Wall Street Week Ahead: Stocks face choppy seas of bank woes, uncertainty


NEW YORK |
Fri May 11, 2012 9:38pm EDT

NEW YORK (Reuters) – More volatility could be in store for stocks next week as investors grapple with less certainty about the economic outlook and a new blow to the financial sector after JPMorgan Chase’s (JPM.N) trading loss.

Europe is expected to keep investors jumpy as well, with inconclusive results from the recent Greek election and the country’s future appearing more worrisome.

The economic picture appears cloudy these days, with some data showing a more positive trend and other reports showing the opposite. An index of consumer sentiment rose to its highest in a more than four years, but last week’s jobs report showed another monthly decline in hiring.

Next week brings minutes from the last Federal Reserve meeting, which investors will look to for more guidance on whether the central bank plans to give additional help to the economy.

Stocks closed lower for a second straight week on Friday after a week of choppy trading. Strategists say that’s likely to be the case again in days to come.

“Expect more volatility. We’re still seeing this natural risk aversion. We expect any source of bad news to trigger a sell-off, but we’re still not in a red-alert area,” said Omar Aguilar, chief investment officer of equities for Charles Schwab in San Francisco.

“The good economy in the U.S. is leading the way, with the Federal Reserve being very accommodating.”

Citigroup’s chief U.S. equity strategist, Tobias Levkovich, said the market has likely begun a pullback, and that the Standard Poor’s 500 index .SPX could fall 5 percent to 7 percent from its April 2nd intraday high of 1,422.

“We’re going to probably spend several months in kind of choppy trading,” he said.

News that JPMorgan Chase Co (JPM.N), the largest U.S. bank by assets, lost billions of dollar on bad trades raised fresh worries that the financial sector was not on the mend. The KBW bank index .BKX fell 1.2 percent for the day.

There’s likely to be more focus on the company next week. After the close of trading, Fitch Ratings cut JPMorgan’s credit rating one notch and cited the bank’s $2 billion trading loss, and Standard Poor’s revised its outlook of JPMorgan to negative.

The SP financial index .GSPF has lost ground since rallying 21.5 percent in the first quarter. The index is still up 13.6 percent since the start of the year.

MESSAGE FROM THE FED

Wall Street will scrutinize the minutes from the FOMC’s late April meeting, which the Fed will release on Wednesday at around 2 p.m. Eastern time.

At that April 24-25 meeting, the FOMC repeated its expectation that interest rates would not rise until late 2014 at the earliest, and it took no action on monetary policy.

But Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke spurred stock market gains when he told reporters on April 25 that “we remain entirely prepared to take additional balance-sheet actions as necessary to achieve our objectives. Those tools remained very much on the table and we would not hesitate to use them, should the economy require that additional support.”

More focus may be on the Fed and economic data next week, with the first-quarter U.S. earnings period nearly done. Ninety percent of SP 500 companies have already reported results.

Major retailers set to report earnings next week include Home Depot (HD.N), a Dow component, and JC Penney Co. (JCP.N), both on Tuesday, followed by Limited Brands (LTD.N), parent of Victoria’s Secret, and discount chain Target Corp (TGT.N) on Wednesday. Wal-Mart Stores, Inc (WMT.N), the world’s largest retailer and a Dow component, is set to report earnings on Thursday before the opening bell.

The week’s mostly closely watched economic indicators will include the U.S. Consumer Price Index and retail sales, both for April, on Tuesday, followed by April housing starts and April, industrial output and capacity utilization, all on Wednesday.

In Europe, problems with the Greek elections raised the risk of it exiting the euro zone.

“I think earnings and valuations are still very compelling. Unfortunately, what we’re looking at on earnings and valuations is going to be overshadowed by the fact that we’ve got these global issues we’re dealing with: Greece and France and their elections, and debt issues and the possible breakup of the euro,” said Evan Nowack, managing director at HighTower’s Leventhal Group in Bethesda, Maryland.

BEARISH PATTERN

Technical charts indicate bearishness ahead.

“My ‘bigger picture’ view is that in the near or intermediate term, further downside is favored,” said Chris Burba, short-term market technician at Standard Poor’s in New York.

SP 500 charts are showing a “head-and-shoulders top,” he said, noting that demand earlier this month was not strong enough to push the benchmark index above its April high.

He sees support just below 1,300, while resistance could come at 1,415 for the SP 500.

“The outlook stays bearish unless you get above 1,415,” Burba said.

(Wall St Week Ahead runs every Friday. Questions or comments on this column can be emailed to: caroline.valetkevitch(at)thomsonreuters.com)

(Reporting by Caroline Valetkevitch; Editing by Jan Paschal)

Article source: http://feeds.reuters.com/~r/reuters/businessNews/~3/Iuias60fJq4/us-usa-stocks-weekahead-idUSBRE84B01T20120512

British Pound: BOE Inflation Report, Euro Zone Debt Crisis in Focus

Wall Street Week Ahead: Stocks face choppy seas of bank woes, uncertaintyReuters

More volatility could be in store for stocks next week as investors grapple with less certainty about the economic …

Article source: http://finance.yahoo.com/news/british-pound-boe-inflation-report-011400691.html

JPMorgan shares plunge on loss

9f647  60161534 014661076 1 JPMorgan shares plunge on lossJPMorgan’s chief executive Jamie Dimon said “many errors” were made

Shares in JPMorgan Chase have dived 9% after the biggest US bank, revealed a trading loss of at least $2bn (£1.2bn)

Chief executive Jamie Dimon blamed “errors, sloppiness and bad judgement” for the losses and warned “it could get worse”.

The risky hedging strategy could cost the bank an additional $1bn, he added.

Mary Schapiro, the head of the US market regulator the Securities and Exchange Commission, said that “all the regulators are focused on this”.

But she did not give any more details about possible action by her agency.

Shares in other US banks fell, including Bank of America which lost 2.4%. European banking shares also suffered, with Barclays down more than 3.5% and Deutsche Bank falling 1.6%.

‘Self-inflicted’

Overall, after accounting for other gains, losses at JPMorgan’s chief investment office (CIO) are estimated to come in at $800m in the second quarter.

The strategy taken at the CIO unit, run by Ina Drew in New York and Achilles Macris in London, had been “riskier, more volatile and less effective” than previously believed, Mr Dimon said.

Continue reading the main story

Start Quote

Many Americans are likely to see the JPMorgan debacle as demonstrating the need for tougher rules – it blunts Mitt Romney’s offensive against red tape”

End Quote



“These were egregious mistakes,” he said. “They were self-inflicted and this is not how we want to run a business.

“It could get worse,” he warned. “This could go on for a little bit.”

The CIO is an arm of the bank used to make broad bets to hedge its portfolios of individual holdings. Hedging is an investment practice used to reduce the risk of price fluctuations to the value of an asset.

Attention has focused on the activities of Bruno Michel Iksil, a London-based JPMorgan trader known as the London Whale, who reportedly made big bets on the financial markets as part of this hedging strategy.

A report said that Mr Iksil was also nicknamed Voldemort, the nemesis of Harry Potter in the hugely successful books and films, due to his power within the markets.

A source close to the bank told the BBC: “We’re not talking about a rogue trader here. His was one trade in a big portfolio of trades. It was a global hedging strategy known by the bank but executed poorly. It failed.”

‘Too big to fail’

Peter Thal Larsen, assistant editor at Reuters Breaking Views, told the BBC: “Because JP Morgan is seen as one of the best run banks, it is a blow to all banks. If we can’t trust JP Morgan to get this right, then we can’t trust anyone else either.

Continue reading the main story

Start Quote

The shock evinced by Mr Dimon will reignite the debate about whether regulators need to take more decisive action to curb the complexity of investment banks”

End Quote



“There will be a renewed drive for politicians and for regulators to say, ‘Let’s make sure we restructure this industry, so that when banks get into trouble and lose a lot of money, we can be sure that we can wind them down and taxpayers don’t have to bail them out,’” he said.

The trading loss, revealed in a regulatory filing, is expected to hurt JPMorgan’s overall earnings in the quarter, and will come as an embarrassment to the bank.

It had emerged from the 2008 financial crisis in much better health than many of its rivals after avoiding risky investments that had hurt others.

“We will admit it, we will learn from it, we will fix it, and we will move on,” Mr Dimon said.

He added that the bank was trying to unload the portfolio in question in a “responsible” manner in order to minimise the cost to shareholders.

Mr Dimon said the type of trading that led to the loss would not be banned by the so-called Volcker rule, designed to censure certain types of trading by banks with their own money.

But he acknowledged that the errors would be particularly embarrassing, given his public criticism of the Volcker rule.

“It plays right into the hands of a bunch of pundits out there, but that’s life,” he said.

Article source: http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/business-18039744#sa-ns_mchannel=rss&ns_source=PublicRSS20-sa

JPMorgan shares plunge on loss

0a1b0  60161534 014661076 1 JPMorgan shares plunge on lossJPMorgan’s chief executive Jamie Dimon said “many errors” were made

Shares in JPMorgan Chase have dived 9% after the biggest US bank, revealed a trading loss of at least $2bn (£1.2bn)

Chief executive Jamie Dimon blamed “errors, sloppiness and bad judgement” for the losses and warned “it could get worse”.

The risky hedging strategy could cost the bank an additional $1bn, he added.

Mary Schapiro, the head of the US market regulator the Securities and Exchange Commission, said that “all the regulators are focused on this”.

But she did not give any more details about possible action by her agency.

Shares in other US banks fell, including Bank of America which lost 2.4%. European banking shares also suffered, with Barclays down more than 3.5% and Deutsche Bank falling 1.6%.

‘Self-inflicted’

Overall, after accounting for other gains, losses at JPMorgan’s chief investment office (CIO) are estimated to come in at $800m in the second quarter.

The strategy taken at the CIO unit, run by Ina Drew in New York and Achilles Macris in London, had been “riskier, more volatile and less effective” than previously believed, Mr Dimon said.

Continue reading the main story

Start Quote

Many Americans are likely to see the JPMorgan debacle as demonstrating the need for tougher rules – it blunts Mitt Romney’s offensive against red tape”

End Quote



“These were egregious mistakes,” he said. “They were self-inflicted and this is not how we want to run a business.

“It could get worse,” he warned. “This could go on for a little bit.”

The CIO is an arm of the bank used to make broad bets to hedge its portfolios of individual holdings. Hedging is an investment practice used to reduce the risk of price fluctuations to the value of an asset.

Attention has focused on the activities of Bruno Michel Iksil, a London-based JPMorgan trader known as the London Whale, who reportedly made big bets on the financial markets as part of this hedging strategy.

A report said that Mr Iksil was also nicknamed Voldemort, the nemesis of Harry Potter in the hugely successful books and films, due to his power within the markets.

A source close to the bank told the BBC: “We’re not talking about a rogue trader here. His was one trade in a big portfolio of trades. It was a global hedging strategy known by the bank but executed poorly. It failed.”

‘Too big to fail’

Peter Thal Larsen, assistant editor at Reuters Breaking Views, told the BBC: “Because JP Morgan is seen as one of the best run banks, it is a blow to all banks. If we can’t trust JP Morgan to get this right, then we can’t trust anyone else either.

Continue reading the main story

Start Quote

The shock evinced by Mr Dimon will reignite the debate about whether regulators need to take more decisive action to curb the complexity of investment banks”

End Quote



“There will be a renewed drive for politicians and for regulators to say, ‘Let’s make sure we restructure this industry, so that when banks get into trouble and lose a lot of money, we can be sure that we can wind them down and taxpayers don’t have to bail them out,’” he said.

The trading loss, revealed in a regulatory filing, is expected to hurt JPMorgan’s overall earnings in the quarter, and will come as an embarrassment to the bank.

It had emerged from the 2008 financial crisis in much better health than many of its rivals after avoiding risky investments that had hurt others.

“We will admit it, we will learn from it, we will fix it, and we will move on,” Mr Dimon said.

He added that the bank was trying to unload the portfolio in question in a “responsible” manner in order to minimise the cost to shareholders.

Mr Dimon said the type of trading that led to the loss would not be banned by the so-called Volcker rule, designed to censure certain types of trading by banks with their own money.

But he acknowledged that the errors would be particularly embarrassing, given his public criticism of the Volcker rule.

“It plays right into the hands of a bunch of pundits out there, but that’s life,” he said.

Article source: http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/business-18039744#sa-ns_mchannel=rss&ns_source=PublicRSS20-sa

Wall Street rises at the end of a soft week


NEW YORK |
Fri May 11, 2012 1:37pm EDT

NEW YORK (Reuters) – Stocks edged up on Friday after a strong outlook from chipmaker Nvidia and surprisingly robust consumer confidence offset a slide in bank shares after disclosures of huge trading losses at JPMorgan Chase Co.

JPMorgan (JPM.N) said it lost at least $2 billion from a failed hedging strategy. The Dow component was down 7.3 percent at $37.76 and weighed on the entire sector.

Nvidia Corp (NVDA.O) rose 8.3 percent to $13.45 after reporting adjusted first-quarter earnings that beat expectations. The stock boosted the Nasdaq and was the SP 500′s top percentage gainer.

U.S. consumer sentiment rose to its highest in more than four years in early May as Americans remained upbeat about the job market. The survey was a welcome sign amid worries that the economic recovery may be slowing down.

“It sort of runs against expectations,” said Sean Incremona, an economist at 4Cast in New York. “We were looking for a bit of a pullback here but consumers appear to be happy.”

Still, the SP 500 was on track for its second weekly decline, although investors were encouraged after the index has rebounded from 2-month lows hit on Wednesday and looks set to close once again above April lows.

Marc Pado, a U.S. market strategist at DowBull.com in San Francisco, said traders had helped the market bounce by closing short positions – bets that stocks will fall – after gains at the start of May.

“The trader types see that we came down to that 1,340 area on the SP 500, started to bounce, started to see some buying, some bottom fishing, then you got that consumer sentiment number and that was compelling enough,” he said,

The Dow Jones industrial average .DJI was up 5.41 points, or 0.04 percent, at 12,860.45. The Standard Poor’s 500 Index .SPX was up 1.30 points, or 0.10 percent, at 1,359.29. The Nasdaq Composite Index .IXIC was up 15.16 points, or 0.52 percent, at 2,948.80.

JPMorgan estimates the business unit involved in the trading loss will lose $800 million in the current quarter, excluding private equity results and litigation expenses. The bank had previously expected the unit to earn a profit of about $200 million.

Jamie Dimon, the chief executive of the biggest U.S. bank by assets, cautioned that losses could grow by another $1 billion, another hurdle for a sector already besieged by the sovereign debt crisis in Europe and fears of slowing growth globally.

JP Morgan’s news weighed on bank shares as investors feared both a greater risk of more regulation and the potential for more such losses at other banks. However, the stocks were off their lows of the morning.

Citigroup Inc (C.N) lost 3.2 percent to $29.67 and the Financial Select Sector SPDR (XLF.P) was off 0.4 percent to $14.72. The SP financial sector .GSPF fell 0.5 percent, extending its month-to-date losses to 3.4 percent.

“There is no investment bank in the country that is more respected and viewed as more capable of dealing with risk management than JP Morgan,” said Jack De Gan, chief investment officer at Harbor Advisory Corp in Portsmouth, New Hampshire.

“This makes it clear that derivatives are risky for anybody to run and we have to be more careful with exposing the system to the risk of derivatives,” he said.

Financial stocks have been among the most volatile in recent months as investors question what the growth outlook for the United States and the debt crisis of Europe will mean for the group’s profits. JPMorgan has fallen 12.2 percent this month.

The CBOE VIX Volatility Index .VIX is up 9 percent this month in a sign of growing caution, although it eased somewhat on Friday.

Thomson Reuters/University of Michigan’s preliminary consumer confidence index for May improved to 77.8 from 76.4 in April, topping forecasts of 76.2.

Of the 453 companies in the SP 500 that have reported earnings to date for Q1 2012, 66.2 percent have reported earnings above analyst expectations, according to Thomson Reuters data.

That compares with more than 80 percent at the start of earnings season and is below the average for the past 4 quarters of 68 percent.

Shares of Arena Pharmaceuticals Inc (ARNA.O) rose 64.5 percent to $6.01 after a panel of experts recommended approval of the company’s obesity pill, a big step toward making it the first new diet drug on the U.S. market in more than a decade. The stock was the most actively traded on the Nasdaq composite.

(Editing by Dave Zimmerman)

Article source: http://feeds.reuters.com/~r/reuters/businessNews/~3/oD9e-np6zQY/us-markets-stocks-idUSBRE8490K020120511

Wall Street rises at the end of a soft week


NEW YORK |
Fri May 11, 2012 1:37pm EDT

NEW YORK (Reuters) – Stocks edged up on Friday after a strong outlook from chipmaker Nvidia and surprisingly robust consumer confidence offset a slide in bank shares after disclosures of huge trading losses at JPMorgan Chase Co.

JPMorgan (JPM.N) said it lost at least $2 billion from a failed hedging strategy. The Dow component was down 7.3 percent at $37.76 and weighed on the entire sector.

Nvidia Corp (NVDA.O) rose 8.3 percent to $13.45 after reporting adjusted first-quarter earnings that beat expectations. The stock boosted the Nasdaq and was the SP 500′s top percentage gainer.

U.S. consumer sentiment rose to its highest in more than four years in early May as Americans remained upbeat about the job market. The survey was a welcome sign amid worries that the economic recovery may be slowing down.

“It sort of runs against expectations,” said Sean Incremona, an economist at 4Cast in New York. “We were looking for a bit of a pullback here but consumers appear to be happy.”

Still, the SP 500 was on track for its second weekly decline, although investors were encouraged after the index has rebounded from 2-month lows hit on Wednesday and looks set to close once again above April lows.

Marc Pado, a U.S. market strategist at DowBull.com in San Francisco, said traders had helped the market bounce by closing short positions – bets that stocks will fall – after gains at the start of May.

“The trader types see that we came down to that 1,340 area on the SP 500, started to bounce, started to see some buying, some bottom fishing, then you got that consumer sentiment number and that was compelling enough,” he said,

The Dow Jones industrial average .DJI was up 5.41 points, or 0.04 percent, at 12,860.45. The Standard Poor’s 500 Index .SPX was up 1.30 points, or 0.10 percent, at 1,359.29. The Nasdaq Composite Index .IXIC was up 15.16 points, or 0.52 percent, at 2,948.80.

JPMorgan estimates the business unit involved in the trading loss will lose $800 million in the current quarter, excluding private equity results and litigation expenses. The bank had previously expected the unit to earn a profit of about $200 million.

Jamie Dimon, the chief executive of the biggest U.S. bank by assets, cautioned that losses could grow by another $1 billion, another hurdle for a sector already besieged by the sovereign debt crisis in Europe and fears of slowing growth globally.

JP Morgan’s news weighed on bank shares as investors feared both a greater risk of more regulation and the potential for more such losses at other banks. However, the stocks were off their lows of the morning.

Citigroup Inc (C.N) lost 3.2 percent to $29.67 and the Financial Select Sector SPDR (XLF.P) was off 0.4 percent to $14.72. The SP financial sector .GSPF fell 0.5 percent, extending its month-to-date losses to 3.4 percent.

“There is no investment bank in the country that is more respected and viewed as more capable of dealing with risk management than JP Morgan,” said Jack De Gan, chief investment officer at Harbor Advisory Corp in Portsmouth, New Hampshire.

“This makes it clear that derivatives are risky for anybody to run and we have to be more careful with exposing the system to the risk of derivatives,” he said.

Financial stocks have been among the most volatile in recent months as investors question what the growth outlook for the United States and the debt crisis of Europe will mean for the group’s profits. JPMorgan has fallen 12.2 percent this month.

The CBOE VIX Volatility Index .VIX is up 9 percent this month in a sign of growing caution, although it eased somewhat on Friday.

Thomson Reuters/University of Michigan’s preliminary consumer confidence index for May improved to 77.8 from 76.4 in April, topping forecasts of 76.2.

Of the 453 companies in the SP 500 that have reported earnings to date for Q1 2012, 66.2 percent have reported earnings above analyst expectations, according to Thomson Reuters data.

That compares with more than 80 percent at the start of earnings season and is below the average for the past 4 quarters of 68 percent.

Shares of Arena Pharmaceuticals Inc (ARNA.O) rose 64.5 percent to $6.01 after a panel of experts recommended approval of the company’s obesity pill, a big step toward making it the first new diet drug on the U.S. market in more than a decade. The stock was the most actively traded on the Nasdaq composite.

(Editing by Dave Zimmerman)

Article source: http://feeds.reuters.com/~r/reuters/businessNews/~3/oD9e-np6zQY/us-markets-stocks-idUSBRE8490K020120511

Euro near 3-1/2-month low vs dollar as Greece churns

By Julie Haviv

NEW YORK (Reuters) – The euro hovered near a 3-1/2-month low in volatile trade on Friday as political uncertainty in Greece and hefty losses disclosed by U.S. bank JPMorgan Chase spurred a rise in risk aversion.

The euro has dropped against the dollar in eight of 10 sessions for a cumulative 2.4 percent decline as investors have focused on Greece, where inconclusive election results last Sunday threw the country into political disarray and raised the risk of it exiting the euro zone and the European Union.

“If the same thing happens in the second round and you do not get a government in Greece, we think that will weigh on the euro,” said Tom Higgins, global macro strategist at Standish Mellon Asset Management in Boston, which has assets under management of about $92 billion and is currently shorting the euro against the dollar.

The euro last traded little changed at $1.2936 after earlier hitting a trough of $1.2905, its lowest level since January 23.

Recent economic data has pointed to recession across Europe and could cause the European Central Bank to take action sooner rather than later, compared with the United States, which is still seeing growth, although at a slower rate.

“I think those factors are all going to come together to lead to a further down leg in the euro,” said Higgins. “We would target something in the low to mid-1.20s over the next six to 12 months.”

The euro did get some support on Friday after Greek conservative leader Antonis Samaras said there were still hopes a government could be formed. But it later moved lower when the leader of the moderate Democratic Left said Greece was heading for a repeat poll.

The euro and growth-linked currencies were already under pressure as investors shunned risk after JPMorgan Chase Co (JPM.N) said it suffered a trading loss of at least $2 billion from a failed hedging strategy.

Analysts said many market players were resigned to further political uncertainty in Greece, meaning the euro would probably grind lower against the dollar rather than drop suddenly.

Options market participants are betting on more euro weakness, with three-month risk reversals showing a firm bias for puts, trading -2.7 vols, flat from Thursday, but up from -2.325 vols a week earlier and -2.150 vols at the start of the month.

“The market does not feel there’s any sense of urgency; investors have come round to the idea of the probability of another election,” said Derek Halpenny, European head of currency research at Bank of Tokyo-Mitsubishi.

“But the net result is we are in a far worse position now than prior to the election. The probability of Greece not being in the single currency by the end of this year is considerably higher and that eliminates risks to the upside in euro/dollar for the next few months.”

Mounting concerns about the Spanish banking sector and the government’s ability to check its budget deficit also weighed on the euro and left investors fretting about whether the debt crisis will ensnare Spain, the euro zone’s fourth-largest economy.

Data showing that U.S. consumer confidence hit a more than four-year high in early May gave a brief boost to the dollar against the yen, though that support was fleeting. The dollar was last little changed at 79.87.

Separate U.S. data showed producer prices unexpectedly fell in April, a sign of easing inflation pressures that could give the Federal Reserve more room to help the economy should growth weaken.

(Additional reporting by Nick Olivari and Wanfeng Zhou; Editing by Leslie Adler)

Article source: http://finance.yahoo.com/news/euro-steady-near-3-1-012432227.html

Euro near 3-1/2-month low vs dollar as Greece churns

By Julie Haviv

NEW YORK (Reuters) – The euro hovered near a 3-1/2-month low in volatile trade on Friday as political uncertainty in Greece and hefty losses disclosed by U.S. bank JPMorgan Chase spurred a rise in risk aversion.

The euro has dropped against the dollar in eight of 10 sessions for a cumulative 2.4 percent decline as investors have focused on Greece, where inconclusive election results last Sunday threw the country into political disarray and raised the risk of it exiting the euro zone and the European Union.

“If the same thing happens in the second round and you do not get a government in Greece, we think that will weigh on the euro,” said Tom Higgins, global macro strategist at Standish Mellon Asset Management in Boston, which has assets under management of about $92 billion and is currently shorting the euro against the dollar.

The euro last traded little changed at $1.2936 after earlier hitting a trough of $1.2905, its lowest level since January 23.

Recent economic data has pointed to recession across Europe and could cause the European Central Bank to take action sooner rather than later, compared with the United States, which is still seeing growth, although at a slower rate.

“I think those factors are all going to come together to lead to a further down leg in the euro,” said Higgins. “We would target something in the low to mid-1.20s over the next six to 12 months.”

The euro did get some support on Friday after Greek conservative leader Antonis Samaras said there were still hopes a government could be formed. But it later moved lower when the leader of the moderate Democratic Left said Greece was heading for a repeat poll.

The euro and growth-linked currencies were already under pressure as investors shunned risk after JPMorgan Chase Co (JPM.N) said it suffered a trading loss of at least $2 billion from a failed hedging strategy.

Analysts said many market players were resigned to further political uncertainty in Greece, meaning the euro would probably grind lower against the dollar rather than drop suddenly.

Options market participants are betting on more euro weakness, with three-month risk reversals showing a firm bias for puts, trading -2.7 vols, flat from Thursday, but up from -2.325 vols a week earlier and -2.150 vols at the start of the month.

“The market does not feel there’s any sense of urgency; investors have come round to the idea of the probability of another election,” said Derek Halpenny, European head of currency research at Bank of Tokyo-Mitsubishi.

“But the net result is we are in a far worse position now than prior to the election. The probability of Greece not being in the single currency by the end of this year is considerably higher and that eliminates risks to the upside in euro/dollar for the next few months.”

Mounting concerns about the Spanish banking sector and the government’s ability to check its budget deficit also weighed on the euro and left investors fretting about whether the debt crisis will ensnare Spain, the euro zone’s fourth-largest economy.

Data showing that U.S. consumer confidence hit a more than four-year high in early May gave a brief boost to the dollar against the yen, though that support was fleeting. The dollar was last little changed at 79.87.

Separate U.S. data showed producer prices unexpectedly fell in April, a sign of easing inflation pressures that could give the Federal Reserve more room to help the economy should growth weaken.

(Additional reporting by Nick Olivari and Wanfeng Zhou; Editing by Leslie Adler)

Article source: http://finance.yahoo.com/news/euro-steady-near-3-1-012432227.html

Clinton Cards in administration


c235d  60124933 clintons Clinton Cards in administration

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The BBC’s Emma Simpson says things have taken a dramatic turn for Clinton Cards

Troubled retailer Clinton Cards has been placed in adminstration, after its largest supplier took steps to begin the process earlier on Wednesday.

Clinton had already asked for trading in its shares to be suspended before the administration announcement.

It said two of its banks sold £35m of loans to supplier American Greetings.

While the banks had waived certain conditions for the loans, American Greetings had pressed for repayments that Clinton Cards could not meet.

Founded in 1968, it is the UK’s biggest card retailer, operating 628 Clinton shops and 139 Birthdays stores and employing more than 8,000 staff.

In March, Clinton reported a loss of £3.7m for the six months to the end of January and said the outlook for 2012 was worse than previously thought.

On Wednesday, it said like-for-like sales, which strip out the impact of sales from shops opened or closed in the past year, fell 3.5% in the past 14 weeks compared with a year earlier.

Loan enforcement

The company said Barclays Bank and Royal Bank of Scotland had sold its loan facilities to American Greetings.

It said that although it had not breached any covenants or repayment obligations, it had been given certain temporary waivers for “technical breaches” by the banks.

Clinton said it had originally believed that American Greetings would extend these waivers.

“However, having secured control of the debt, American Greetings immediately informed the board that it intended to enforce the loan against the company,” the retailer said in a statement earlier on Wednesday.

“The board has concluded that because it is unable to repay the loan, it has no option but to concur with American Greetings’ proposal to place the company and its subsidiaries into administration.”

Clinton has been restructuring its business to try and turn around its fortunes, including closing a number of Clinton and Birthdays-branded UK stores.

Article source: http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/business-18002413#sa-ns_mchannel=rss&ns_source=PublicRSS20-sa

Wall Street rebounds from lows as Greek worry ebbs


NEW YORK |
Wed May 9, 2012 12:42pm EDT

NEW YORK (Reuters) – Stocks rebounded from session lows on Wednesday as optimism grew that Greece was likely to get a bailout payment approved.

Stocks had tumbled more than 1 percent earlier in the session, with the SP 500 hitting a two-month low over concerns about political uncertainty in Greece and Spain’s weak banks.

The yield on the 10-year Spanish bond climbed over 6 percent, seen as a troublesome level among investors, after Spain came up with a plan to demand banks set aside another 35 billion euros ($45 billion) against loans to the ailing building sector. Huge bank losses have raised fears that the country may need an international bailout.

But worries about the region eased as sources said the board of the euro zone’s EFSF fund was more likely than not to approve the payment of 5.2 billion euros ($6.8 billion) to Greece. The approval was deemed likely despite Greece’s recent election in which the country’s pro-bailout parties were denied a majority by other political parties that had rejected the bailout’s strict austerity terms.

“What happens is that every time there are these problems in Europe, it gets very, very dark and then someone pulls a solution out of the hat,” said Stephen Massocca, managing director at Wedbush Morgan in San Francisco.

“That is creating some complacency here. People think, ‘Oh, this Greek thing is going to get worked out.’”

U.S.-listed shares of Banco Santander SA (STD.N) dropped 5.3 percent to $6.03 while the FTSEurofirst 300 index .FTEU3 ended at its lowest level in four months. .EU

The recent turmoil in Europe has moved to the forefront of investor focus and has helped drive Wall Street’s slide, with the benchmark SP 500 index down five of the last six sessions as earnings season winds down and few domestic economic indicators are released.

The Dow Jones industrial average .DJI dropped 106.19 points, or 0.82 percent, to 12,825.90. The Standard Poor’s 500 Index .SPX lost 10.45 points, or 0.77 percent, to 1,353.27. The Nasdaq Composite Index .IXIC slipped 18.75 points, or 0.64 percent, to 2,927.51.

Walt Disney Co (DIS.N) reported quarterly earnings that beat expectations late Tuesday on strong theme park attendance and higher cable network advertising revenue. Shares of Disney, a Dow component, rose 2.2 percent to $45.26, after earlier hitting a lifetime high at $45.80. The success of its superhero movie, “The Avengers,” also helped bolster Disney’s stock.

Macy’s Inc (M.N) earnings rose more than expected, but the stock fell 3.5 percent to $38.12 on disappointment that the department-store chain didn’t change its outlook.

With 441 of the SP 500 companies reporting results through Wednesday morning, 66.7 percent exceeded estimates, according to Thomson Reuters data. At the start of earnings season, more than 80 percent had beaten estimates.

Yahoo Inc (YHOO.O) slipped 0.4 percent to $15.30. Company director Patti Hart, who led the hiring process of Chief Executive Scott Thompson, will leave the board as the Internet company investigates Thompson’s educational credentials, sources said.

(Reporting by Chuck Mikolajczak; Editing by Jan Paschal)

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