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FLASH: Stocks Fall on European Jitters

Cautious commentary from the head of the European Central Bank set a dour tone on Wall Street even after data on the U.S. labor market topped expectations.

Today’s Markets

As of 10:13 a.m. ET, the Dow Jones Industrial Average fell 64 points, or 0.53%, to 12,132, the S&P 500 slumped 10.2 points, or 0.81%, to 1,251 and the Nasdaq Composite slid 16.9 points, or 0.64%, to 2,632.

Hopes that the ECB might enact a massive bond-buying program to ease yields on sovereign debt were dashed to some extent on Thursday. ECB head Mario Draghi said government bond purchases are limited to enacting monetary policy and that the European Union treaty technically restricts broader purchasing. He also said making such purchases by lending to the International Monetary Fund, a concept that has been widely discussed among analysts, would be legally challenging.

However, Draghi came short of explicitly making a ruling either way.

Financial shares, particularly investment banks like Morgan Stanley (MS: 16.34, -1.00, -5.77%), were hit the hardest on the back of the EU jitters. Basic material and energy shares were also down sharply as a result of strong selling in precious-metal and energy futures.

European blue chips fell 0.66% while the euro slid 0.66% to $1.3321.

In light of the growing economic headwinds created by the debt crisis, the ECB also said that it plans on taking on non-standard measures to buoy the economy. That move was initially seen as a positive, but then was quickly overshadowed by Draghi’s comments.

The central bank also sliced its main refinancing rate by a quarter percentage point to 1%. The rate move was largely anticipated, but markets were less sure if the ECB would take other actions.

European Union leaders are set to begin descending on Brussels on Thursday for a summit that is being billed by many analysts as crucial in staving off a collapse of the euro, a once unthinkable scenario.

The backdrop for the meeting is gloomy: Italian debt yields are less than half a percentage point away from the painful 7% level and in a sign of how real the worries are, the Wall Street Journal reported last night that several European central banks are making contingency plans in case they have to revert to their pre-euro currency. French President Nicholas Sarkozy also said on Thursday that time is running out against the single currency, and that there will be no second chances if a deal isn’t reached, according to a report by Reuters.

Traders are hoping for decisive action from European leaders to solve the debt debacle that is now in its second year, and has spread from periphery economies into the core of the European Union.  One concept that has been discussed, according to media reports, is forcing closer fiscal ties between eurozone states in a bid to convince the ECB to launch a bond-buying program.

On the U.S. front, the weekly jobless claims report from the Labor Department topped expectations on Thursday morning.  New claims for unemployment benefits fell last week to 381,000 from an upwardly revised 404,000 the week prior.  Economists had expected a smaller drop to 395,000 from an initial reading of 402,000.

Energy markets were to the downside.  The benchmark crude oil contract traded in New York fell $1.53, or 1.5%, to $98.97 a barrel.  Wholesale RBOB gasoline fell 1.1% to $2.56 a gallon.

In metals, gold dropped $25.10, or 1.4%, to $1,721 a troy ounce. Silver was off 57 cents, or 1.7%, to $31.99 a troy ounce. U.S. government bond prices fell, pushing yields higher.  The benchmark 10-year Treasury note yields 2.065% from 2.040%.

Foreign Markets 

European blue chips fell 1.3%, the English FTSE 100 slid 0.33% to 5,528 and the German DAX sold off 1.3% to 6,918.

In Asia, the Japanese Nikkei 225 dropped 0.66% to 8,665 and the Chinese Hang Seng slipped 0.69% to 19,108.

Read more: http://www.foxbusiness.com/markets/2011/12/08/stocks-fall-on-european-jitters/#ixzz1fxh5y4dO

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Eric Holder is talking out both sides of his mouth right now

In a dance as intricate and gay looking as I’ve ever seen, Eric Holder is busy talking about the long lasting negative ramifications of the gun running scandal his department approved while at the same time denying he knew anything about it despite us having already seen memos that inform us he knew exactly what was going out. The hypocrisy is so thick it’s sickening.

WASHINGTON – Attorney General Eric Holder suggested Thursday that weapons lost during the course of the failed “Fast and Furious” gunrunning operation will continue to show up at crime scenes in the U.S. and Mexico “for years to come.”

Holder, in testimony on Capitol Hill that comes as the congressional investigation into the program expands, decried the “gun-walking” tactic used in the operation as “inexcusable” and “wholly unacceptable.” But a day after an influential senator called for the resignation of one of Holder’s top deputies over the scandal, Holder denied department leaders played any role in the crafting of Fast and Furious.

He continued to assert that top Justice officials were not told about the “inappropriate tactics” until they were made public.

Still, the top law enforcement official in the country conceded that, as a result of Fast and Furious, guns lost by the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives remain in the hands of criminals.

“Although the department has taken steps to ensure that such tactics are never used again, it is an unfortunate reality that we will continue to feel the effects of this flawed operation for years to come,” he said. “Guns lost during this operation will continue to show up at crime scenes on both sides of the border.”

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Americans reject automatic budget cuts

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Americans split on almost every important issue facing Washington, but they agree on this much: Republicans and Democrats share blame for the failure of the Congressional “super committee,” and the resulting automatic budget cuts are unacceptable.

In CNBC’s new All-America Economic Survey, a robust 62 percent majority blamed the two parties equally for the committee’s inability to reach a compromise on $1 trillion to $2 trillion in deficit reduction over the next 10 years. That includes more than 70 percent of Republicans and independents, though nearly half of Democrats and a majority of Occupy Wall Street supporters blame Republicans in particular.

Moreover, Americans overwhelmingly reject the consequences of that failure – $1.2 trillion in automatic budget cuts, divided equally between military and non-military programs. In the legislative deal Democrats and Republicans struck to create the super-committee, those cuts were intended to be so unpopular that they would force super committee members to reach a bi-partisan deal.

The survey shows that Washington got it half right – the part about the unpopularity of automatic cuts. Just 16 percent of Americans favor proceeding with the cuts, which are due to take effect in January 2013. Some 25 percent prefer an alternative plan with deeper budget cuts.

A 43 percent plurality favors an alternative plan containing fewer budget cuts. In a reflection of the limited appetite for cutting defense at a time when the nation is at war, even a 39 percent plurality of Republicans prefer fewer cuts than the automatic reductions call for.

That broad opposition to the automatic cuts underscores the opportunity Congress has over the next year to devise a new deficit-reduction plan.

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EU must empower the ECB

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Martin Wolf, chief economic commentator for the Financial Times and long time critic of the Eurozone is optimistic that something tangible will emerge from the crucial, critical, and “endlessly hyped” two-day summit between EU officials commencing today. Alas, tangible and effective are wholly different concepts.

Wolf says the options are simple: the Eurozone can do the bare minimum to ward off economic chaos or come up with a maximal, comprehensive solution that is obviously never going to happen. The half-baked option, according to Wolf, is to “give enough cover, in terms of longer run discipline and longer run reform… to allow the ECB to start intervening in government bond markets in a much more aggressive way”.

By way of translation, Wolf’s idea is akin America’s method for cutting our budget. First you posture, yell, argue and point fingers. Next you refuse any meaningful compromise in the now, leaving the hard decisions to your political successors. Finally you chuck money at the problem in a fiscally reckless manner designed to do nothing more than buy time.

Barring a wild modification of human and political nature this bare-boned solution is what’s going to be detailed for us Friday afternoon. The problem with merely prolonging the crisis is that ultimate success is entirely reliant on an economic recovery in Europe to enable member nations to buy things from one another even as half of the Eurozone is facing mandatory austerity measures.

In short, the idea is to give countries less and hope they buy more while somehow not incurring more debt. It’s an idea akin to he ECB becoming a Federal Reserve cover-band playing tired versions of America’s failed policies. Regardless, Wolf says it’s the Eurozone’s only hope.

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Upgrades and Downgrades This Morning

Source

These are some of the top analyst upgrades, downgrades, and initiations seen from Wall Street research calls this Thursday morning.

Brightpoint Inc. (NASDAQ: CELL) Reiterate as Buy with a $14 price target objective at Canaccord Genuity.
Cisco Systems Inc. (NASDAQ: CSCO) Reiterated as Buy with $24 price target objective at Argus.
Deckers Outdoor Corporation (NASDAQ: DECK) Reiterated as Buy with a $122 price target objective at Canaccord Genuity.
Diamond Offshore Drilling Inc. (NYSE: DO) Started as Sell with a $70 target price objective at Goldman Sachs.
France Telecom (NYSE: FTE) Cut to Underperform and named as Bear of the Day by Zacks Investment Research.
Hatteras Financial Corporation (NYSE: HTS) Cut to Neutral at Stern Agee.
Healthways Inc. (NASDAQ: HWAY) Raised to Buy at Stifel Nicolaus.
Hercules Offshore, Inc. (NASDAQ: HERO) Started as Neutral at Goldman Sachs.
Las Vegas Sands Corp. (NYSE: LVS) Cut to Neutral at Janney Capital Markets.
Lululemon Athletica Inc. (NASDAQ: LULU) Reinitiated as Buy at Stern Agee.
Melco Crown Entertainment Ltd. (NASDAQ: MPEL) Raised to Outperform from Neutral at Credit Suisse.
NRG Energy, Inc. (NYSE: NRG) Cut to Neutral from Buy at UBS.
Philip Morris International, Inc. (NYSE: PM) Cut to Neutral from Buy at Nomura.
Schlumberger Limited (NYSE: SLB) Started as Neutral at Goldman Sachs.
Sonic Automotive, Inc. (NYSE: SAH) named as value stock of the day by Zacks Investment Research.
State Auto Financial (NASDAQ: STFC) Raised to Buy from Neutral at Janney Capital Markets.
Veolia Environnement S.A. (NYSE: VE) Cut to Hold from Buy at Deutsche Bank.
VeriSign, Inc. (NASDAQ: VRSN) Raised to Outperform and featured as the Bull of the Day by Zacks Investment Research.
Weatherford International Ltd. (NYSE: WFT) Started as Buy with a $22 price target objective at Goldman Sachs.
Yum! Brands, Inc. (NYSE: YUM) Reiterated Buy with $65 fair value target at Janney Capital Markets.

 

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Gapping Up and Down This Morning

Gapping Up

LULU +1.5%, PSUN +44.4%, AXL +3%, GIII +21.3%, CJES +6.8%, CEDC +9.6%,  MCD +1.4%, ENB +0.5%,

AZN +1.4%, GSK +1.4%, AFFY +25.4%, CJES +6.8%, ARMH +1.6%,  USB +0.9%,  EQT +3.2%,  BA +2%, POT +0.9%,

Gapping Down 

RIG -1.3%, THQI -12.3%, SNH -1.5%, CLWR -7.9%, TSLA -7.9%, EPD -2.7%, ARR -2.4%, CREE -2.2%, BP -1.2%,

TSLA -8.3%, HNR -7.6% ,  ARR -2.4%, ALXA -34.3%, WFR -3.1%, AMR -10.7%, SAVE -4.3%, COST -1.9%,

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