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EU imposes first ever anti-subsidy tariffs against imports from China

In a 15 month investigation, the EU found that that the Chinese government was significantly subsidising its coated fine paper industry by giving cheap loans, allocating land below market value and granting various tax incentives which are illegal practices under WTO rules. After this first-ever anti-subsidy proceeding launched by the EU against China, the EU today imposes definite countervailing duties ranging from 4% to 12% on this high quality paper imported from China. The investigation also brought to light that Chinese producers of coated fine paper exported their products to the EU at dumped prices, hence the EU will impose anti-dumping duties ranging from 8% to 35.1%, depending on the producer.

“This is the first time ever we put in place measures against the strategic and targeted subsidisation of a specific industry by the Chinese government. All these subsidies are not in line with the obligations China has signed up to when joining in 2001 the World Trade Organisation. Today’s measures will restore effective and fair trade conditions on the EU market”, said John Clancy, EU Trade Spokesman.

Full press release here

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What If the U.S. Treasury Defaults?

What If the U.S. Treasury Defaults?

Stanley Drukenmiller says it’s OK

”People aren’t going to wonder whether 20 years ago we delayed an interest payment for six days. They’re going to wonder whether we got our house in order.’

winterdruckenmi

‘A financial crisis is surely going to happen as big or bigger than the one we had in 2008 if we continue to behave the way we’re behaving,” says Stanley Druckenmiller, the legendary investor and onetime fund manager for George Soros. Is this another warning from Wall Street that Congress must immediately raise the federal debt limit to prevent the end of civilization?

No—Mr. Druckenmiller has heard enough of such “clamor and hyperbole.” The grave danger he sees is that politicians might give the government authority to borrow beyond the current limit of $14.3 trillion without any conditions to control spending.

One of the world’s most successful money managers, the lanky, sandy-haired Mr. Druckenmiller is so concerned about the government’s ability to pay for its future obligations that he’s willing to accept a temporary delay in the interest payments he’s owed on his U.S. Treasury bonds—if the result is a Washington deal to restrain runaway entitlement costs.

“I think technical default would be horrible,” he says from the 24th floor of his midtown Manhattan office, “but I don’t think it’s going to be the end of the world. It’s not going to be catastrophic. What’s going to be catastrophic is if we don’t solve the real problem,” meaning Washington’s spending addiction.

Widely credited with orchestrating Mr. Soros’s successful shorting of the British pound in 1992, Mr. Druckenmiller also built his own fund, Duquesne Capital, into a $12 billion titan. He announced plans last year to close the fund and now reports, “I have no clients.” He is still managing his own money, which Forbes magazine recently estimated at $2.5 billion.

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Secret Desert Force Set Up by Blackwater’s Founder

ABU DHABI, United Arab Emirates — Late one night last November, a plane carrying dozens of Colombian men touched down in this glittering seaside capital. Whisked through customs by an Emirati intelligence officer, the group boarded an unmarked bus and drove roughly 20 miles to a windswept military complex in the desert sand.

The Colombians had entered the United Arab Emirates posing as construction workers. In fact, they were soldiers for a secret American-led mercenary army being built by Erik Prince, the billionaire founder of Blackwater Worldwide, with $529 million from the oil-soaked sheikdom.

Mr. Prince, who resettled here last year after his security business faced mounting legal problems in the United States, was hired by the crown prince of Abu Dhabi to put together an 800-member battalion of foreign troops for the U.A.E., according to former employees on the project, American officials and corporate documents obtained by The New York Times.

The force is intended to conduct special operations missions inside and outside the country, defend oil pipelines and skyscrapers from terrorist attacks and put down internal revolts, the documents show. Such troops could be deployed if the Emirates faced unrest or were challenged by pro-democracy demonstrations in its crowded labor camps or democracy protests like those sweeping the Arab world this year.

The U.A.E.’s rulers, viewing their own military as inadequate, also hope that the troops could blunt the regional aggression of Iran, the country’s biggest foe, the former employees said. The training camp, located on a sprawling Emirati base called Zayed Military City, is hidden behind concrete walls laced with barbed wire. Photographs show rows of identical yellow temporary buildings, used for barracks and mess halls, and a motor pool, which houses Humvees and fuel trucks. The Colombians, along with South African and other foreign troops, are trained by retired American soldiers and veterans of the German and British special operations units and the French Foreign Legion, according to the former employees and American officials.

In outsourcing critical parts of their defense to mercenaries — the soldiers of choice for medieval kings, Italian Renaissance dukes and African dictators — the Emiratis have begun a new era in the boom in wartime contracting that began after the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks. And by relying on a force largely created by Americans, they have introduced a volatile element in an already combustible region where the United States is widely viewed with suspicion.

Read the full article at the NYT

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Canada Real Estate: Are Price-to-Rent Ratios Flashing Warning Signs?

In the following analysis, I will turn the focus to price to rent ratios in major Canadian cities.  The data sources are the Canadian Real Estate Association (CREA) who kindly provided me with quarterly house price data going back to Q1 1980, and the Centre for Urban Economics and Real Estate at the Sauder School of Business.  They have created a rent index that tracks the change in rent in various large cities in Canada by tracking the change in Rented Accommodation Subindex of the Consumer Price Index.

Below, I will examine changes in rents and house prices in Vancouver, Calgary, Edmonton, Winnipeg, Ottawa, Toronto, and Halifax.

Before examining the data, let’s review why rents are an important determinant of the value of housing (both investment housing and residential housing).

Why rents matter

Interestingly, it was the house price to rent ratio and the house price to income ratio that alerted some economists to the severe overvaluation in the US housing market (precious few as those economists were).  It is worth examining why this ratio is an indicator of potential house price overvaluation and why it applies to both residential and investment housing.

Full article

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Breaking: IMF boss Strauss-Khan pulled off plane, arrested in sodomy probe

Full story at the NY post

A top French politician who heads the International Monetary Fund was hauled off an Air France flight at Kennedy Airport today on suspicion of sodomizing a Manhattan hotel maid, sources told The Post.

Three Port Authority detectives took Dominique Strauss-Khan into custody in the plane’s first-class cabin just two minutes before it was due to depart for Paris, said police sources.

Strauss-Khan, 62, was turned over to NYPD officers from the Midtown South precinct.

Around noon today, a maid at the hotel knocked on the door of Strauss-Khan’s room.

After letting the maid in, Strauss-Khan allegedly threw the maid on the room’s bed and forced her to perform oral sex on him, said police sources.

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Felix Zulauf turns bearish, expects major correction and QE3

Barron’s Roundtable member Felix Zulauf spoke to the German-language Handelsblatt about the European sovereign debt crisis and financial markets in an article published today. Like Jeremy Grantham, he has turned bearish. Credit Writedowns has translated that article.

Title: Italy is Next

The euro will break apart. At least that is what stock market Guru Felix Zulauf expects. Handelsblatt spoke to the Swiss investment banker about his expectations for the stock market.

Frankfurt. Mr. Zulauf, you were always a big critic of the euro. How is the crisis going?

Felix Zulauf: Debt problems are never solved by more debt. In Greece, an epic drama is playing out. The Greeks are broke. The Irish are too.and the Portuguese are close.

Read the full article

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Bikini Waxing Painful to Tombini Fight Against Brazil Inflation

If you’re getting a bikini wax in Brazil, you’re likely to find that the cost is rising. And if you’re an economic policy maker, that’s a problem.

As with more prosaic services ranging from car repair to dentistry, the price of waxing is rising faster than most components of the nation’s economy. That’s pushing inflation above the government’s target and may force central bank President Alexandre Tombini to prolong interest-rate increases this year.

Full story and more on Brazilian waxes here

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Technology Winners/Losers (1 month)

No. Ticker 1-month Return Market Cap Sector
1 SREV 43.82 1,040,000,000 TECHNOLOGY
2 SMI 43.72 3,010,000,000 TECHNOLOGY
3 VSEA 39.46 4,610,000,000 TECHNOLOGY
4 SPWRA 29.26 1,950,000,000 TECHNOLOGY
5 FEIC 27.71 1,530,000,000 TECHNOLOGY
6 CGNX 22.27 1,450,000,000 TECHNOLOGY
7 IIVI 20.89 1,690,000,000 TECHNOLOGY
8 CY 20.77 3,670,000,000 TECHNOLOGY
9 CYOU 20.42 2,190,000,000 TECHNOLOGY
10 ONNN 20.04 5,170,000,000 TECHNOLOGY
11 IPGP 19.51 3,110,000,000 TECHNOLOGY
12 NTGR 19.41 1,410,000,000 TECHNOLOGY
13 INTC 19.33 127,630,000,000 TECHNOLOGY
14 BBBB 19.27 1,550,000,000 TECHNOLOGY
15 ERTS 19.16 7,890,000,000 TECHNOLOGY
16 PLCM 19.07 5,090,000,000 TECHNOLOGY
17 ERIC 18.96 47,650,000,000 TECHNOLOGY
18 LSI 18.69 4,690,000,000 TECHNOLOGY
19 SAPE 18.14 2,000,000,000 TECHNOLOGY
20 MERU 18.03 1,810,000,000 TECHNOLOGY
21 IDTI 17.75 1,280,000,000 TECHNOLOGY
22 N 17.36 2,310,000,000 TECHNOLOGY
23 MLNX 17.18 1,080,000,000 TECHNOLOGY
24 FTNT 16.58 3,570,000,000 TECHNOLOGY
25 IGT 16.41 5,470,000,000 TECHNOLOGY
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No. Ticker 1-month Return Market Cap Sector
1 LFT -36.39 1,080,000,000 TECHNOLOGY
2 DMD -25.64 1,020,000,000 TECHNOLOGY
3 PTI -24.12 1,070,000,000 TECHNOLOGY
4 IL -23.04 1,170,000,000 TECHNOLOGY
5 IO -21.99 1,470,000,000 TECHNOLOGY
6 RIMM -21.14 22,530,000,000 TECHNOLOGY
7 RMBS -19.44 1,630,000,000 TECHNOLOGY
8 LXK -18.98 2,360,000,000 TECHNOLOGY
9 LDK -17.54 1,410,000,000 TECHNOLOGY
10 PANL -15.68 1,780,000,000 TECHNOLOGY
11 YOKU -15.66 5,110,000,000 TECHNOLOGY
12 TSL -14.51 1,990,000,000 TECHNOLOGY
13 NTES -13.95 5,920,000,000 TECHNOLOGY
14 YGE -13.88 1,660,000,000 TECHNOLOGY
15 SOHU -13.52 3,180,000,000 TECHNOLOGY
16 FSLR -13.21 10,830,000,000 TECHNOLOGY
17 OPEN -13.02 2,190,000,000 TECHNOLOGY
18 INFY -12.95 36,300,000,000 TECHNOLOGY
19 TCL -12.94 1,410,000,000 TECHNOLOGY
20 AMX -12.73 103,060,000,000 TECHNOLOGY
21 TRMB -12.73 5,250,000,000 TECHNOLOGY
22 DST -12.68 2,200,000,000 TECHNOLOGY
23 ARRS -12.66 1,360,000,000 TECHNOLOGY
24 SFSF -12.59 2,590,000,000 TECHNOLOGY
25 LORL -11.69 2,060,000,000 TECHNOLOGY

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Utilities Winners/Losers (1 month)

No. Ticker 1-month Return Market Cap Sector
1 NRG 15.02 5,910,000,000 UTILITIES
2 FE 14.26 17,790,000,000 UTILITIES
3 UIL 13.19 1,720,000,000 UTILITIES
4 DPL 11.81 3,520,000,000 UTILITIES
5 CEG 11.72 7,370,000,000 UTILITIES
6 NWE 10.96 1,190,000,000 UTILITIES
7 D 10.17 27,630,000,000 UTILITIES
8 POM 9.92 4,520,000,000 UTILITIES
9 NI 9.82 5,700,000,000 UTILITIES
10 POR 9.46 1,940,000,000 UTILITIES
11 PNM 9.33 1,460,000,000 UTILITIES
12 AVA 9.20 1,440,000,000 UTILITIES
13 ITC 9.17 3,800,000,000 UTILITIES
14 CNP 9.16 7,970,000,000 UTILITIES
15 SO 9.05 34,380,000,000 UTILITIES
16 AEP 8.99 17,500,000,000 UTILITIES
17 TEG 8.95 4,200,000,000 UTILITIES
18 PNW 8.80 4,930,000,000 UTILITIES
19 NJR 8.36 1,860,000,000 UTILITIES
20 DTE 8.31 8,900,000,000 UTILITIES
21 OKE 8.26 7,410,000,000 UTILITIES
22 WR 8.16 3,170,000,000 UTILITIES
23 ED 8.04 15,830,000,000 UTILITIES
24 PEG 7.98 16,920,000,000 UTILITIES
25 SWX 7.91 1,850,000,000 UTILITIES

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No. Ticker 1-month Return Market Cap Sector
1 EBR -8.77 15,890,000,000 UTILITIES
2 ORA -8.49 1,040,000,000 UTILITIES
3 EGN -4.69 4,130,000,000 UTILITIES
4 BKH -3.02 1,240,000,000 UTILITIES
5 KMI -2.82 19,750,000,000 UTILITIES
6 AES -2.43 10,190,000,000 UTILITIES
7 GEN -2.41 2,800,000,000 UTILITIES
8 SBS -2.10 6,520,000,000 UTILITIES
9 NKA -2.07 1,410,000,000 UTILITIES
10 VE -1.88 15,190,000,000 UTILITIES
11 NFG -1.12 5,840,000,000 UTILITIES
12 ELP -0.98 7,440,000,000 UTILITIES
13 SUG 0.98 3,470,000,000 UTILITIES
14 OGE 1.07 4,990,000,000 UTILITIES
15 CPN 1.74 7,290,000,000 UTILITIES
16 APU 1.96 2,640,000,000 UTILITIES
17 UGI 2.21 3,580,000,000 UTILITIES
18 CIG 2.40 13,100,000,000 UTILITIES
19 SJI 2.51 1,670,000,000 UTILITIES
20 CNL 2.74 2,130,000,000 UTILITIES
21 HNP 2.87 6,490,000,000 UTILITIES
22 ATO 3.09 3,080,000,000 UTILITIES
23 TAC 3.32 4,830,000,000 UTILITIES
24 EIX 3.59 12,890,000,000 UTILITIES
25 NGG 3.61 32,710,000,000 UTILITIES

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Services Winners/Losers (1 month)

(Includes long and short, average volume > 25k. ETFs excluded.)

No. Ticker 1-month Return Market Cap Sector
1 DPZ 30.50 1,450,000,000 SERVICES
2 DDS 30.29 3,360,000,000 SERVICES
3 BPI 28.14 1,120,000,000 SERVICES
4 BJRI 25.10 1,330,000,000 SERVICES
5 MW 24.62 1,750,000,000 SERVICES
6 ASCA 24.10 1,340,000,000 SERVICES
7 DISH 23.82 12,810,000,000 SERVICES
8 PSMT 22.42 1,390,000,000 SERVICES
9 SIRI 21.20 8,840,000,000 SERVICES
10 MPEL 21.11 5,590,000,000 SERVICES
11 SVU 19.82 2,310,000,000 SERVICES
12 UAL 19.65 8,450,000,000 SERVICES
13 VCLK 19.58 1,430,000,000 SERVICES
14 DTG 19.53 2,370,000,000 SERVICES
15 GPRO 18.79 3,850,000,000 SERVICES
16 SBH 18.72 2,980,000,000 SERVICES
17 CPA 17.65 2,780,000,000 SERVICES
18 MHS 17.49 25,860,000,000 SERVICES
19 ROST 15.61 9,720,000,000 SERVICES
20 M 15.40 12,060,000,000 SERVICES
21 RAD 15.38 1,080,000,000 SERVICES
22 GA 14.76 2,050,000,000 SERVICES
23 VMED 14.63 10,090,000,000 SERVICES
24 LCC 14.04 1,520,000,000 SERVICES
25 FUN 13.82 1,210,000,000 SERVICES
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No. Ticker 1-month Return Market Cap Sector
1 SVM -26.41 1,810,000,000 SERVICES
2 NYT -18.23 1,100,000,000 SERVICES
3 URI -17.84 1,630,000,000 SERVICES
4 ARO -16.94 1,760,000,000 SERVICES
5 BID -14.61 2,820,000,000 SERVICES
6 CTCM -14.54 3,050,000,000 SERVICES
7 BIG -11.51 2,900,000,000 SERVICES
8 FRO -10.29 1,610,000,000 SERVICES
9 HRB -10.25 4,830,000,000 SERVICES
10 SSI -9.92 2,030,000,000 SERVICES
11 SVN -9.51 1,010,000,000 SERVICES
12 LAMR -9.17 2,770,000,000 SERVICES
13 ALEX -9.11 1,960,000,000 SERVICES
14 IM -9.01 3,090,000,000 SERVICES
15 RCII -8.79 2,010,000,000 SERVICES
16 TRN -8.79 2,590,000,000 SERVICES
17 JNY -8.38 1,150,000,000 SERVICES
18 PSS -8.30 1,200,000,000 SERVICES
19 RRR -8.11 1,280,000,000 SERVICES
20 TGH -7.89 1,600,000,000 SERVICES
21 MSG -7.76 2,010,000,000 SERVICES
22 WCC -7.67 2,360,000,000 SERVICES
23 TAL -7.56 1,130,000,000 SERVICES
24 KNX -7.54 1,460,000,000 SERVICES
25 AEO -7.25 2,840,000,000 SERVICES

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Industrials Winners/Losers (1 month)

No. Ticker 1-month Return Market Cap Sector
1 B 18.40 1,320,000,000 INDUSTRIAL GOODS
2 TGI 17.79 2,340,000,000 INDUSTRIAL GOODS
3 HXL 16.18 2,140,000,000 INDUSTRIAL GOODS
4 HIT 15.05 254,040,000,000 INDUSTRIAL GOODS
5 GGG 14.55 3,020,000,000 INDUSTRIAL GOODS
6 MHK 12.64 4,640,000,000 INDUSTRIAL GOODS
7 SHAW 12.41 3,210,000,000 INDUSTRIAL GOODS
8 BA 10.13 58,350,000,000 INDUSTRIAL GOODS
9 ESL 9.34 2,230,000,000 INDUSTRIAL GOODS
10 ABB 9.26 59,500,000,000 INDUSTRIAL GOODS
11 ITW 8.76 28,980,000,000 INDUSTRIAL GOODS
12 AWI 8.61 2,790,000,000 INDUSTRIAL GOODS
13 LLL 8.44 8,860,000,000 INDUSTRIAL GOODS
14 FLIR 8.28 5,760,000,000 INDUSTRIAL GOODS
15 PCP 7.98 22,260,000,000 INDUSTRIAL GOODS
16 RSG 7.83 12,270,000,000 INDUSTRIAL GOODS
17 GR 7.70 11,330,000,000 INDUSTRIAL GOODS
18 MTZ 7.07 1,680,000,000 INDUSTRIAL GOODS
19 NJ 6.90 12,270,000,000 INDUSTRIAL GOODS
20 GVA 6.85 1,070,000,000 INDUSTRIAL GOODS
21 IR 5.89 16,600,000,000 INDUSTRIAL GOODS
22 IFSIA 5.86 1,230,000,000 INDUSTRIAL GOODS
23 LFUS 5.73 1,310,000,000 INDUSTRIAL GOODS
24 UTX 5.65 81,440,000,000 INDUSTRIAL GOODS
25 HON 5.58 47,620,000,000 INDUSTRIAL GOODS
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1 GFA -17.18 2,320,000,000 INDUSTRIAL GOODS
2 MDR -14.15 4,790,000,000 INDUSTRIAL GOODS
3 DGI -14.12 1,120,000,000 INDUSTRIAL GOODS
4 MTW -13.21 2,370,000,000 INDUSTRIAL GOODS
5 X -11.67 6,420,000,000 INDUSTRIAL GOODS
6 GTLS -11.58 1,290,000,000 INDUSTRIAL GOODS
7 USG -11.53 1,490,000,000 INDUSTRIAL GOODS
8 TPC -11.18 1,050,000,000 INDUSTRIAL GOODS
9 WPRT -9.84 1,060,000,000 INDUSTRIAL GOODS
10 ROK -9.47 11,910,000,000 INDUSTRIAL GOODS
11 VMC -8.49 5,160,000,000 INDUSTRIAL GOODS
12 JOYG -7.74 9,170,000,000 INDUSTRIAL GOODS
13 DRC -7.55 3,620,000,000 INDUSTRIAL GOODS
14 TXT -7.52 6,800,000,000 INDUSTRIAL GOODS
15 EXP -7.48 1,190,000,000 INDUSTRIAL GOODS
16 TXI -7.42 1,080,000,000 INDUSTRIAL GOODS
17 CNH -6.89 10,070,000,000 INDUSTRIAL GOODS
18 RS -6.88 3,830,000,000 INDUSTRIAL GOODS
19 BWC -6.60 3,320,000,000 INDUSTRIAL GOODS
20 NDSN -6.34 3,540,000,000 INDUSTRIAL GOODS
21 DE -6.25 36,930,000,000 INDUSTRIAL GOODS
22 PH -6.11 14,190,000,000 INDUSTRIAL GOODS
23 LPX -6.08 1,120,000,000 INDUSTRIAL GOODS
24 CX -6.08 8,510,000,000 INDUSTRIAL GOODS
25 EMR -5.89 40,240,000,000 INDUSTRIAL GOODS

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Healthcare Winners/Losers (1 month)

No. Ticker 1-month Return Market Cap Sector
1 AMRN 94.94 1,820,000,000 HEALTHCARE
2 TRNX 35.00 4,800,000,000 HEALTHCARE
3 ALKS 30.80 1,390,000,000 HEALTHCARE
4 ONXX 28.44 2,720,000,000 HEALTHCARE
5 ZOLL 28.38 1,290,000,000 HEALTHCARE
6 HLF 25.16 6,360,000,000 HEALTHCARE
7 THOR 22.50 1,930,000,000 HEALTHCARE
8 MYGN 21.49 2,070,000,000 HEALTHCARE
9 VRTX 21.31 11,810,000,000 HEALTHCARE
10 AMLN 19.70 1,930,000,000 HEALTHCARE
11 BIIB 19.32 23,340,000,000 HEALTHCARE
12 WCG 18.89 2,100,000,000 HEALTHCARE
13 QCOR 18.71 1,410,000,000 HEALTHCARE
14 REGN 18.48 4,820,000,000 HEALTHCARE
15 NUVA 17.62 1,240,000,000 HEALTHCARE
16 AET 17.15 15,890,000,000 HEALTHCARE
17 MR 16.56 3,560,000,000 HEALTHCARE
18 CBST 16.10 2,090,000,000 HEALTHCARE
19 WLP 16.07 29,460,000,000 HEALTHCARE
20 HS 15.65 2,940,000,000 HEALTHCARE
21 SGEN 15.45 2,050,000,000 HEALTHCARE
22 ZMH 15.02 13,220,000,000 HEALTHCARE
23 ELN 14.95 4,960,000,000 HEALTHCARE
24 UHS 14.36 5,270,000,000 HEALTHCARE
25 TMH 13.96 1,420,000,000 HEALTHCARE
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No. Ticker 1-month Return Market Cap Sector
1 JAZZ -17.19 1,150,000,000 HEALTHCARE
2 ITMN -16.50 2,210,000,000 HEALTHCARE
3 CYH -12.21 2,640,000,000 HEALTHCARE
4 NXTM -11.40 1,090,000,000 HEALTHCARE
5 MASI -8.20 1,880,000,000 HEALTHCARE
6 HGSI -7.54 5,160,000,000 HEALTHCARE
7 PPDI -6.85 3,250,000,000 HEALTHCARE
8 AH -6.06 2,400,000,000 HEALTHCARE
9 EXEL -5.11 1,400,000,000 HEALTHCARE
10 CRL -4.78 2,040,000,000 HEALTHCARE
11 VRX -4.74 15,230,000,000 HEALTHCARE
12 THC -3.21 3,100,000,000 HEALTHCARE
13 NVO -3.18 70,960,000,000 HEALTHCARE
14 VPHM -3.01 1,440,000,000 HEALTHCARE
15 RMD -2.17 4,820,000,000 HEALTHCARE
16 DNDN -1.99 5,550,000,000 HEALTHCARE
17 HSP -1.91 9,310,000,000 HEALTHCARE
18 ALXN -1.75 9,150,000,000 HEALTHCARE
19 BSX -1.72 10,450,000,000 HEALTHCARE
20 ISRG -1.72 13,990,000,000 HEALTHCARE
21 MAKO -1.58 1,030,000,000 HEALTHCARE
22 DVA -1.28 8,170,000,000 HEALTHCARE
23 PRGO -1.03 8,030,000,000 HEALTHCARE
24 BLUD -1.00 1,460,000,000 HEALTHCARE
25 BKD -0.73 3,120,000,000 HEALTHCARE

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Financial Winners/Losers (1 month)

No. Ticker 1-month Return Market Cap Sector
1 CSGP 19.13 1,490,000,000 FINANCIAL
2 TW 15.11 4,700,000,000 FINANCIAL
3 CHSI 14.96 2,840,000,000 FINANCIAL
4 AGO 14.53 3,080,000,000 FINANCIAL
5 UMBF 12.85 1,700,000,000 FINANCIAL
6 OCN 12.36 1,210,000,000 FINANCIAL
7 SLG 12.35 6,790,000,000 FINANCIAL
8 CSH 11.21 1,400,000,000 FINANCIAL
9 PRA 10.38 2,100,000,000 FINANCIAL
10 BEE 10.33 1,160,000,000 FINANCIAL
11 RYN 9.95 5,380,000,000 FINANCIAL
12 CBL 9.81 2,790,000,000 FINANCIAL
13 SPG 9.76 33,810,000,000 FINANCIAL
14 AFSI 9.57 1,160,000,000 FINANCIAL
15 TCO 9.57 3,270,000,000 FINANCIAL
16 BXP 9.53 14,610,000,000 FINANCIAL
17 CXW 9.27 2,790,000,000 FINANCIAL
18 SKT 9.21 2,230,000,000 FINANCIAL
19 ADS 8.95 4,640,000,000 FINANCIAL
20 WRI 8.94 3,190,000,000 FINANCIAL
21 STSA 8.81 1,100,000,000 FINANCIAL
22 PVTB 8.74 1,100,000,000 FINANCIAL
23 VNO 8.73 17,460,000,000 FINANCIAL
24 KIM 8.71 7,720,000,000 FINANCIAL
25 IVR 8.68 1,140,000,000 FINANCIAL
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No. Ticker 1-month Return Market Cap Sector
1 NBG -22.22 6,690,000,000 FINANCIAL
2 AIB -21.58 3,980,000,000 FINANCIAL
3 IRE -16.44 2,420,000,000 FINANCIAL
4 BXS -15.48 1,080,000,000 FINANCIAL
5 GS -11.63 77,390,000,000 FINANCIAL
6 SF -11.39 2,070,000,000 FINANCIAL
7 BMA -11.30 2,050,000,000 FINANCIAL
8 HXM -11.14 1,390,000,000 FINANCIAL
9 JNS -10.95 2,030,000,000 FINANCIAL
10 BCS -10.87 53,060,000,000 FINANCIAL
11 LYG -10.74 58,940,000,000 FINANCIAL
12 ENH -10.71 1,690,000,000 FINANCIAL
13 AEG -10.68 11,910,000,000 FINANCIAL
14 GNW -10.60 5,500,000,000 FINANCIAL
15 JLL -10.17 4,060,000,000 FINANCIAL
16 AIG -10.13 55,120,000,000 FINANCIAL
17 BAC -10.10 120,890,000,000 FINANCIAL
18 CSE -10.00 2,000,000,000 FINANCIAL
19 MS -9.78 36,490,000,000 FINANCIAL
20 SNV -9.77 1,880,000,000 FINANCIAL
21 LFC -9.38 96,920,000,000 FINANCIAL
22 AUTC -9.22 1,490,000,000 FINANCIAL
23 BFR -9.03 1,720,000,000 FINANCIAL
24 BBVA -8.94 51,930,000,000 FINANCIAL
25 HDB -8.68 24,510,000,000 FINANCIAL

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Consumer Goods Winners/Losers (1 month)

No. Ticker 1-month Return Market Cap Sector
1 DF 35.56 2,460,000,000 CONSUMER GOODS
2 RAH 31.11 4,970,000,000 CONSUMER GOODS
3 NUS 26.84 2,340,000,000 CONSUMER GOODS
4 POOL 20.94 1,460,000,000 CONSUMER GOODS
5 CROX 19.42 1,900,000,000 CONSUMER GOODS
6 UFS 18.70 4,320,000,000 CONSUMER GOODS
7 GT 18.45 4,340,000,000 CONSUMER GOODS
8 IMAX 18.17 2,360,000,000 CONSUMER GOODS
9 ICON 15.57 1,790,000,000 CONSUMER GOODS
10 MJN 14.61 13,960,000,000 CONSUMER GOODS
11 HBI 14.47 3,080,000,000 CONSUMER GOODS
12 LEG 14.33 3,710,000,000 CONSUMER GOODS
13 GNTX 13.94 4,420,000,000 CONSUMER GOODS
14 DAR 13.70 2,010,000,000 CONSUMER GOODS
15 COLM 13.46 2,330,000,000 CONSUMER GOODS
16 WBC 13.36 4,660,000,000 CONSUMER GOODS
17 PII 13.18 3,530,000,000 CONSUMER GOODS
18 GMCR 13.11 10,730,000,000 CONSUMER GOODS
19 LO 13.04 16,020,000,000 CONSUMER GOODS
20 DMND 13.01 1,490,000,000 CONSUMER GOODS
21 BCPC 12.86 1,180,000,000 CONSUMER GOODS
22 VRA 12.44 2,060,000,000 CONSUMER GOODS
23 OI 12.09 5,410,000,000 CONSUMER GOODS
24 CSL 11.47 3,000,000,000 CONSUMER GOODS
25 SHOO 11.34 1,540,000,000 CONSUMER GOODS
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No. Ticker 1-month Return Market Cap Sector
1 PPC -21.96 1,200,000,000 CONSUMER GOODS
2 TBL -21.40 1,740,000,000 CONSUMER GOODS
3 HNI -15.24 1,150,000,000 CONSUMER GOODS
4 PAY -14.74 4,160,000,000 CONSUMER GOODS
5 SFD -11.53 3,410,000,000 CONSUMER GOODS
6 BC -11.12 1,940,000,000 CONSUMER GOODS
7 UA -10.74 3,460,000,000 CONSUMER GOODS
8 CCH -10.64 9,290,000,000 CONSUMER GOODS
9 OSK -10.07 2,680,000,000 CONSUMER GOODS
10 GMK -9.18 1,020,000,000 CONSUMER GOODS
11 ADM -8.34 21,650,000,000 CONSUMER GOODS
12 GNRC -8.05 1,230,000,000 CONSUMER GOODS
13 SNE -7.32 27,710,000,000 CONSUMER GOODS
14 LII -7.16 2,570,000,000 CONSUMER GOODS
15 PHG -6.80 27,410,000,000 CONSUMER GOODS
16 SAM -6.27 1,120,000,000 CONSUMER GOODS
17 WRC -6.01 2,490,000,000 CONSUMER GOODS
18 TTM -5.35 15,170,000,000 CONSUMER GOODS
19 CZZ -5.32 2,990,000,000 CONSUMER GOODS
20 HOG -5.11 9,010,000,000 CONSUMER GOODS
21 XRX -4.89 14,310,000,000 CONSUMER GOODS
22 TSN -4.68 7,000,000,000 CONSUMER GOODS
23 DBD -4.43 2,160,000,000 CONSUMER GOODS
24 SWFT -4.00 1,860,000,000 CONSUMER GOODS
25 PCH -3.81 1,490,000,000 CONSUMER GOODS

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Biggest ETF Winners/Losers For the Week

No. Ticker 1-week Return
1 EDZ 8.37
2 LHB 7.90
3 DUST 7.64
4 BZQ 6.73
5 EEV 5.86
6 SGG 5.50
7 FAZ 4.73
8 EWV 4.40
9 HPI 4.10
10 XIV 4.00
11 SMN 3.99
12 ERY 3.90
13 APF 3.79
14 DRR 3.70
15 HPF 3.68
16 SGAR 3.67
17 DPK 3.48
18 KHI 3.45
19 PMR 3.41
20 EUM 3.30
21 EUO 3.30
22 SKF 3.26
23 BBH 3.25
24 PBJ 3.23
25 SAA 3.02

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No. Ticker 1-week Return
1 ZSL -12.81
2 SQQQ -10.06
3 TVIX -8.91
4 EDC -8.69
5 LBJ -8.35
6 AGQ -8.34
7 NUGT -7.99
8 TUR -7.74
9 GDXJ -6.05
10 JO -5.65
11 EZA -5.47
12 CAFE -5.43
13 EET -5.36
14 CEE -5.35
15 GAF -5.11
16 SIL -5.05
17 DZK -5.03
18 CTNN -4.94
19 ERX -4.93
20 FAS -4.91
21 CVOL -4.59
22 UYM -4.49
23 VXX -4.39
24 ASA -4.36
25 VIIX -4.30

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Biggest Winners/Losers For the Week

No. Ticker 1-week Return
1 ARTX 87.60
2 VRML 59.19
3 ABCW 30.51
4 SREV 28.52
5 ONTY 27.74
6 FFHL 27.70
7 TREE 27.50
8 HCKT 27.44
9 CKXE 26.98
10 VICL 24.66
11 DF 24.11
12 SCLN 23.86
13 PKT 23.73
14 GRNB 22.32
15 ALKS 22.18
16 MSHL 22.13
17 SPA 21.16
18 MED 20.55
19 IPSU 20.32
20 CYCC 19.86
21 ROVI 19.77
22 PRKR 19.35
23 FSII 18.57
24 AVEO 18.46
25 RPTP 17.82
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No. Ticker 1-week Return

2 JTX -47.11
3 IBNK -41.67
4 JGBO -39.49
5 PNSN -36.64
6 HEV -36.44
7 BMTI -36.27
8 REVU -32.26
9 PAL -29.11
10 TNGN -28.85
11 HEAT -27.85
12 RCON -26.42
13 HRZ -26.29
14 STEC -26.04
15 RENN -25.77
16 VTRO -25.58
17 SPMD -23.35
18 TBSI -22.94
19 IL -22.60
20 HW -22.38
21 USNA -22.28
22 BLTI -21.95
23 DHRM -21.73
24 TRGL -21.56
25 CWS -20.88

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Today’s Biggest ETF Losers

No. Ticker % Change
1 ZSL -7.11
2 EDC -6.61
3 DZK -6.18
4 TUR -5.24
5 LBJ -4.87
6 EET -4.05
7 CZM -3.84
8 FAS -3.70
9 TNA -3.70
10 REMX -3.18
11 TYH -3.05
12 UKK -3.04
13 UVT -2.99
14 UYM -2.99
15 DRN -2.93
16 TQQQ -2.92
17 EWP -2.90
18 EWO -2.86
19 THD -2.85
20 GAF -2.82
21 TMV -2.74
22 NUGT -2.73
23 SOXL -2.68
24 LIT -2.64
25 EZA -2.62

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Today’s Biggest ETF Winners

No. Ticker % Change
1 AGQ 5.08
2 EDZ 4.96
3 EEV 3.29
4 SLV 2.94
5 PSLV 2.62
6 FAZ 2.58
7 SKF 1.74
8 FXP 1.46
9 TZA 1.24
10 DRV 1.22
11 SRS 1.19
12 SPXU 1.14
13 BGZ 1.08
14 QID 1.06
15 TWM 0.98
16 VXX 0.94
17 DXD 0.84
18 TLT 0.82
19 OIH 0.76
20 SMN 0.76
21 SDS 0.75
22 DTO 0.72
23 PTY 0.69
24 EUO 0.63
25 SIL 0.50

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