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Happy Holiday – 2015 at the Halfway Point
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The euro tested three-week lows after the Greek referendum was announced, dropping as low as 1.0960 in early trading, then rocketing back up to 1.1280 on Monday. The pair gradually sank lower through the rest of the week. On Thursday, Sweden’s Riksbank lowered its main interest rate deeper into negative territory and expanded its bond purchases to the end of the year as the turmoil in Greece raised the specter of further krona gains.
Puerto Rico’s ongoing financial crisis has reached a tipping point, drawing some comparisons to Greece. Last weekend, Puerto Rico Governor Alejandro Garca Padilla said the territory could no longer make payments on its $73 billion in debt and would try to reach a deal with holders to implement a possible payment moratorium. There were fears that the island would miss a $1.9 billion payment on Wednesday, on debt owed by power utility Prepa, but the payment was made. Credit default swaps on its bonds jumped to levels close to Venezuela’s. The White House stated that nobody in Washington would consider bailing out the island, but Congressional Democrats tried to advance a bill that would remove the prohibition on Puerto Rico from declaring Chapter 9 bankruptcy. Shares of bond insurers MBIA and Assured Guarantee fell sharply, dropping by double digit percentages.
Iran and the P5+1 group of world powers pushed back their deadline for resolving the nuclear negotiations by a week. The new July 7 deadline was announced amid an air of optimism that a enough progress is being made that deal can get done next week.
The Supreme Court struck down the EPA’s new, more stringent mercury emission regulations, ruling that the Obama Administration unlawfully failed to consider costs when deciding to regulate mercury pollution from power plants. The vote was 5-4, with Scalia writing the majority opinion. Recall that in making the rules, the EPA argued that public health was the only criteria to be considered, not the industry cost of compliance, which the agency estimated at nearly $10B annually. Coal names briefly spiked higher on the ruling, however Peabody Energy cut its Q2 guidance, dragging down the sector through Friday.
ACE Ltd. reached a deal to acquire Chubb in a combined cash and stock deal valued at $28.3 billion. Chubb shareholders will receive $62.93 per share in cash and 0.6019 shares of ACE stock, for a total per-share price of around $124.13/shr, based on the prior day’s closing price. Sysco said it would abandon its $8.2bn takeover of US Foods after the deal was blocked by a federal judge last week. Announced back in December 2013, the merger would have created the largest food service distributor in the US but quickly came under scrutiny from the FTC. Celgene acquired a 10% stake in Juno Therapeutics as part of a wide-ranging cancer treatment partnership, paying $93/shr, a premium of around 100% on the prior day’s closing price. The massive premium attracted mixed comments from analysts, many of whom said Celgene had massively overpaid. Early on Friday, Humana spurned its latest suitor Cigna and wrapped up talks with its preferred partner Aetna, confirming it will be acquired for $37B or $230/shr in cash and stock, a premium of just over 20% from Thursday close.
After last week’s 13% drop, Shanghai Composite shed another 12% in spite of more earnest efforts by policymakers to contain the damage. Over the weekend, PBoC announced a 25bps reduction in key interest rates along with a 50bps cut in RRR for lenders to farming and small business enterprises. Throughout the week, PBoC also maintained an active stance via open market operations, injecting another CNY35B via reverse repos while also lowering the offering yield by 20bps to 2.50%. On the fiscal side, NDRC signaled it is looking at measures to stimulate the rail industry and also assist the struggling coal sector. And in terms of the rapidly evolving financial landscape, policymakers accepted the risk of moral hazard by easing some restrictions around margin requirements widely deemed as a culprit for rapid selling. All these measures are seemingly to no avail, with the Shanghai index now down 29% from its mid-June peak. Late in the week, local press stipulated that active buying may not return unless the regulators lower stamp tax on transactions – a measure that has been more successful in the past. In the meantime, the latest set of PMI figures painted a mixed picture, with the official June manufacturing print at its 4th straight expansion of 50.2 vs 50.4 consensus and services at a 4-month high of 53.8.