreamliner, reported a problem with one of its test flights involving damage to an electrical distribution panel but said that it was not related to the newly modified battery system.

 

NYT

* Fred Eckert was once a star at Goldman Sachs, with a mansion and a collection of vintage cars; but by 2011, he was bankrupt, divorced and had spent two months in a coma. Today, he is planning a return to the arena.

* Google announced seven new apps for its Internet connected glasses, including ones from Facebook, Twitter, Tumblr, CNN, Elle and Evernote.

* Vast databases of patient and doctor information being used by drug makers let them know which medications physicians are prescribing and how they compare to colleagues.

* Two separate groups sent letters to Wal-Mart, Target, Sears and Gap, urging them to sign on to the factory safety plan that over 30 European retailers embraced this week.

* Foxconn Technology has made progress toward better safety conditions, but employees are still working longer than Chinese law allows.

* J C Penney’s former Chief Executive Myron Ullman, who is now its new chief executive, is reinstating old pricing and promotion policies to lure alienated customers back through its doors.

* The Bayonne Medical Center charged Medicare the highest amounts for about a quarter of the most common treatments, a Times analysis of 2011 data shows.

 

Canada

THE GLOBE AND MAIL

* Paul Godfrey has been ousted as chairman of Ontario’s lottery corporation, leaving his vision for a downtown Toronto casino in tatters and plans to overhaul the province’s gambling operations in disarray. The entire board of directors at the Ontario Lottery and Gaming Corp resigned in protest on Thursday evening, with six of them penning a letter to the Finance Minister saying they are shocked by Godfrey’s dismissal.

* Senator Mike Duffy is stepping down from the Conservative caucus, saying the ongoing controversy over his expenses has become a significant distraction to his colleagues and the government. Just days after being praised by the Conservative government for his “leadership” in paying back more than C$90,000 ($88,600) in expenses, Duffy will now sit as an independent as he faces various potential ethics probes.

Reports in the business section:

* Telus Corp’s C$380 million ($374.07 million)agreement to buy faltering carrier Mobilicity presents the federal government with a stark choice – admit failure in its years-long push to create more competition in the wireless business or try to salvage the goal of having at least four players in every regional market.

NATIONAL POST

* It is said that the way to a man’s heart is through his stomach, and Parti Québécois Premier Pauline Marois is hoping the same holds true for a nation. The polls have relegated her party’s dream of independence to the distant future, but that did not stop Marois from making a unilateral declaration of “food sovereignty” on Thursday. Fulfilling a promise from last summer’s election campaign, she announced a government policy aimed at achieving a 50 percent increase in the amount of locally produced food Quebecers eat.

* The fallout from Quebec’s corruption scandals has reached the epicentre of Canada’s Parliament, with the federal Opposition leader revealing on Thursday he once spoke to police about someone trying to pass him a suspicious-looking envelope. NDP Leader Tom Mulcair said he spoke to investigators two years ago about a 1994 meeting with the then mayor of Laval, Quebec, who has since resigned in scandal and been slapped with criminal charges.

FINANCIAL POST

* Prime Minister Stephen Harper is seeking to counter opposition to TransCanada Corp’s Keystone XL pipeline, a project crucial for boosting Canada’s economy and Harper’s plans to make the country an energy superpower to rival Saudi Arabia. Harper, at an event on Thursday moderated by former U.S. Treasury Secretary Robert Rubin for the Council on Foreign Relations in New York, said there is a strong case for the U.S. government to approve the pipeline, citing the prospects for job creation and North American energy independence.

China

CHINA SECURITIES JOURNAL

– New loans by China’s Shanghai Pudong Development Bank Co Ltd are expected to hit 190 billion yuan ($30.90 billion), while bad loans will remain above 0.75 percent in 2013, said Liu Xinyi, vice president of the bank.

– China’s government has allocated 58 billion yuan ($9.43 billion) for public rental housing projects in 2013.

SHANGHAI SECURITIES NEWS

– China will remove or reduce requirements for official approval for 117 “items”, according to a list published by the State Council on Thursday. The official China Daily added that 16 further items are pending decision. The items range from foreigners touring in their own vehicles to companies investing in large oil and gas fields.

SHANGHAI DAILY

– Shanghai authorities are considering reopening some of the city’s live poultry markets next month, after they were shut down in April and thousands of birds culled due to an outbreak of a bird flu virus. The move suggests that fears over the deadly outbreak are waning in China.

– Gold demand in China rose 20 percent in the first quarter of 2013 from a year ago to 294.3 tonnes, according to a report from the World Gold Council.

CHINA DAILY

– Sales of consumer goods in China will grow 13 percent in 2013, slower than previous years, according to a report released on Thursday by a department of China’s Ministry of Commerce. Zhao Ping, deputy director of the department, said the slowdown was linked to private spending rather than public funds becoming the main driver of consumption.

CHINANEWS.COM

– Thirty-three people have died and 12 are missing after storms battered southern China, the country’s civil affairs and disaster reduction authorities said on Thursday. Official news agency Xinhua also reported late Thursday night that some areas of Guangdong province had suffered the worst flooding in a century with close to 3,000 homes destroyed and 650,000 people affected in the region.

Corporate Finance

* Dish Network Corp has lined up four banks to finance its $25.5 billion bid for Sprint Nextel Corp, escalating the bidding war against Japanese telecom company SoftBank Corp, according to two people familiar with the matter.

* RP Martin Holdings Ltd, the British interdealer broker that became involved in the Libor fixing investigation when two of its employees were arrested in December, suspended its chief executive and a director on Wednesday, a source familiar with the matter told Reuters.

* The consortium of investors seeking to take over Severn Trent Plc offered just under 20 pounds per share for the British water company, valuing it at around 4.7 billion pounds ($7.16 billion), a source told Reuters on Wednesday.

* The Portuguese government and JPMorgan Chase & Co are attempting to resolve a tussle over potentially costly derivative contracts sold by the U.S. investment bank to state-owned companies, a source familiar with the situation said.

* Swiss drugmaker Roche Holding AG is exploring a sale of its blood glucose meters business, three people familiar with the matter told Reuters on Wednesday, as the industry grapples with increased competition and reimbursement pressure.

* Macquarie Group Ltd -backed Asian Pay Television Trust has priced its Singapore initial public offering at S$0.97 per unit, at the bottom of a narrowed marketing range, people familiar with the matter told Reuters on Thursday, raising $1.14 billion.

* Before Optimer Pharmaceuticals Inc even put itself up for sale earlier this year, Cubist Pharmaceuticals Inc offered to buy the antibiotic maker for $20 per share, or nearly $1 billion, two people familiar with the matter told Reuters on Wednesday.

* Bain Capital LLC has emerged as the last party standing in the race for Yankee Candle Co Inc, three people familiar with the matter said, making it likely that the largest scented candle maker in the United States will stay in private equity hands.

* Singapore’s Changi Airport Group has sold its 8.36 percent stake in Italy’s Generale Mobiliare Interessenze Azionarie SpA at 1.43 euros per share, a source close to the situation said on Wednesday.

* British tour operator Thomas Cook Group Plc will announce plans to raise about 400 million pounds ($609.02 million) through a placing and rights issue on Thursday, according to two travel industry sources.

* Austin Brown, a portfolio manager with a focus on metals at Caxton Associates, has left the London office of the $6 billion U.S. hedge fund, according to a source at the company.

* Publishing company Mecom Group Plc is set to appoint veteran investment banker Rory Macnamara as its chairman as it continues to restructure its business, the Financial Times reported, citing people close to the company

 

Fly On The Wall 7:00 AM Market Snapshot

ANALYST RESEARCH

Upgrades

Capella Education (CPLA) upgraded to Outperform from Market Perform at William Blair
Ctrip.com (CTRP) upgraded to Neutral from Sell at Citigroup
General Motors (GM) upgraded to Buy from Underperform at CLSA
Ruckus Wireless (RKUS) upgraded to Buy from Neutral at Goldman
Standard Pacific (SPF) upgraded to Buy from Fair Value at CRT Capital
Tetra Technologies (TTI) upgraded to Outperform from Sector Perform at RBC Capital
U.S. Silica (SLCA) upgraded to Outperform from Sector Perform at RBC Capital

Downgrades

Actuant (ATU) downgraded to Neutral from Buy at SunTrust
Aruba Networks (ARUN) downgraded to Equal Weight from Overweight at Morgan Stanley
Aruba Networks (ARUN) downgraded to Market Perform from Outperform at Wells Fargo
Aruba Networks (ARUN) downgraded to Neutral from Buy at Janney Capital
Aruba Networks (ARUN) downgraded to Perform from Outperform at Oppenheimer
CAE (CAE) downgraded to Sector Perform from Outperform at RBC Capital
City Holding (CHCO) downgraded to Market Perform from Outperform at Keefe Bruyette
Deere (DE) downgraded to Sell from Neutral at Goldman
Disney (DIS) downgraded to Neutral from Overweight at Atlantic Equities
HSBC (HBC) downgraded to Neutral from Outperform at Exane BNP Paribas
L Brands (ltd) downgraded to Underperform from Hold at Jefferies
Manning & Napier (MN) downgraded to Underperform from Neutral at BofA/Merrill
MeadWestvaco (MWV) downgraded to Underperform from Sector Perform at RBC Capital
National Grid (NGG) downgraded to Neutral from Outperform at Exane BNP Paribas
Savient (SVNT) downgraded to Market Perform from Outperform at William Blair
Stryker (SYK) downgraded to Reduce from Neutral at SunTrust
TRW Automotive (TRW) downgraded to Hold from Buy at Deutsche Bank
Universal Health (UHS) downgraded to Neutral from Positive at Susquehanna
Williams-Sonoma (WSM) downgraded to Neutral from Buy at BofA/Merrill
Zimmer (ZMH) downgraded to Reduce from Neutral at SunTrust

Initiations

Ambac Financial (AMBC) initiated with a Buy at BTIG
Cempra (CEMP) initiated with a Buy at Jefferies
Globus Medical (GMED) initiated with a Buy at WallachBeth
Infoblox (BLOX) initiated with a Buy at Needham
McCormick (MKC) initiated with a Neutral at Citigroup
NuVasive (NUVA) initiated with a Buy at WallachBeth
T-Mobile USA (TMUS) initiated with an Equal Weight at Barclays

HOT STOCKS

Northrop Grumman (NOC) announced additional $4B share repurchase authorization
Caterpillar (CAT), Mining Machinery resolved all outstanding issues
Dell (DELL) continues to expect “relatively weak” demand in end-user PC business
ING Groep (ING) to sell part of its direct stake in SulAmerica to International Finance Corp.
Yum! Brands (YUM) Taco Bell CEO sees doubling revenue to $14B in 10 years
Yahoo! (YHOO) granted favorable ruling in Mexico City superior court
Vascular Solutions (VASC) filed patent infringement complaint against Boston Scientific (BSX)

EARNINGS

Companies that beat consensus earnings expectations last night and today include:
SINA (SINA), Bona Film (BONA), ViaSat (VSAT), Xueda Education (XUE), Brocade (BRCD), Envestnet (ENV)

Companies that missed consensus earnings expectations include:
Stage Stores (SSI), J.C. Penney (JCP), SMART Technologies (SMT), 21Vianet (VNET), Nordstrom (JWN), Aruba Networks (ARUN), Autodesk (ADSK), Cosi (COSI), Dell (DELL)

NEWSPAPERS/WEBSITES

  • JPMorgan Chase (JPM), in a last-ditch effort to beat back activist investors, sent a letter to shareholders who have yet to vote on the nonbinding proposal ahead of the May 21 annual meeting, urging them to reject a proposal to split the chairman and CEO roles held by James Dimon, the Wall Street Journal reports
  • Amazon.com (AMZN) will be called back to the British parliament to clarify how its activities in the U.K. justify its low corporate income tax bill, Reuters reports
  • J.C. Penney (JCP) CEO Ullman says that the department store chain is emerging from what he called an abyss but warned he needs time to fix the issues of the retailer, Reuters reports
  • Apple (AAPL), which holds $102B in cash and investments outside the U.S., will suggest changes to corporate-tax laws to encourage companies to bring more cash into the country, Bloomberg reports
  • Fiat’s (FIATY) deliberations over moving its headquarters to the U.S. after a merger with Chrysler Group LLC. raised concern among Italian unions and politicians about the plans of the country’s biggest manufacturer. CEO Marchionne is considering the move because Fiat’s main sources of revenue and profit are shifting to North America, Bloomberg reports

SYNDICATE

Marketo (MKTO) 6.059M share IPO priced at $13.00
Stemline (STML) 4.14M share Secondary priced at $14.50
TC PipeLines (TCP) 7.7M share Secondary priced at $43.85
Tableau Software (DATA) 8.2M share IPO priced at $31.00
Tesla (TSLA) 2.7M share Secondary priced at $92.24
Triple-S (GTS) 5.4M share Secondary priced at $18.25

ACTIVIST/PASSIVE FILINGS

SAC Capital reports 5.0% passive stake in Tessera (TSRA)
Yucaipa wants Morgans Hotel (MHGC) meeting to reflect $7.50 per share offer