• 01Jun

    U.S. Regulators Close Five More Banks
        * EverBank
        * Bank of Florida
        * Granite Community Bank
        * City National Bank
        * Sun West Bank

    The U.S. state and federal regulators have shut down five banks in Florida, California and Nevada, The Wall Street Journal reports. The closure has brought the nationwide total of failed institutions until May 2010 to 78.

    EverBank of Jacksonville will buy the banking operations of the three units of Bank of Florida, including a combined $1.32 billion in deposits. The regulators have also seized California-based Granite Community Bank, which will be taken over by Tri Counties Bank. The Los Angeles-based City National Bank will acquire the Sun West Bank, which has $353.9 million in deposits.

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  • 29May

    LULU, BIDU, NFLX, CMG, IDSA, MED, BOFI, DECK, DGIT, MELI, ULTA: IBD 100 Top 10 for the week of May 31

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  • 20May

     

    How Low Can the Market Go? Pros Say Slide Hasn’t Stopped

     
    With technical barriers continuing to give way and the March 6 “flash-crash” fluke looking like not so much of a fluke anymore, market watchers were left Thursday wondering how much worse things could get.
    Forecasts varied substantially but few thought there was much to stand in the way of a further move down that would bring the major indexes officially into correction territory, or 10 percent off their most recent highs.

    Standard & Poor’s said the correction could total 15 percent by the time all is said and done, sending its benchmark S&P 500 (INDEX: .SPX) to the 940 range.

    Others weren’t quite so pessimistic, but worry seemed to be the word as a confluence of bad news proved a toxic mix that ended a powerful 14-month rally.

    “I would have preferred a pullback that was a little more controlled and a little less news-oriented…something that was orderly and maybe just due to people taking profits and becoming a little more conservative,” says Richard Sparks, senior analyst at Schaeffer’s Investment Research in Cincinnati. “This feels a little out of control at this point.”

     

    Expressing a common sentiment among traders, Sparks says the S&P is likely to visit the 1050-1060 range before turning around.

    Trading-floor technicians had been looking at 1100-the 200-day moving average-as a key support level for the S&P 500. The point has held up well during recent market dips off the rally that began from the brutal lows of March 2009.

    But 1100 came and went Thursday as markets worried about whether European debt problems would spread to the US and how new financial regulations would hurt banks.

    It all harkened back to May 6, the day of the so-called “flash crash” when the Dow temporarily lost nearly 1,000 points. Written off by some as an anomaly-caused either by a trader mistake such as a “fat finger” and duress from electronic trading triggers-the averages in fact have fallen below the closing levels of that tumultuous day and threaten to drop even lower.

     

    “The flash-crash kind of worried me from the standpoint that not only did they not know exactly why it happened, but if you don’t know why it happened you can’t prevent it from happening again,” Sparks says.

    Many traders see the market drop as a normal part of the process after such a relentless rally. Yet even among that group, the flash-crash represents a signature moment.

    “Our first level of support should be that fat-finger low,” says Todd Horwitz, a trader and chief strategist for the Adam Mesh Trading Group. “No matter what they blame it on, no matter what the story is, that’s the footprint they put into the market.”

    In fact, Horwitz thinks the market could fall to the intraday lows of the flash crash-or 1065 for the S&P and 9869 for the Dow (INDEX: .DJIA).

     

    “The market overall is in a downtrend. The trend has changed from a couple weeks ago when we finally peaked out,” Horwitz says. “Volatility is increasing here in the market. There’s a lot more fear versus the complacency we had back then.”

    To be sure, not everyone was looking on the recent correction-level drop as bad thing.

    After all, technicians for months have been saying the market was overbought and a true correction actually would be constructive. A leg lower, they reasoned, would be a good entry point for investors who missed the rally.

    “It’s not clearly indicating a ’sell’ signal for us. It could easily be a ‘buy’ signal,” says Dave Lutz, managing director of trading at Stifel Nicolaus in Baltimore. “Consolidation pullbacks make perfect sense so everybody can take a look back and re-evaluate the levels where we are and re-evaluate the macro picture.”

    But the market faces a slew of pressures-geopolitical and domestic events that are forcing technical levels.

     

    “Mutual fund managers have virtually no cash-they’re fully invested,” says Rick Bensignor, chief market strategist at Execution Noble in New York. “In order to handle redemptions, that requires them to sell stock to raise cash. That selling is going to add more selling pressure to the market.”

    While technical levels will trigger automated electronic selling programs, Bensignor points out that fundamentals drive the sentiment that pushes the market to those technical points.

    “There are real problems going on in the world right now,” says Bensignor, who thinks the S&P is likely to hit 1060 but will plunge to 950 should it fail that test. “Technicals are a reflection of behavior and it’s just trying to use charts to anticipate where the behavior is. My best guess is it’s in the process of shifting areas, and it could fall swiftly.”

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  • 18May

    America’s Underclass: Growing Gap Between the Rich and Poor
    Macro economic data suggest the great recession is over. But the gap between the haves and the have-nots is growing, thanks, in large part, to a jobless recovery. Wall Street Cheat Sheet’s Damien Hoffman says the growing underclass now accounts for about 10% of the U.S. population.

    In this clip, he and his brother Derek, who jointly run the Wall Street Cheat Sheet website, point to several signs America is turning into a two-class society:  

    -The foreclosure problem. 2.8 million homes were foreclosed in 2009.  RealyTrac expects that number to increase to 3-3.5 million in 2010.  Damien Hoffman thinks it could be even higher if “strategic foreclosures” become a more accepted practice.
    - Unemployment.  The official rate is 9.9% but the wider measure of under employed and those who have given up on their job search is more like 17%.   That’s more than 24 million Americans out of work.
    - Record numbers using food stamps. The Agriculture Department said a record 40 million Americans, or 1 in 8 Americans, may not be able to eat without government assistance.  “This is the ultimate sign of an under class,”  the Hoffman Brothers say.
    - Take a look at Dollar Tree Stores. The discounter’s stock is near an all-time high while revenues are up 12.5% this year.  In other words, more Americans are chasing cheaper goods.

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  • 16May

    Bank Failures outpace 2009’s default rate
    State regulators closed four community banks Friday, bringing the total number of failed banks for 2010 to 72. Year-to-date bank failures were more than double the pace for the same period in 2009, when there were 33 bank closures.

    Midwest Bank & Trust
    The largest bank failure on Friday was Midwest Bank & Trust of Elmwood Park, Ill, which was the main subsidiary of Midwest Banc Holdings (MBHI).

    After state regulators took over the institution, the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation was appointed receiver and sold Midwest to FirstMerit Bank, NA of Akron, Ohio, which is held by FirstMerit Corp (FMER).
    While Midwest Bank & Trust faced mounting loan losses, the deterioration of the bank’s capital first came to a head when the government-sponsored mortgage giants Fannie Mae (FNM) and Freddie Mac (FRE) were placed under government conservatorship in September 2008. On the holding company level, Midwest Banc Holdings reported total 2008 losses and impairment charges of nearly $82 million on the company’s investments in preferred shares of Fannie and Freddie.
    FirstMerit paid the FDIC a premium of 0.4% for Midwest Bank & Trust’s $2.4 billion in deposits, and the FDIC agreed to share in losses on $2.3 billion of the assets First Merit acquired. Midwest’s 23 offices were scheduled to reopen Saturday as FirstMerit branches.

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  • 15May

    Bank-Failures swell to 72 for 2010
    State regulators shuttered small banks in Illinois, Missouri, Georgia and Michigan, including a 23-branch community bank that failed despite having received an infusion from the government’s Troubled Asset Relief Program.

    So far this year, 72 banks have collapsed and the spate of failures is expected to continue throughout 2010. Although there are signs that the worst of the financial crisis may be over for the banking industry, financial institutions are still being battered by severe losses on mortgages and commercial real-estate loans.

    In the largest of Friday’s closures, Illinois regulators closed Midwest Bank & Trust Co. of Elmwood Park. FirstMerit Corp., based in Akron, Ohio, agreed to take over Midwest’s 23 branches, $2.42 billion in deposits and essentially all of its $3.17 billion in assets.

    Midwest had been warning for months that it was in dire financial straits. On Thursday, the bank said in a securities filing that it would likely be placed into receivership because it had been unable to raise fresh capital after a previous plan had been rejected by the Federal Reserve.

    Its failure is a financial blow to the government, which had previously swapped the preferred shares that it held in Midwest for common shares. The government had received the preferred shares when it injected Midwest with $84.8 million of TARP funds. Common shareholders typically are wiped out when a bank fails.

    FirstMerit, which has been a bidder on other failed banks, agreed to pay the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. a premium of 0.4% for Midwest’s deposits. FirstMerit also entered into a loss-sharing transaction on $2.27 billion of Midwest’s assets.

    As part of the deal, the FDIC will receive a so-called value appreciation instrument, which will provide the agency with additional money if FirstMerit’s share price rises over a certain amount of time.

    Midwest was the 11th bank to fail in Illinois so far this year.

    Elsewhere, regulators in Georgia, Illinois and Michigan closed three one-branch banks.

    In Georgia, state regulators seized Satilla Community Bank, of Saint Marys, Ga. Ameris Bank, based in Moultrie, Ga., agreed to assume all of the deposits and most of its assets. Satilla had $135.7 million in assets and $134 million in deposits at March 31.

    Ameris, which is paying a premium of 0.19% to assume Satilla’s deposits, also entered into a loss-sharing agreement with the FDIC. It was the eighth bank failure of the year in Georgia.

    Michigan regulators closed Plymouth-based New Liberty Bank, which had roughly $109.1 million in assets and $101.8 million in deposits. Bank of Ann Arbor, based in Ann Arbor, assumed all of the deposits and agreed to buy nearly all of the assets. It didn’t pay a premium for the deposits.

    In Missouri, regulators closed Southwest Community Bank, based in Springfield. Its $96.6 million in assets and $102.5 million in deposits are being assumed by Simmons First National Bank, of Pine Bluff, Ark.

    The FDIC estimated the four failures would cost $301.7 million to its deposit insurance fund.

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  • 07Jan

     JANUARY 7, 2010, 1:33 A.M. ET

    China Raises Key Interbank Rate

    China’s central bank unexpectedly raised a key interbank market interest rate Thursday for the first time in nearly five months, signaling a change in its policy focus toward pre-empting inflation risks in the new year.

    The tightening move, in the form of a higher yield in its weekly bill sale, came less than a day after the People’s Bank of China hinted its priorities had shifted toward managing inflation expectations and away from single-mindedly supporting economic growth.

    It also shows the PBOC still prefers using liquidity management tools, rather than policy interest rates, to guide market funding costs.

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  • 19Dec

     

     

    Seven U.S. banks closed by regulators 140 have failed in 2009

     

    Seven U.S. banks were closed by regulators on Friday, bring the total this year to 140 as the effects of the credit crisis continued to be felt across the country.

    What’s more, the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. established temporary institutions to help close two of the failed banks.

    Atlanta-based RockBridge Commercial Bank became the 25th Georgia-based bank to fail this year. The FDIC was unable to find another institution to take over the failed bank, and so will mail checks to retail depositors for insured funds.

    RockBridge Commercial Bank had roughly $294 million in assets and $291.7 million in deposits as of Sept. 30. Its failure will cost the federal deposit-insurance fund $124.2 million, the regulator said.

    Panama City, Fla.-based Peoples First Community Bank became the 14th to fail in that state in 2009. Peoples First Community Bank had $1.7 billion in deposits as of Sept. 30, and Gulfport, Miss.-based Hancock Bank has agreed to assume those deposits.

    Peoples First Community Bank’s failure will cost the deposit-insurance fund $556.7 million, according to the FDIC.

    New Baltimore, Mich.-based Citizens State Bank’s failure will cost the deposit-insurance fund $76.6 million, with the FDIC creating the Deposit Insurance National Bank of New Baltimore to protect depositors of Citizens State Bank.

    The new bank will remain open for 45 days to allow depositors to access insured deposits and open an account elsewhere, the agency said. Columbus, Ohio-based Huntington National Bank will operate the DINB under contract with the FDIC.

    An FDIC spokesman said the agency has created such bridge banks “several times this year and in previous years.”

    Irondale, Ala.-based New South Federal Savings Bank also was closed by regulators Friday. The bank had $1.2 billion in deposits as of Sept. 30, which will be assumed by Plano, Texas-based Beal Bank, the FDIC added.

    New South Federal Savings Bank’s failure will cost the deposit-insurance fund $212.3 million.

    Springfield, Ill.-based Independent Bankers’ Bank was closed, with $511.5 million in deposits as of Sept. 30.

    The FDIC said it created the Independent Bankers’ Bank Bridge Bank to allow client banks of Independent Bankers’ Bank “to maintain their correspondent banking relationship with the least amount of disruption.”

    Independent Bankers’ Bank’s failure will cost the deposit-insurance fund $68.4 million.

    Two Southern California banks were closed Friday, the 16th and 17th such failures in the Golden State as a whole.

    First Federal Bank of California in Santa Monica was taken over by regulators. OneWest Bank of Pasadena will assume all of its deposits and take over First Federal’s 39 branches, the FDIC said.

    OneWest Bank agreed to purchase all of the $6.1 billion in First Federal Bank assets and did not pay the FDIC a premium for the $4.5 billion in total deposits; the hit to the deposit-insurance fund will be $146 million.

    Separately, La Jolla, Calif.-based Imperial Capital Bank was closed. It had $2.8 billion in deposits as of Sept. 30, the FDIC said, and its failure will cost the deposit-insurance fund $619.2 million. City National Bank of Los Angeles is assuming all of the deposits in the “least costly” resolution, according to the agency.

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  • 28Nov
     
     
     

    The London Stock Exchange halted its trading for more than three hours on Thursday owing to technical snag.

     

    The trading halt, which affected numerous client connections to UK securities, lasted for more than three hours from 10.33 hours to 14.00 hours, when continuous trading resumed, the London Stock Exchange (LSE) said in a statement.

    The London Stock Exchange expressed regret over the inconvenience caused to its clients as a result of the said disruption.

    Commenting on the disruption LSE CEO Xavier Rolet said: “we regret the inconvenience that today’s disruption to trading has caused for our clients.  Having resolved the immediate issue, we are working hard to ensure this doesn’t happen again ahead of switching to MillenniumIT’s trading platform next year.”

    LSE further said that to ensure an orderly market, the Exchange took the decision to place the London market into an auction at 10:33, which had the effect of halting trading but allowed clients to continue to interact with orders on the system.

    “Having identified the source of the problem and gained confidence in the remedial steps needed to restore market connectivity, the Exchange initiated an auction call at 13:30, with continuous trading resuming across the market from 14:00,” LSE added.

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  • 19Nov

    Stockshakers can expect a down opening Thursday for the US Equities markets.

    The US Dollar trade is showing signs of strength  here and the Euro trade that mirrored the inverse moves of the US Equities market may be decoupling.

    There is also an interesting leading indicator trend that Stockshakers have been successfully utilizing lately, the S&P500 compaired to the GOLD trade. Gold has been leading the move. Gold will dip and then very soon the S&P 500 will dip. Our biggest challenge still remains the lack of liquidty. Banks are not loaning cash and the jobs are not being generated quick enough.

    This will continue to be the challenge for global economies.

    Watch for the attempted first hour reversal and stay on the right side of the Trade trend.
    If we accelerate to the downside here keep in mind this options expiration week. Short covering is possible.

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