Financial stocks drag Wall Street down (AUG 11)

Financial stocks drag Wall Street down (AUG 11)

Financial stocks drag Wall Street down

NEW YORK (Reuters) – Stocks slid on Tuesday after a prominent banking analyst warned that the sector’s fundamentals have not yet improved, sparking a sell-off in bank shares.

Economic data showing an unexpectedly large fall in wholesalers’ inventories added to the bearish sentiment.

The drop in inventories in June, which was nearly double expectations, suggests that businesses remained skeptical about a return in demand.

Financial stocks, which had gained about 25 percent in the last month, tumbled after Rochdale Securities analyst Richard Bove painted a gloomy outlook for the banking industry. He said bank stocks are trading on “fumes,” and he expects a short-term pull-back in their stock prices.

Among banking stocks, Bank of America(BAC.N) was down 4.8 percent to $15.88 and JPMorgan Chase (JPM.N) was down 3 percent to $41.40.

“Bank (shares) have been rallying because low interest rates have helped them make money,” said Keith Springer, president of Capital Financial Advisory Services in Sacramento, California. “But the deleveraging process is removing tens of billions from the economy. We’re going to see a lot more defaults.”

A report from the Congressional Oversight Panel, a U.S. bailout watchdog, issued late Monday highlighted the rocky road facing the banking industry. The panel said toxic loans and securities continue to pose a threat to the financial system, particularly for smaller banks that face mounting losses on commercial real estate loans.

The Dow Jones industrial average (.DJI) was down 98.85 points, or 1 percent, at 9,239.10. The Standard & Poor’s 500 Index (.SPX) slid 13.65 points, or 1.4 percent, at 993.45. The Nasdaq Composite Index (.IXIC) fell 28.08 points, or 1.4 percent, at 1,964.16.

Springer said there is “a little pullback” after the recent rally that sent the broader S&P index to a 10-month high last week and up nearly 50 percent from a closing low set on March 9.

Stocks slightly pared losses after results from a government auction of U.S. Treasuries at midday.

Investors were also cautious ahead of a two-day monetary policy meeting by the U.S. Federal Reserve that kicks off Tuesday afternoon and July retail sales data due Thursday.

With quarterly earnings reports also due this week from retail giants Wal-Mart (WMT.N), J.C. Penney (JCP.N) and Macy’s (M.N), investors will look to see if consumer spending, which accounts for roughly two-thirds of the U.S. economy, is stabilizing.

Another worrying sign of a still-weak economy came from hedge fund firm Atticus Capital LLC, which told investors that it is closing two of its three funds and would return $3 billion to shareholders.

The financial sector of the S&P 500 (.GSPF) dropped 3.3 percent. The S&P Regional Banks sub-index (.GSPBNKS) was off 4.4 percent, while the KBW Bank Index (.BKX) was down 4.5 percent.

Adding to losses for financials, Miller Tabak cut its price targets on Zions Bancorp (ZION.O) and Regions Financial Corp (RF.N). Shares of Zions dropped 9.8 percent to $16.17, while Regions dropped 4.43 percent to $4.75.

The negative news offset better-than-expected data on U.S. non-farm productivity in the second quarter, which showed worker productivity rose at the fastest pace in six years as hours worked fell much more steeply than output.

// Reuters – Trading specialists glance at each other as they prepare to leave the floor of the New York Stock Exchange, …

end #main-media end .byline
// ]]>
NEW YORK (Reuters) – Stocks slid on Tuesday after a prominent banking analyst warned that the sector’s fundamentals have not yet improved, sparking a sell-off in bank shares.

Economic data showing an unexpectedly large fall in wholesalers’ inventories added to the bearish sentiment.

The drop in inventories in June, which was nearly double expectations, suggests that businesses remained skeptical about a return in demand.

Financial stocks, which had gained about 25 percent in the last month, tumbled after Rochdale Securities analyst Richard Bove painted a gloomy outlook for the banking industry. He said bank stocks are trading on “fumes,” and he expects a short-term pull-back in their stock prices.

Among banking stocks, Bank of America(BAC.N) was down 4.8 percent to $15.88 and JPMorgan Chase (JPM.N) was down 3 percent to $41.40.

“Bank (shares) have been rallying because low interest rates have helped them make money,” said Keith Springer, president of Capital Financial Advisory Services in Sacramento, California. “But the deleveraging process is removing tens of billions from the economy. We’re going to see a lot more defaults.”

A report from the Congressional Oversight Panel, a U.S. bailout watchdog, issued late Monday highlighted the rocky road facing the banking industry. The panel said toxic loans and securities continue to pose a threat to the financial system, particularly for smaller banks that face mounting losses on commercial real estate loans.

The Dow Jones industrial average (.DJI) was down 98.85 points, or 1 percent, at 9,239.10. The Standard & Poor’s 500 Index (.SPX) slid 13.65 points, or 1.4 percent, at 993.45. The Nasdaq Composite Index (.IXIC) fell 28.08 points, or 1.4 percent, at 1,964.16.

Springer said there is “a little pullback” after the recent rally that sent the broader S&P index to a 10-month high last week and up nearly 50 percent from a closing low set on March 9.

Stocks slightly pared losses after results from a government auction of U.S. Treasuries at midday.

Investors were also cautious ahead of a two-day monetary policy meeting by the U.S. Federal Reserve that kicks off Tuesday afternoon and July retail sales data due Thursday.

With quarterly earnings reports also due this week from retail giants Wal-Mart (WMT.N), J.C. Penney (JCP.N) and Macy’s (M.N), investors will look to see if consumer spending, which accounts for roughly two-thirds of the U.S. economy, is stabilizing.

Another worrying sign of a still-weak economy came from hedge fund firm Atticus Capital LLC, which told investors that it is closing two of its three funds and would return $3 billion to shareholders.

The financial sector of the S&P 500 (.GSPF) dropped 3.3 percent. The S&P Regional Banks sub-index (.GSPBNKS) was off 4.4 percent, while the KBW Bank Index (.BKX) was down 4.5 percent.

Adding to losses for financials, Miller Tabak cut its price targets on Zions Bancorp (ZION.O) and Regions Financial Corp (RF.N). Shares of Zions dropped 9.8 percent to $16.17, while Regions dropped 4.43 percent to $4.75.

The negative news offset better-than-expected data on U.S. non-farm productivity in the second quarter, which showed worker productivity rose at the fastest pace in six years as hours worked fell much more steeply than output.

info provided by Reuters

U.S. banks to make $38 billion from overdraft fees: report

U.S. banks to make $38 billion from overdraft fees: report

U.S. banks to make $38 billion from overdraft fees: report


(Reuters) – Banks in the United States are poised to make $38.5 billion in customer overdraft fees this year, the Financial Times said, citing research by Moebs Services.

A large portion of the revenue is likely to come from the most financially stretched consumers, according to the paper.

It said the research showed that many banks have increased charges on overdrafts and credit cards in order to boost profits.

The median bank overdraft fee rose this year by one dollar to $26, the paper said, citing the Moebs data.

“Banks are returning to a fee-driven model and overdraft fees are the mother lode,” Mike Moebs, the company’s founder was quoted by the paper as saying.

Overdraft fees accounted for more than 75 percent of service fees charged on customer deposits, the paper cited Moebs as saying.

Last year the U.S. Federal Reserve approved credit card rules to curb “unfair” practices such as surprise fees and interest rate hikes, and new mortgage lending rules are expected this summer. It is also mulling rules to give bank customers the chance to opt out of overdraft schemes that can involve fees.

(Reporting by Ajay Kamalakaran in Bangalore; Editing by Greg Mahlich)

WHAT MAD MONEYS’ CRAMER HAS TO SAY ABOUT STOCKS TODAY

WHAT MAD MONEYS’ CRAMER HAS TO SAY ABOUT STOCKS TODAY

CRAMERS TAKE ON STOCKS AUG 10 2009

Regardless of why a stock is in the news, it never hurts to hear what a professional investor has to say about it. The key is to gather as much information as you can in order to make the most informed investment decisions you can. As Jim Cramer often reminds, investors must do their homework.

So what has Cramer had to say lately about today’s headline-makers? At Stockpickr, we’ve combed through his recent RealMoney blog posts, “Mad Money” TV show recaps and “Stop Trading!” segments to find out what he thinks about some of today’s newsworthy stocks.

McDonald’s (MCD): McDonald’s same-store sales rose 4.3% in July, due in large part to France and the U.K. Same-store sales in the U.S. rose 2.6%.

On “Stop Trading!” On July 30, Cramer said that while he loves McDonald’s, he said that it and Colgate (CL) were not the right stocks at the time. Instead, he liked Yum! Brands (YUM).

He had recommended McDonald’s on July 21 on his “Lightning Round” segment, as well as Starbucks (SBUX).

Freddie Mac (FRE): Freddie reported its quarterly earnings after the closing bell on Friday. It posted a profit of $768 million, its first quarterly operating profit in two years. Including $1.1 billion in dividend payments, however, it was in the red.

In an Aug. 7 blog post, Cramer said that “a cooling in the buying of the worthless,” including Freddie, Sirius (SIRI) and Ambac (ABK), is a positive sign for the bulls.

The day before, he’d written that Freddie and Fannie Mae (FNM) “shouldn’t even be trading.” “It is totally counterintuitive to buy these stocks as the losses mount and mount and mount,” he said.

And on Aug. 5, Cramer called Fannie, Freddie, Sirius and Ambac “brain-dead and ugly.” “I don’t trust any of these, not for a minute,” he wrote in his blog. “The government can determine whatever it wants to do with the common of FNM and FRE, and I see no way there will ever be anything left for shareholders in that queue.”

Microsoft (MSFT): France’s Publicis Groupe will buy Razorfish, Microsoft’s digital firm, in a deal worth $530 million.

In a recent post to his RealMoney blog, Cramer wrote:

“Apple, Broadcom (BRCM), SanDisk (SNDK) — they just won’t quit. Qualcomm (QCOM) is right back, Intel (INTC) is moving up and Microsoft — by virtue of its pantsing of Yahoo! (YHOO) — is back on the right track even if it had a terrible quarter.

“These are all part of the mobile Internet tsunami that is this generation’s equivalent of the 1992 PC rally and the 1996 Internet rally.

“I am spending a lot of time today on reverse discipline. That’s when you figure out the most difficult thing and you do it. The toughest thing to do was to buy the Nasdaq after the big streak because the propensity to say “I missed it” reigns supreme. But the simple truth is that’s not how it works if you have a broad overarching theme.

“I know so few people who want to believe in a major theme. They’ve all been so had that they don’t know what happens when they see markets rally except to sell — that’s actually been the right course for most stocks for so long that it is counterintuitive to buy into a rally.

“But that’s what history dictates. T.J. Rodgers, the visionary CEO of Cypress Semi (CY) is convinced that we are early on in this revolution. So is Bob Bowman, CEO of MLB.com, the foremost early adopter of the mobile Internet world.

“Remember in 1992 we got profit-taking for awhile, but you did just fine if you bought. But not in 1996 — there simply was no profit-taking and you got stocks that gave you 10-baggers. (Ironically, the leader was Yahoo!)

“Right now you cannot be constrained by convention of the last few years if you are buying within this theme. We just got the next generation smartphones from Apple. The others are coming. You cannot cash in now.”

(Editor’s note: At the time of publication, Cramer owned Yum! and Qualcomm for his Action Alerts PLUS charitable trust.)

By Rebecca Corvino
Posted on Aug. 10, 2009
http://www.stockpickr.com/problog/1895/