Morning News Notes: 2011-03-11

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    Friday, March 11, 2011

    Japan the country was struck w/a massive 8.9 magnitude earth quake on Fri, the largest such

    event in Japan since records have been kept (140 years). There have been 27 aftershocks w/magnitudes

    of at least 5 since the initial quake struck. Tsunami alerts were issued for Japan, all its neighbors, as well

    as California, Oregon, and Washington; all the countrys ports have been closed; the quake hit just

    minutes before the Japanese market closed for Fri; equities in Europe were hit by the news (esp.

    reinsurers); Some nuclear power plants and oil refineries in Japan were shut down and a refinery and a

    major steel plant was ablaze. Some blue chip Japanese companies have reported plant

    damage/outages. There was some worry about the Tepco Fukushima nuclear plant, although officials

    say there was no radioactive leak (the reactors cooling system was apparently not working). Finance

    officials said they would be watching markets closely (the BOJ pledged to ensure financial stability).

    Moodys said it was very unlikely that the quake would impact Japans credit rating DJ/CNBC

    Saudi Arabia an official at the Saudi Interior Minister denied media reports and said that police

    didnt fire into the crowd during protests on Thurs (shots were fired above the crowd, not at it).

    Also officials said that rubber bullets were used. Saudi Arabia has accused some elements inside the

    country of trying to instigate chaos. Bloomberg

    Saudi Arabia the countrys capital was quiet early Fri morning ahead of a day of planned

    protests. Dozens of uniformed police patrolled main squares in Riyadh as scores of police cars toured

    the streets. If protests take place, they might start up after noon prayers at 1 p.m. (1000 GMT) or after

    evening prayers around 5 p.m. (1400 GMT). More than 200 protesters took to the streets on Friday in

    the Saudi Arabian city of Hofuf, two activists told Reuters. A diplomat in the Gulf region said protests

    were not expected to evolve into a mass demonstration on Friday. Protests were planned in other

    countries on Fri as well (inc. Yemen, others). Reuters

    China inflation comes in higher than St print ests (4.9% vs. the St 4.8%); note that some whispers

    were calling for a number more like ~4.4% w/some even looking for a sub-4% print, making todays

    release esp. disappointing. One of the silver linings of Chinas weaker growth was supposed to be lowerinflation, but so far that hasnt occurred. JPMorgan thinks CPI could breach 5% in the month of Mar.

    OPEC publishes its monthly report - Maintains 2011 Demand For OPEC Crude At 29.8M B/D;

    World Economic Growth "Remains Robust"; Spare Oil Capacity Ready To Accommodate Disruption;

    Spare Oil Capacity Was Almost 6M B/D Before Libya Crisis; Seasonal 2Q Demand Drop To Ease Oil Mkt

    Pressure; said February output rose 110,000 barrels per day (bpd) to 30.02 million bpd, the highest since

    December 2008 DJ/Reuters

    Debate rages about the direction of Treasuries once QE2 ends; Bill Gross most recent letter

    (and the revelation that he has cut all long-term TSY holdings to zero) has spooked markets and sparked

    a debate about how the market will look on Jul 1. Other managers are more sanguine and insist the

    Treasury market is driven by economic fundamentals, not Fed buying. FTTreasuries bond manager Gundlach made pos. comments on the Treasury market (earlier on

    Thurs) Gundlach thinks Treasuries have the potential to rally over the short-term and that the end of

    QE2 is full priced in at current levels. Reuters

    Treasuries Bill Gross tells CNBC why he sold all his long-term Treasuries - "It's not a question of

    dissing the United States or questioning the credit of the United States, but simply a maturity

    reflection," Gross said. Treasurys are "mispriced relative to the inflationary environment and the growth

    we see ahead and there are better alternatives in order to capture yield." CNBC growth? What

    about the new normal?

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