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U.S. crude steady Brent up on low stock, M.East
SEOUL, June 15 (Reuters - U.S. crude futures remained unchanged in early Asian trade on Wednesday, while ICE Brent for July delivery rose $1.04 a barrel after U.S. oil inventories showed a larger-than-expected drop for the second straight week on top of political unrest in the Middle East.
 
  FUNDAMENTALS
  * U.S. July crude < CLc1> stayed at $99.37 a barrel as of 0049 GMT.
  * In London, ICE Brent for July delivery was up $1.04 to $121.20 a barrel versus its settlement at $120.27, for the highest settlement since May 4, when front-month Brent crude closed at $121.19.
  * U.S. crude's discount against Brent crude stood at $21.84, after hitting $22.80 in the previous session, the fifth record in six sessions. < CL-LCO1=R>
  * American Petroleum Institute data showed on Tuesday that U.S. crude oil stocks dropped by 3 million barrels, with inventories in Cushing, Oklahoma, alone falling by 1.7 million barrels in the week to June 10. That was more than the 1.5 million barrel decline that analysts had forecast.
  * The EIA will issue its data at 10:30 a.m. EDT (1430 GMT) on Wednesday. An expanded Reuters analyst survey taken ahead of weekly inventory reports showed on Tuesday that U.S. crude oil inventories fell last week on lower imports and as higher margins encouraged refiners to raise utilization rates.
  * Euro zone ministers failed on Tuesday to reach agreement on how private holders of Greek debt should share the costs of a new bailout, putting the onus on the leaders of Germany and France to forge a deal later this week.
  * Yemen's Gulf neighbours renewed an offer on Wednesday to mediate in Yemen's bloody political crisis, but offered no formula to break a deadlock over the fate of wounded President Ali Abdullah Saleh.
  * Libyan rebels made fresh gains on the western front on Tuesday, pushing back forces loyal to leader Muammar Gaddafi in a string of clashes that brought them closer to the capital Tripoli. Insurgents also sought to extend an advance in the east, setting their sights on the oil town of Brega in a bid to extend their control over the region, epicentre of the four-month rebellion against Gaddafi's four-decade rule.
  * Thousands of Syrians fled the historic town of Maarat al-Numaan on Tuesday to escape tank forces thrusting into the country's north in a widening military campaign to crush protests against President Bashar al-Assad.
 
  MARKETS NEWS
  * U.S. equities rose more than 1 percent as the oversold market attracted buyers and better-than-expected retail sales data added support to trigger a relief rally.
  * The Nikkei stock average rose on Wednesday, helped by a weaker yen and U.S. retail sales figures that were not as bad as expected, while resource-related stocks gained on rising commodity prices.
  * The safe-haven Swiss franc and yen were under broad pressure in Asia on Wednesday after U.S. and Chinese data helped lift some of the gloom about the global economy, bolstering risk appetite that saw strong gains for the euro and commodity currencies. The dollar index , which tracks its performance against a basket of major currencies, retreated from a two-week high near 75.000 to last trade at 74.422.
China key money mkt rate jumps nearly 200 bps on RRR hike
SHANGHAI, June 15 (Reuters) - China's benchmark short-term money market rate spiked nearly 200 basis points to its highest level since late February early on Wednesday after the central bank surprised the market with a rise in banks' reserve requirement ratio (RRR).
  The weighted average seven-day government bond repurchase rate , the main barometer of short-term liquidity supply, rose to 6.1001 percent about 15 minutes after trading started, up from 4.1757 percent at the close on Tuesday.
  In a move to help fight high inflation, the People's Bank of China announced after the market closed on Tuesday a 50 basis-point RRR increase to take effect next Monday, forcing big banks to put aside a record high 21.5 percent of their deposits as required reserves. (Reporting by Lu Jianxin and Jacqueline Wong)
Today’s Focus  dbs vickers
.. No change in STI 2980 view, temporary support along the way at 3050
.. New trend on major electronics plants basing in Singapore benefit Cache Logistics and MIT
.. Keppel Corp wins US$260m contract – expect more potential orders in the horizon
We maintain our technical view for the STI to trend lower to 2970-2980 before finding firmer support. Along the way down, temporary support is seen at 3050 while the immediate resistance from here is 3115. While near-term downside is seen, investors (and traders alike) who heeded our recent call for the STI to decline to 2980 and stayed on the sidelines should re-position into stocks when that level approaches or is reached.
DBS’s economics research team believes that Asian equities are currently ‘down but not out’. Our regional equity strategist says the current stock market lull provides a window of opportunity to position into a 2H rally. For Singapore, she thinks that the industrial space will be a principal beneficiary of the new trend on major electronics plants basing in Singapore. SME loans, rental of industrial space and more business throughout the value chain are poised to pick up. Among the Industrial REITS, our analyst likes Cache Logistics and Mapletree Industrial Trust.
Our Singapore economist anticipates that after a weak 2Q, the 2H GDP growth momentum should re-accelerate on account of the reconstruction in Japan, moderation in oil price, gradual recovery in US/Europe and sustained Asian domestic demand. Inflation is set to moderate due to moderating oil and food prices but it should remain above the historical norm. If these forecasts come true, the combination of higher GDP growth and moderating inflation in 2H is a
positive reversal of current investors’ worries. We maintain our view that investors should capitalize on the current market lull to accumulate SIA and SIA
Engineering ahead of the handsome dividend in the July/August period. Traders can also eye technically oversold stocks (see our Weekly Focus on ‘10 stocks to consider for oversold watch list’). While relying on technical oversold indicators is not a ‘sure win’ method (but then, nothing is either) and the timing for an
oversold rebound for these stocks can be in tandem with the broad market, keep them on your watch list because we think they will also be on the radar screens of bargain hunters and traders alike when the STI bounces.
Keppel Corp has secured an order from repeat customer, Floatel International, for the construction of a 500-man accommodation semisubmersible unit, worth US$260m. This order brings FY11 YTD order wins to S$7.2bn, accounting for 80% of our full year assumption. Order backlog is raised to S$10.3bn, with book-to-bill of around 2.1x. No change to our Buy recommendation and $13.55 target price. Keppel Corp continues to build up its order backlog robustly with the second order in as many weeks. With the counter down 7.5% since its recent high, we reiterate our conviction BUY on the counter – we advise investors to position ahead of more potential orders on the horizon.
May11 palm oil output jumped 13.7% m-o-m to 1.740m
MT, which is 21% higher than expected. At the same time, exports grew by a less-than-expected 4.3% m-o-m in to 1.402m MT. Hence, May11 inventory piled up
14.8% m-o-m to 1918m MT. Our plantation analyst raises Malaysia’s CY11F-12F CPO output by 7% to 18.85m MT and 19.94m MT respectively. No change to
our CPO price forecast at RM3180/MT for 2011 and RM2540/MT for 2012 given stronger-than-expected YTD crude oil price. We prefer processor Wilmar International and upstream laggard First Resources.
iocbc
Midas Holdings: Secures RMB62m contract
Summary: Midas Holdings (Midas) recently announced that it has secured a contract worth RMB62m from CNR Changchun Railway Vehicles Co for the Shanghai Metro Line 12 Project. This would entail the provision of aluminium alloy extrusion profiles for 41 train sets, or 246 train cars. Delivery is expected to take place from 2011 to 2013. Prior to this announcement, Midas’ order book stood at RMB1.2b. While we are encouraged by Midas’ latest contract success, we opine that this contract win is relatively small-scale in nature and we are expecting order book momentum to pick up more strongly in 2H11. This is because China’s Ministry of Railways has recently recommitted its intention to invest RMB745.5b in 2011 following the corruption scandal surrounding its Minister of Railways. We believe that current share price weakness of Midas represents a favourable entry point. Midas is currently trading at 11.7x FY11F PER, a large 53.2% discount to its historical average 25x PER it is also comparable to its peers’ 11.8x PER despite commanding stronger margins. We are keeping our estimates intact as our projections allow for such contract wins. Maintain BUY and S$1.10 fair value estimate (20x FY11F EPS). (Wong Teck Ching Andy)
Ascendas REIT: Awarded site at Fusionopolis
Summary: A-REIT announced on 8 Jun that it has been awarded the Fusionopolis site by JTC for S$110m, which will be developed into a modern suburban business space facility. A-REIT will develop a suburban business facility of 25,000 sqm GFA comprising 60% business park space and 40% office space to cater to prospective tenants in the ICT and media industries as well as R& D activities in physical science and engineering. We have factored in contributions from the new site into our valuation. Our assumptions place the total development costs, financed entirely by debt, at S$178.8m (S$665 psf ppr), with a modest initial NPI yield-on-cost of 7% and 6.5% for the business park and office segments respectively. This is slightly above A-REIT’s existing NPI yield of 6.46% in FY2010/2011. Nonetheless, we remain sceptical of the clear differentiation between the two segments, and presume A-REIT will probably market the business park segment with a more R& D slant. We expect rental income to be streaming in from Oct 2013 onwards. Our RNAV-derived fair value increased from S$2.04 to S$2.08. Maintain HOLD. (Ong Kian Lin)
Biosensors International Group: Acquiring remaining 50% stake in JWMS
Summary: Biosensors International Group (BIG) has proposed to acquire the remaining 50% stake in JW Medical Systems (JWMS) from Shandong Weigao Group Medical Polymer (Shandong Weigao). JWMS is currently a joint venture between BIG and Shandong Weigao. The purchase consideration shall comprise (i) a cash payment of S$160m (ii) issuance of 260m new ordinary shares to Shandong Weigao at S$1.2215 per share (0.12% premium to last closing price) and (iii) issuance to Shandong Weigao of US$120m principal amount of 4% convertible notes due 2014. Upon the successful completion of this transaction, JWMS would be a wholly-owned subsidiary of BIG. We view this move positively on a strategic standpoint as BIG’s own BioMatrix drug-eluting stent (DES) has yet to obtain approval from the relevant authorities in China and currently penetrates the China market via JWMS. Hence this acquisition would allow BIG to gain full control of JWMS and strengthen its position in China, which augurs well given the size of the Chinese DES market. Nevertheless, the issuance of new shares to Shandong Weigao would result in dilution to existing shareholders. We are placing our BUY rating and S$1.55 fair value estimate UNDER REVIEWpending a discussion with BIG’s management. (Wong Teck Ching Andy)
For more information on the above, visit www.ocbcresearch.comfor the detailed report.
NEWS HEADLINES
- Latest data from Thomson Reuters shows that announced M& A deals involving Singapore-domiciled companies between Jan and 10 Jun 2011 increased to 450 with a total value of US$21.5b, compared to 387 deals worth US$15b inked in a year ago period.
- Hong Kong has lowered the loan-to-value ratio for home mortgages to curb the red-hot property market, the Hong Kong Monetary Authority said.
- Sim Lian Group Limited has voiced its concern that construction costs may swell with the recent move to speed up the pace of public housing supply.
- SIAS has made representations to SGX to consider putting safeguards in place to ensure that money raised from the Singapore stock market is not misused.
- UMS Holdings announced that it will invest US$1m in four tranches to purchase a 5% stake in Terra Verde Technologies.
- Genting Singapore has, through its wholly owned subsidiary, Genting International Management, increased its investments in Resorts World Inc, a 20% associated company of Genting.
Technically:  cimb
• DBS Group (DBS SP S$14.52, BUY) – Aggressive traders may go long but wait for lower levels.
• Fragrance Group (FRAG SP S$0.715, SELL) – We think prices could soon correct.
• ARA Asset Management (ARA SP S$1.66, BUY) – Triangle breakout could carry prices towards S$1.80-1.88.
What's Relevant...
Singapore shares closed lower on Friday with the blue-chip STI down 19.2pts (0.6%) to 3,078.4. Losers beat gainers 3 to 1 in a volume of 1.1bn shares worth $1.1bn. Property counters dipped last Friday after the government rolled out another bumper supply of land sites for 2H11. Selling pressure on the sector may persist this morning, and we advise investors to switch out of CityDev (our key UNDERPEFORM) into OUE (TP S$4.16) & FNN (TP S$7.32), our sector top picks.
Corporate News...
Beyonics Technology. 3Q11 net loss of S$2m from a net profit of S$0.6m in 3Q10. Revenue for the quarter fell 21% to S$303m due to weaker USD and lower shipments to HDD customers.
Biosensors (BS) and Shandong Weigao Group (Weigao) announced the restructuring of the shareholding in JW Medical Systems (JWMS) where BS acquires the remaining 50% of JWMS from Weigao after which, JWMS will be a wholly-owned subsidiary of BS. The purchase consideration from BS comprise of: (i) S$160m cash payment (ii) issuance of 260m new BS shares and (iii) issuance of US$120m principal, 4% convertible notes due 2014 to Weigao. After completion of this transaction, Weigao will become a strategic shareholder of BS, and will participate in BS’ development through its membership on BS’ board.
Keppel Corp has been awarded a US$260m contract by Floatel International Ltd to build a new generation accommodation semisubmersible (semi) for delivery in 1Q14. Pending review, we have an OUTPERFORM call on the stock and TP of S$14.00.
Keppel T& T. Following our recent discussions with management, we sense a strong determination to shed Keppel T& T's image as a passive investment holding company. Management plans to develop their core logistics and data centre operations and reduce reliance on associates’ contributions. Excluding contributions from M1, Keppel T& T trades at 7x CY10 EPS, very cheap for a Keppel-related company, in our view. A fairer value for the group should be 10.7x (retention ratio: 0.7, g: 5.3%, r: 8.2%), based on projected fundamentals. Our SOTP valuation suggests a fair value of S$1.54. At current price levels, we see limited downside risks for Keppel T& T.
Tiger Airways. Tiger Australia announced that it will halt all flights after volcanic ash from the Chilean Puyehue volcano eruption has reached Australia and New Zealand. We lower our target price on the stock to S$1.40 on the back of the negative news flow. However, we upgrade Tiger Airways to NEUTRAL as we see some value emerging from Tiger’s recent underperformance.
UMS Holdings signed a conditional MoU with, Terra Verde (TV), a U.S. clean-tech company. UMS will invest US$1m in four tranches to purchase a 5% stake in TV, and secure a five-year exclusive agreement to manufacture and distribute its hydro-power generators in several countries.
Thank for telling me. I 'll keep buying selective good penny S-chips!
rabbitfoot ( Date: 11-Jun-2011 10:48) Posted:
NOT ALL SIGNS POINT DOWN
  But even with the heavy losses suffered recently, the CBOE Volatility index has remained relatively unchanged, indicating market participants have yet to push the panic button.
  " During this entire correction, the VIX hasn't budged much," said Jason Goepfert, president of sentimenTrader.com, in a report. " That could be a sign of complacency among traders, but historically a stock market correction without a spike in the VIX has been a better 'buy' signal than 'sell' signal."
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NOT ALL SIGNS POINT DOWN
  But even with the heavy losses suffered recently, the CBOE Volatility index has remained relatively unchanged, indicating market participants have yet to push the panic button.
  " During this entire correction, the VIX hasn't budged much," said Jason Goepfert, president of sentimenTrader.com, in a report. " That could be a sign of complacency among traders, but historically a stock market correction without a spike in the VIX has been a better 'buy' signal than 'sell' signal."
Wall St Week Ahead: Troubling signs point to more losses
By Chuck Mikolajczak
  NEW YORK, June 10 (Reuters) - Don't be surprised if Wall Street racks up a seventh consecutive week of losses as the likelihood of more poor economic data and other disconcerting signals outweigh any thoughts that stocks are cheap.
  After closing at its highest level in nearly three years on April 29, the S& P 500 has tumbled nearly 7 percent on the back of a barrage of soft economic data, sparking the debate over whether the economy is headed for a double-dip, or has merely hit a soft patch in its recovery.
  The benchmark S& P 500 recorded its sixth straight weekly decline on Friday and volume has picked up, as it typically does, on down days. Another week of selling will mark the longest stretch of weekly losses for the index since 2001.
  Red flags, including ugliness in the junk bond market, options activity and the ease with which support levels have been broken suggest more selling ahead.
  " You have to be realistic. You've got to have some sort of correction to go into this marketplace just for the healthiness of the market," said Cliff Draughn, president and chief investment officer at Excelsia Investment Advisors in Savannah, Georgia.
  As stocks have declined, both investment-grade and high-yield risk premiums in the bond market have slumped as investors sought safe-haven assets.
  That's troublesome since the stock market often moves in sympathy with the junk bond market because rising borrowing costs crimp corporate profits.
  The CDX HY16 North America index for high-yield bonds, which conversely falls as risk appetite decreases, closed below par for the first time this year on Wednesday. The CDX IG16 North American investment grade index, which investors use to hedge against bond losses, hit its highest level since Nov. 30, according to Tradeweb.
  In another signal of skittishness about the market's footing, Ally Financial, an auto and mortgage lender majority owned by the U.S. government, delayed a $6 billion IPO due to bad market conditions, two sources familiar with the situation told Reuters.
  DATA BLITZ AND QUADRUPLE WITCH
  Stocks have also been easily passing through technical support levels, with the S& P 500 most recently taking out the April 18th low of 1,294.70, leaving analysts to eye the 1,250 level as the next area of support.
  And the daily volume put/call ratio for equity options on the Chicago Board Options Exchange (CBOE) hit an 18-month high on Wednesday, indicating that investors are significantly bearish on the stock market.
  On top of all that, data expected for next week, including the Producer Price Index, the Consumer Price Index, May retail sales, manufacturing surveys for New York and Philadelphia as well as the index of leading indicators of economic activity are forecast to mostly show a struggling economy.
  " It is a busy economic week, so we expect the market to both anticipate economic data and to react to the releases -- I don't necessarily see anything good coming out of the economic releases next week," said Tim Ghriskey, chief investment officer of Solaris Asset Management in Bedford Hills, New York.
  Several of these indicators set off the first alarm bells about the economy's health when they came out a month ago.
  By the end of the week, investors will also grapple with quadruple witching, when the options for stock-index futures, single-stock futures, equity options and stock-index options for June expire.
  " This trade will lead to increased volume and the possiblity of big moves in the market. Expiration also has the potential for increased volatility, especially intraday volatility next week," said TD Ameritrade chief derivatives strategist Joe Kinahan.
  NOT ALL SIGNS POINT DOWN
  But even with the heavy losses suffered recently, the CBOE Volatility index has remained relatively unchanged, indicating market participants have yet to push the panic button.
  " During this entire correction, the VIX hasn't budged much," said Jason Goepfert, president of sentimenTrader.com, in a report. " That could be a sign of complacency among traders, but historically a stock market correction without a spike in the VIX has been a better 'buy' signal than 'sell' signal."
  However, a turnaround in stocks could be stoked by any sign of progress in Washington on the debt ceiling and budget debates, an overhang on stocks that has frustrated market participants.
  " The biggest thing on the horizon right now is the inability of the U.S. Congress to come to some sort of conclusion over a budget," Draughn said.
  " Once that happens, that kinds of frees Bernanke's hands to where if he needs to do monetary intervention, he can. But he essentially is handcuffed at this point, due to the fact that the Treasury is happy to restrict the amount of bonds being issued for bumping up to the debt limit."
  Wall St Week Ahead appears every Friday. Questions or comments on this column can be e-mailed to: Charles.mikolajczak@thomsonreuters.com (Reporting by Chuck Mikolajczak Additional reporting by Doris Frankel and IFR analyst Rachelle Horn Editing by Jan Paschal)
MARKETS CAN'T FIND A BOTTOM AS SIX WEEK SELLOFF CONTINUES: Here's What You Need To Know
Markets continued their epic slide today, closing near their bottoms. That's 6-weeks of negative trading on the Dow.
 
First, the scoreboard:
- Dow down 1.42%
- S& P 500 down 1.40%
- NASDAQ down 1.53%
Now, the headlines:
- Overnight, markets sank in Asia over concerns the Chinese economy was slowing down at a greater pace. Trade data showed a weaker than expected surplus. Things also looked bleak in India, where industrial production has slowed, and Korea where the central bank hiked rates overnight.
- In Europe, UK manufacturing output came in weaker than expected. Shares on the FTSE sold off sharply, and the pound fell big against the dollar. In Germany, the Bundesbank raised its outlook for 2010 and 2011 GDP growth. The euro continued its slide against the dollar.
- Prior to the open, hedge fund manager David Tepper told CNBC he didn't see QE3 coming. His comments sent the dollar higher, the inspiration for today's selloff.
- Markets opened negative and stayed that way all day. The Fed announced that it wanted to hold annual stress tests, expand them, and have a say in dividend policy. That didn't help matters for the banks.
- We hit a bottom just moments before the the announcement that capital requirements on banks would be weaker than expected. That lead to a mild rally in bank shares and the overall market.
- Commodities overall were hit by the strong dollar, risk off trade today, with crude oil sliding nearly 3% on China worries too.
- One bright spot today: Lululemon shares were up big after the company reported better than expected earnings and raised guidance.
US 30-year bonds trade a point higher in price
(Updates with long bond up over a point in price)
  NEW YORK, June 10 (Reuters) - U.S. 30-year Treasury bonds traded over a point higher in price on Friday as worries over the pace of economic recovery and falling stocks bolstered the safe-haven value of government debt.
  The 30-year bond was trading 1-2/32 higher in price to yield 4.17 percent, down from 4.23 percent late on Thursday, while the benchmark 10-year note was 16/32 higher to yield 2.94 percent from 3.00 percent. (Reporting by Chris Reese Editing by James Dalgleish)
World stocks head for weekly loss oil slumps
Global Markets
* Slowing Chinese exports add to global economic worries
  * U.S. crude slumps world stocks head for weekly loss
  * Lack of unity over Greece aid pressures euro (Updates prices, adds comment, details)
  By Wanfeng Zhou
  NEW YORK, June 10 (Reuters) - Major stock markets headed for their fifth weekly loss in six weeks on Friday on growing worries about the global economy, while U.S. crude oil prices tumbled $3 after Saudi Arabia began offering more oil to Asian refiners.
  The euro fell against the dollar and yen as worries over Greece's debt crisis returned to center stage and investors scaled back expectations of the pace of future interest rate hikes in the euro zone.
  Fears the global economic recovery is stumbling grew after data showed China's export growth slowed in May. That followed a barrage of reports in recent weeks showing the U.S. economy has hit a soft patch, which has rattled investors.
  " We have had a slow erosion of economic numbers in the past quarter," said Brian Battle, vice president of trading at Performance Trust Capital Partners in Chicago. " The economic numbers aren't supporting this level of valuation."
  U.S. stocks opened sharply lower, while Treasury prices rose as investors turned to lower-risk government debt.
  The Dow Jones industrial average was down 115.99 points, or 0.96 percent, at 12,008.37. The Standard & Poor's 500 Index was down 11.71 points, or 0.91 percent, at 1,277.29. The Nasdaq Composite Index was down 20.06 points, or 0.75 percent, at 2,664.81.
  World stocks as measured by the MSCI world equity index fell 1 percent, on track for a decline of 1.5 percent this week. The index has lost more than 6 percent over the past six weeks and is only up 1.2 percent so far this year.
  The FTSEurofirst 300 stock index was down 1.1 percent at 1092.03 points. Earlier Japan's Nikkei closed up half a percent.
  U.S. crude oil fell $2.65 a barrel to $99.27. Brent crude was down $1.24 at $118.33 a barrel, having risen to $120.07 earlier, the highest since May 5.
  Top oil exporter Saudi Arabia is offering more crude to Asian refiners in July, industry sources with direct knowledge of negotiations said on Friday. It was the first evidence the kingdom is taking steps to raise supplies unilaterally after OPEC earlier this week failed to agree on an increase in the cartel's production targets.
  GREEK DEBT
  The euro fell 0.7 percent to $1.4404 and was down 0.9 percent to 115.46 yen, hurt by the lack of unity among euro zone officials on a resolution of Greece's debt troubles.
  The European Central Bank kept its 2012 inflation forecast unchanged on Thursday after leaving rates at 1.25 percent, suggesting the pace of euro zone interest rate hikes may be slower than previously thought.
  Investors received mixed messages about the progress of debt assistance to Greece. Germany stuck to its demand that private investors contribute to a second bailout even after renewed ECB opposition to any investor participation that might be deemed involuntary.
  " The image of European policymakers and the ECB standing toe to toe on this particular issue is something investors find deeply unsettling," said Michael Derks, chief strategist at FXPro.
  Core euro zone debt was generally a bit stronger, but there was more pressure on the periphery as the premium investors demand to hold Spanish and other lower-rated government bonds rather than benchmark German Bunds rose.
  Five-year credit default swaps on Greek government debt rose 25 basis points to 1,545 basis points, according to data monitor Markit. That means it costs 1.545 million euros to protect 10 million euros of exposure to Greek bonds.
  Benchmark U.S. 10-year Treasury notes were trading 10/32 higher in price to yield 2.96 percent, down from 3.00 percent late on Thursday. (Additional reporting by Edward Krudy and Chris Reese in New York, and Atul Prakash and Jeremy Gaunt in London editing by Dan Grebler)
Dow, S& P drop 1 percent
NEW YORK, June 10 (Reuters) - U.S. stocks extended losses on Friday, with the Dow and S& P 500 indexes briefly down more than 1 percent, as weaker trade data from China, the scrapping of a large IPO and ongoing disputes about a second Greece bailout weighed on sentiment.
Saudi shows who's boss, to pump 10 mln bpd
* Saudi newspaper says Saudi to pump 10 mln bpd in July
  * Lifting supply unilaterally after OPEC talks fall apart
  * Riyadh asserts authority but not seen flooding market
 
  (updates throughout)
  By Shaimaa Fayed
  DUBAI, June 10 (Reuters) - Saudi Arabia will raise output to 10 million barrels a day in July, Saudi newspaper al-Hayat reported on Friday, as Riyadh goes it alone to pump more outside official OPEC policy.
  Citing OPEC and industry officials, the newspaper said output would rise from 8.8 million bpd in May. There was no immediate independent verification of the story.
  The report suggests Riyadh is asserting its authority over fellow members of the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries after it failed to convince the cartel to lift output at an acrimonious meeting in Vienna on Wednesday.
  " The Saudi intention is to show that they cannot be pushed around," said Middle East energy analyst Sam Ciszuk at IHS. " Either OPEC follows the Saudi lead or they will have problems."
  A proposal by Saudi and its Gulf Arab allies the UAE and Kuwait to lift OPEC production was blocked by seven producers including Iran, Venezuela and Algeria.
  The two sides blamed each other for the breakdown in talks. Saudi Oil Minister Ali ali-Naimi called those opposed to the deal obstinate. Iran's OPEC governor Mohammad Ali Khatibi responded by saying Riyadh had been overly-influenced by U.S.-led consumer country demands for cheaper fuel.
  " The hawks in OPEC called their bluff and now it is up to Riyadh to show that they were not bluffing -- that they will go ahead unilaterally if pushed," said Cizsuk.
  < ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
  OPEC says supply gap looms this year [ID:nLDE7591ES]
  Saudi supply increase cheapens OPEC crude [ID:nL3EHA18N]
  Saudi offers Asian refiners more oil [ID:nnL3E7HA01L] ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^>
 
  NO FLOOD
  It appears unlikely though that Saudi is preparing to flood the market and produce more than is required to meet demand, potentially sending oil prices plummeting.
  New forecasts from OPEC headquarters released on Friday project demand for OPEC's oil increasing about 1.7 million bpd in the second half of the year to 30.7 million bpd.
  Saudi Arabia proposed to OPEC that it raise production targets to 30.3 million bpd.
  " Prices may moderate from where they would have been otherwise but it is not the intention of Saudi Arabia to use an oil weapon against Iran," said David Kirsch at consultancy PFC Energy in Washington.
  " They might be happy to see prices dip briefly but there is a broad consensus forming within OPEC that $100 is the minimally acceptable long-term price."
  Brent crude rose to a 5-week high of $120 a barrel after the OPEC talks broke down. Prices eased after Friday's Saudi news, dipping 45 cents to $119.12 a barrel.
  Saudi Arabia has not pumped 10 million bpd for at least a decade, according to Reuters data, production having peaked at 9.7 million bpd in July 2008 after prices hit a record $147 a barrel. It is the only oil producer inside or outside OPEC with any significant spare capacity.
  Asked in Vienna on Thursday whether Saudi would reach 10 million bpd Naimi said: " Just send the customers, don't worry about the volumes."
  Gulf delegates said Riyadh was planning to pump an average 9.5-9.7 million bpd in June.
  Saudi is already offering more crude to refiners in Asia, which, led by China, is driving a global rise in oil consumption. European refiners said they need no more for now.
Oil drops as Saudi Arabia offers more crude
* U.S. crude falls by more than $1 to below $100/barrel
  * Analysts say lack of OPEC leadership not price supportive
  (Adds quote para 10, spread, updates prices)
  By Zaida Espana
  LONDON, June 10 (Reuters) - Crude oil prices dropped on Friday as Saudi Arabia began offering more oil to Asian refiners, easing worries about supply following an inconclusive OPEC meeting.
  By 1400 GMT, U.S. crude futures fell by $2.65 to $99.28 a barrel, retreating from early gains and slipping below $100 a barrel.
  ICE Brent for July delivery was down $1.18 at $118.39 a barrel, having risen to a high of $120.07 earlier, the highest since May 5.
  Top oil exporter Saudi Arabia is offering more crude to Asian refiners in July, industry sources with direct knowledge of negotiations said on Friday, the first evidence the kingdom is taking steps to unilaterally raise supplies.
  The country will also boost production in July to 10 million barrels per day, al-Hayat newspaper said on Friday.
  The reports eased concerns that supply may dip following a meeting of the Organisation for Petroleum Exporting Countries, which failed to reach agreement on raised production quotas.
  " I would expect people to start to digest what happened during the meeting. It means OPEC has no longer a quota, no restraint on production and Saudi Arabia is doing that, offering more to Asian customers. This element today should lead to some pressure on prices," Christophe Barret from Credit Agricole CIB said.
  In a meeting on Wednesday, OPEC for the first time in about a decade failed to agree on output policy.
  " Today we're seeing a normalisation it's back to reality," Commerzbank analyst Carsten Fritsch said.
  Harry Tchilinguirian from BNP Paribas said OPEC's non-decision leaves countries with spare production capacity free to increase supply on a discretionary basis.
  " In this respect, all eyes are on Saudi Arabia as the largest holder of OPEC spare capacity. The Kingdom has demonstrated in the past that it can act unilaterally," Tchilinguirian said in a note.
  Merrill Lynch analysts piled into the debate, saying in a note that a breakdown in cohesion in OPEC cannot be a bullish signal for oil prices in the medium term.
  " OPEC's position could come back to hurt the cartel as the high cost of energy is a key risk to growth. Our energy as a share of GDP indicator suggests energy prices are reaching maximum affordability for the global economy," they said.
  " Our economists believe that the high oil prices washed out the U.S. fiscal stimulus passed in December, hampering the recovery in America. Similar negative effects can be observed in other oil-consuming economies."
  The spread between Brent and U.S. light crude, meanwhile, widened to a record $19.09 a barrel.
 
  CHINA DEMAND, POLITICAL TENSION
  Prices got support from strong demand by China, which registered a more than 20 percent year-on-year rise in May crude imports. The world's second-largest buyer imported more than 5 million bpd for a fifth consecutive month in May.
  " As we go through the second part of the year, there may be a constant upward revision on Chinese oil demand," said Tokyo-based Mitsubishi Corp's risk manager, Tony Nunan.
  Political tension in Libya, Syria and Yemen continued to support oil prices. NATO warplanes pummelled a town west of Libya's capital, state media said, soon after Western and Arab powers promised more than $1 billion to help rebels fighting to end Muammar Gaddafi's four-decade rule.
  In Syria, thousands fled into Turkey fearing a military assault, officials said, as the country braced for more violent protests against the rule of President Bashar al-Assad.
  The latest reports of a government crackdown intensified international concerns over Syria's handling of pro-democracy protests, inspired by uprisings across the Arab world. (Additional reporting by Simon Falush in London and Seng Li Peng in Singapore editing by Keiron Henderson and Jane Baird)
Goldman: " QE3 Optimism Is Excessive"
As has been repeated on Zero Hedge many times, with the stock market just 15 percent off its post-Jackson Hole surge highs, the market continues to be irrationally exuberant that QE3 will come come hell or high water.
No. That will not happen until all the mutual funds who have been holding for 2 or more years realize that in order to get another heroin hit, some will have to be wiped out (thank near-record margin debt and record low cash holdings) before QE3 does arrive.
The latest to confirm this is Goldman Sachs, which via a note just released by Dominic Wilson. It confirms our speculation that "
QE3 optimism is excessive." Ironically, the only thing that will guarantee QE3 is a fresh round of significant pains which retraces the entire QE2 move higher. Nobody in the long-only community wants to hear it. Alas, it is the truth. As usual: he who sells first, will have a job tomorrow...
From Goldman:
Part of the reason for speculating that QE3 optimism is excessive is that many investors believe that equity markets have been strangely resilient. We have ourselves pointed out that US equity indices have been vulnerable to the growth downgrade that their own rotations out of cyclical sectors imply, and some of that “gap” has recently closed. But it is also true that the current pattern of asset markets is broadly consistent with the way mid-cycle slowdowns are often priced. Cyclical assets underperform broad equity indices, bonds rally as the market adjusts its views of policy and that dynamic in turn partially cushions the hit to risk assets overall. As Themos Fiotakis described in a recent Daily, a weakening dollar is not uncommon in an environment where the global cycle is showing positive but declining growth. So the critical question again comes back to how persistent and how significant the underlying growth slowdown turns out to be. Amid all this is a reminder that the simplest US slowdown trade – mid-cycle or otherwise – is generally to be long US fixed income.
And some more observations:
While the market has been quick to price easier policy in the US in response to the growth slowdown, it has been slower to relax about EM tightening risk. At one level, that makes sense given tighter capacity and more intense inflation pressures in many of the large EM markets. But we think a US slowdown – up to a point at least – is probably more helpful to EM than to DM markets. This is simply the reverse of our argument in late 2010 that an accelerating US recovery would add to EM policy dilemmas by pushing commodity prices higher and providing a tailwind to local demand. While persistently slower US growth would be more troubling for the large developed economies that are still trying to make inroads into spare capacity, it would also create more “room” for EM economies to grow without hitting global constraints so hard. That was the rationale for our long EM Top Trade recommendation in April. The timing of our shift has clearly been premature. But we are less puzzled that EM equities have been outperforming again recently in this environment than we were by their underperformance in the first half of May. Our latest tactical FX trade recommendation to be short MXN/CLP, based on Robin Brooks’ and Alberto Ramos’s recent work on cyclical momentum in Latam, has a similar flavour.
One potential lesson of the last few months is that the global economy finds itself in uncomfortable places when US growth accelerates alongside robust growth in other parts of the world. Our latest round of forecast revisions in May were to a large extent about acknowledging that the energy constraint is more binding than we expected going into the year. The silver lining of a US slowdown could thus be that it takes the sharpest edge off some of the commodity-related inflation worries. Our own new forecasts look for higher commodity prices over the coming 18 months, but not for the kind of rapid acceleration that we started to see in the first quarter of this year in energy markets. Those forecast revisions do reinforce our preference for commodity exposures – having taken a break in April and early May – and Jeff Currie and team added fresh long recommendations in oil, copper and zinc two weeks ago. With that shift and an expectation of more USD weakness, we added a short $/NOK Top Trade recommendation (our eighth) at the same time, which is off to a good start.
Translation: prepare for much more selling (including precious metals which will likely see at least one or two rounds of margin call satisfying liquidation), before the time to front run the Fed comes again.
Gates Says NATO Is Heading Toward " Collective Military Irrelevance"
Defense Secretary Robert M. Gates delivers a speech to the Security and Defense Agenda think tank in Brussels. (John Thys / AFP/Getty Images / June 10, 2011)
Outgoing Defense Secretary Gates told a group of diplomats, military officers, and former alliance officials that NATO is facing " collective military irrelevance' unless member nations increase their spending.
 
According to the
L.A. Times, Gates pointed out that less than half of NATO's 28 members were participating in the military operations in Libya and fewer than a third are considering airstrikes against ground targets.
Gates said Libya has " laid bare" NATO's shortcomings, pointing out many members fail to participate in actions not because they don't want to, but because they can't.
" The military capabilities simply aren't there," he said. " The mightiest military alliance in history is only 11 weeks into an operation against a poorly armed regime in a sparsely populated country -- yet many allies are beginning to run short of munitions, requiring the U.S., once more, to make up the difference."
He also mentioned that the Libya campaign is in Europe's neighborhood and vital to its interests he then criticized Germany and Poland for for refusing to participate in the Libya campaign.
Meet The Highest Paid Government Employee In The State Of New York

He has since been forced out of his job after an ethics scandal, but before that he made $1 million a year. (He also
got paid $1.2 million to resign).
Can you guess who he is? Can you guess what he did?
His name's
Kevin Broadus. He was the Men's Basketball coach at SUNY Binghamton.
He took his team to the NCAA tournament, before being benched after various recruiting violations and allegedly pressuring teachers to give his players better grades. Then he was forced out.
Anyway, Mr. Broadus tops our new database of
New York State government employee salaries.
Here are some other fun facts from the database:
- 35 New York State employees make more than $400,000 a year
- 98 New York State employees make more than $300,000 a year
- 594 New York State employees make more than $200,000 a year
- 28,920 New York State employees make more than $100,000 a year.
The lower-paid folks in the latter group include boatloads of court stenographers, police, correctional officers, professors in the state university systems, and at least one " mapping technician."
The numbers above (and
in the database) don't include benefits, which are prodigious. And the database doesn't even include teachers yet! (It will soon).
Have a look. And when you're finished scrolling around, have a look at our New York State Pension Database, which is just as interesting. You
wouldn't believe some of the pensions these folks get.
Politics in 60 Seconds: What You Need To Know Right Now
Good morning! Here's what you need to know:
 
1. Newt Gingrich's national campaign staff
quit en masse, as did his entire Iowa political operation. They were apparently frustrated by Mr. Gingrich's " lack of focus." Mr. Gingrich vowed to press on without them. 
2. Mr. Gingrich's implosion was
not unexpected. Some argue that it
opens the door for Texas Governor Rick Perry to get into the race. Mr. Perry has been preparing to do just that for some time now.
3. Mitt Romney
will skip the Iowa straw poll in August.  This is front-page news in
The Wall Street Journal, as it likely diminishes Romney's chances of winning the Iowa caucuses, which in turn makes winning the Iowa caucuses that much more important for the other GOP candidates.
4. Yale economist Robert Shiller says that t
he U.S. economy is at a tipping point where a double-dip recession is possible and home prices could have much further to fall.  Mr. Shiller says that home prices could fall another 10-to-25 percent.
5.
The Wall Street Journal reports: " Congressional leaders from both parties agreed on Thursday to
accelerate their negotiations over reducing the federal deficit, signaling a heightened sense of urgency to avoid a potential default on the government's debt. The negotiating group, led by Vice President Joe Biden, plans to meet three times next week, compared with the six meetings it has held since March."
6. Defense Secretary
Robert M. Gates today
tongue-lashed NATO nations for what he said were shortages in military spending and political will, warning of “a dim if not dismal future” for an alliance at risk of becoming irrelevant in a dangerous and uncertain world.
7. Syrian security forces
today began military operations in the country’s restive northwest, heightening fears of a
brutal crackdown on dissent.
8. After the revolution comes the hard part. 
The Egyptian economy has ground to a virtual halt. Tourism has collapsed. There appears to be no strategy to get things going again. " People in the neighborhood are talking about going back to the streets for another revolution — a hunger revolution,” one man told
The New York Times.
9. Egypt's fundamentalist Salafist movement is poised to make major gains in this fall's elections.  “
There is going to be a battle between two visions for Egypt,” said Abdel Moneim El-Shahat, a Salafist leader.
10. Finally, muni market inflows!
The Wall Street Journal reports: "
Investors put $274 million into municipal-bond funds in the week ended Wednesday, Thomson Reuters unit Lipper FMI said Thursday, the first money coming into funds since mid-November."
Everything You Need To Know About The Judo Black Belt Who May Be Japan's Next Prime Minister
Japan's Finance Minister, Yoshihiko Noda might soon succeed the lame-duck prime minister, Naoto Kan,
the Japan Times reports.
Noda's main advantage is that he is more respected than Kan, whose own Democratic Party of Japan is in open revolt against him.
Most Japanese blame Kan's wet-noodle leadership for the lackluster recovery from the March 11 earthquake. Kan's unpopularity came to a head last week when he survived a vote of no confidence only when he
promised to step down at an unspecified date after the nuclear crisis at the Fukushima Daiichi plant is under control.
Noda's approach to post-quake recovery isn't going to be a major departure from Kan's policies. Noda advocates raising the consumption tax to contribute to the recovery efforts in the prefectures that were hurt by the quake. In the longer term, he wants to cap issuance of new government debt to mitigate
Japan's debt, which now stands at about 200% of GDP.
Noda's top priorities are tackling the debt and deflation--a nightmare to a country so dependent on exports.  Last year, he took part in a
massive currency intervention to help weaken the yen, which is still high against the dollar.
Noda is known in Japan as a fiscal hawk. He comes from a modest background and he's a proud graduate of Waseda University and the
Matsushita Institute of Government and Management, a free-marketeer policy school. He is also a black-belt in judo.