Wednesday, May 26, 2010

Liquidity Forecast for the World Economies

Stock Assault 2.0 - Artificial Intelligence Stock Market Software

This past week the Dow fell 4%, S&P 4.2%, the Russell 2000 fell 6.4% and the Nasdaq 100 fell 4.4%. Banks fell 5.4%; broker/dealers 4%; cyclicals fell 5.6%; transports 5.5%; consumers 3.4%; utilities 4.3%; high tech fell 3.7%; semis 1.3%; Internets fell 4.2% and biotechs 4.2%. Gold bullion fell $56.00, the HUI gold index fell 11.4% and the USDX, dollar index, fell 0.8% to 85.38.

Two-year Treasury bills fell 2 bps to 0.73%; the 10-year notes fell 22 bps to 3.24% and the 10-year German bund fell 20 bps to a record low of 2.66%.

Freddie Mac fixed-rate 30-year mortgages fell 7 bps to 4.93%. The 15’s fell 6 bps to 4.30%, one-year ARMs fell 5 bps to 4.02% and 30-year jumbos fell 4 bps to 5.59%.

Federal Reserve credit surged $28.9 billion to a record $2.339 trillion. It has been up ytd 14% and 8% yoy. Fed foreign holdings of Treasury, Agency debt fell $7.1 billion to $3.057 tril lion. Custody holdings rose $101 billion ytd or 8.9%, a yoy rise of 12.8%.

M2, narrow, money supply rose $25.3 billion to $8,530 trillion. M2, has declined $17.2 billion ytd.

Total money market fund assets fell $33.6 billion to $2.844 trillion. In the first 20 weeks of the year they have fallen $449 billion as investors plowed back into the market. That decline was 24.6%.

Total commercial paper fell $27 billion to $1.076 trillion. CP has declined $94 billion, or 20.9% ytd and $208 billion yoy, or 16.2%.

Europe is rescuing its economy in the same way that the Federal Reserve has attempted to same America’s financial system and economy. They have used an unprecedented aid and stimulus package to offset massive fiscal deficits. In the US a deflationary depression was avoided at least temporarily and that is what is now being attempted in Europe with the guidance of the Federal Reserve.

This kind of program was implemented during the 1930s when we are told that unemployment was 25%. During the late 1930s the program failed to pull America out of depression. Unemployment in 1939 was 17.4% and in 1940 it was 16.2%, hardly the results hoped for and anticipated. The result was WWII. We are headed in the same direction today, as the Middle East and Asia smolder ready at any time to burst into flames.

In the US liquidity was unleashed on a massive scale and that is what will happen in Europe. It is the only way they can keep the system functioning.

We Are now closing in on the next planned world war as a result. When and where we can only guess, but it surely is on the way, the same way it was in the late 1930s. War is a distraction and it succeeds in culling the population. It is also a cover-up for massive financial and economic problems that have resulted from the financial elite looting the system.

The system is not being fixed and deliberately so. The elitists do not want it fixed. They want a collapse. This is the only way they can force people to accept world government.

The groundwork was laid after WWII, as it was right after WWI. The 1960s brought inflation and on August 15,1971 the gold standard was abandoned. That is all that was needed to get the game underway. That inflation lasted some 50 years and is in the process of coming to an end. Many say they do know where it will end, but if they studied history they’d know exactly where it would end. It will end with the deliberate collapse of the financial and economic system and war, the way it always has. This time the conductor is the Federal Reserve, which is currently on the way to being a financial and monetary monopoly with the assistance of our well paid off representatives and senators. The massive reflation you have witnessed over the past almost three years is a steppings tone toward a final solution and world government. As a result we see collapses in some areas and booms in other areas. In the end all markets will fall, some more than others. Debt overwhelms the system worldwide, which is a form of perpetual entrapment.

No currency will be able to withstand the onslaught. In the final analysis only gold and silver will be left standing. Currently, as soon as the most recent credit expansion runs its course, and that should be by yearend, another reflationary wave will be upon us, that is unless those who are controlling this debacle, decide that this is when we slip into an irretrievable deflationary depression.

What is really interesting to us is that we read thousands of reports a week and almost everyone of them follows the same lines, believing the line dished out by governments, Wall Street and banking and other financial entities and the mass media. The control of the media is bad enough, yet t hese never mind independent journalists refusing to go to the core of the real problem and expose who is causing all these problems. What it does is cause fine researchers to be consistently wrong because they do not understand the real underlying historical problem. Unfortunately, most of them will pass away, never understanding what the problem was all about.

We understand the reflation that took place between 2001 and now. The big question is will it continue? Appearance say yes, but Europe even with an initial $1 trillion aid program will probably see low inflation, perhaps the UK being the exception. The US could stay the same, but we do not think so. Without stimulus by either Congress or the Fed the US would collapse economically. You can expect something but we do not know what as yet. Everyone looks for a middle ground, but we seldom see that. We see a world, and particularly in Europe and the US, where people are unhappy with the system, where w ealth is in decline and signs of recovery are not to be found, as more and more jobs are shipped to the second and third worlds. Leadership is dreadful, composed of Illuminists and those controlled by them. We live in a politically unstable world that gets nastier each and every day. No one wants austerity or realistic solutions. Throwing money at these problems accomplishes nothing. We see no signs of commentary in regard to the end of free trade, globalization, offshoring and outsourcing, which continues to drain jobs from the US and UK. Fiscal restraint simply doesn’t exist. Most of the jobs created are by the federal government. Taxes are continuing to rise. Officially we are told deficits will be $10 trillion over the next ten years. America is being set up for a financial collapse. Today’s debts are unplayable, never mind those of the next ten years. America and Europe will hit the wall â€" there is no avoiding it. They are in denial as severe problems approach. Th ere are no easy solutions left. America and Europe have never seen anything like this before, even in the 1930s. This leaves those with wealth left in a quandary. Yields on bonds are terrible and the rest of conventional investments are risky at best. The dollar may have rallied from 74 to 86 on the USDX, but it and all other currencies have fallen versus gold, a trend in place for 11 years, that shows no signs of ending. The stock market is losing its footing and real estate is still descending. At the same time our purchased congress is about to give the privately owned Federal Reserve a financial monopoly, when it should be terminated. If that happens the looting by elitists will continue apace. We certainly are not optimistic regarding the future and that is why we continue to recommend gold and silver related assets.

Americans do not understand the significance of what is happening in Europe. Greece may have accepted the EU aid plan, but the people h aven’t and an election is looming, which probably means a different government. In Spain a lender fails and other banks are merged with the help of the Bank of Spain. Spain misses its budget projection and the same happens in Greece. Global markets are in part responsible for what is happening in US markets. As long as the euro falls and these problems persist there can be no real recovery in the US or Europe. Being interconnected is having disastrous consequences. A US recovery unfortunately is in the hands of European politicians, who all take their marching orders from the illuminati. What is happening in Greece and will happen in 17 other countries will also happen in the UK and the US. The US market is falling already off 1,400 Dow points just as we said it would be and we see it much lower. Due to the closeness of policy what is happening in Europe will affect the entire world. The dominoes are in fact falling. European and British foreign debts are now being studied with the same focus as subprime bonds and the results are going to be the same, a massive credit crisis. The PIIG nations represent about 4% of world GDP, but they could take the entire system down. Germany has put a key piece into the support program and the Fed has contributed a massive swap arrangement giving Europe unlimited access to unlimited dollars. The euro will allow a sideways movement in GDP growth, but will also bring higher inflation as unemployment grows. This, of course, is why we need a war. No matter what, Asian goods are going to become more expensive worldwide. Defaults are a sign of a coming calamity just as they were in the 1930s. In addition, Germans are very unhappy bailing out Southern Europe and they do not like being forced into participating in austerity that to them is unnecessary, at least for Germany.

This is another holding action to gain time until the elitists can get another war going. This is another bank bailout by t axpayers and the German people don’t want to participate.

There is still no question in our minds that Greece was a setup to lead to a deflationary collapse later and the Greek people refused to listen. As a result it is now apparent that Greece is even worse off than the elitists imagined. We do not see European bailouts going any further. The result is the US and UK will follow. Financial Europe is history. You should all keep in mind that this is child’s play. Wait until England and the US go down, perhaps before the end of the year.

As this transpires the NY Fed President, William Dudley, tells us households are still de-leveraging.

He tells us the banking system is under significant stress. There is small and medium-sized banks that have significant exposure to commercial real estate loans.

He sees significant headwinds ahead. We call that an under statement.

As banks sought bids for $10 billion in toxic waste the Fed is attempting to sell the same kind of garbage. Anything they do not dump they will have monetized and that is inflationary.

Total US debt just hit $12,987,823,000,000, $13 billion from lucky $13 trillion. As next week the US Treasury is auctioning off another gross $140+ billion in Bonds, we will pass this totally irrelevant resistance level on May 25, when Timmy issues another $42 billion of 2 Year Notes

http://www.treasurydirect.gov/instit/annceresult/press/preanre/2010/A_20100520_1.pdf The next important support level of $14 trillion will be surpassed around the time the Democrats get destroyed in the mid-term elections, while the statutory debt limit of $14.3 trillion will likely have to be raised in January 2011 by a new republican majority, an action which will promptly reduce popular republican support following their landslide election victory, thus starting the pointless D ->R->D->R etc cycle all over again. Also, at approximately that time headlines that US debt is now 100% of GDP will bring the US bond vigilantes out of hibernation and will send US interest rates soaring, assisted by Ben Bernanke's most recent announcement that the Fed will is once again "forced" to purchase another $1.5 trillion in treasuries and mortgages.  

Stepping away from the Ouija board, we also notice that so far in April, the Treasury has rolled another unsustainable amount of Treasuries: $397 billion, of which $$359 billion is in Bills.

Lyndon LaRouche issued the following statement today in response to the vote in the U.S. Senate to end debate on the so-called Financial Reform Bill:

"The issue is if somebody tries to push this bill through without Glass-Steagall and the Cantwell-Lincoln amendment to close the Dodd loophole on derivatives, then the U.S. citizenry won't accept any decision from this Congres s as legitimate. The citizenry will not recognize the Congress or its authority. They will view it as a corrupt institution which must be purged. We are in a mass strike mode. If congress rigs the process to ram through the President's demands, the citizenry will revolt against Congress and the President. And they will do so based on the authority of the Constitution of the United States of America. The people of the U.S. won't stand for this. The authority of the Constitution is in my hands and I am exerting it. I am confident the people of the United States will support me in this. Those who disagree don't understand the people of the United States and their temperament."

Senator Scott Brown yesterday drew scorn from former admirers who had hailed the Massachusetts Republican as a new voice for the conservative cause but now say he has abandoned them by joining Democrats to advance President Obama’s plan to overhaul the financial system.

As quickly as they had latched onto his campaign four months ago, they repudiated him yesterday through a flurry of blog posts, editorials, and Facebook messages.

“His career as a senator of the people lasted slightly longer than the shelf life of milk,’’ said Shelby Blakely, executive director of New Patriot Journal, the media arm of the Tea Party Patriots, which includes various Tea Party groups around the country. “The general mood of the Tea Party is, ‘We put you in, and we’ll take you out in 2012.’ This is not something we will forget.’’

But Brown also won praise from Democrats and some political observers for taking what they view as a shrewd step toward securing reelection in a state that typically has preferred its statewide Republican officeholders to be moderate. They said it also showcased his effort to make good on his vow to be independent and not always hew to the party line.

Federal prosecutors won’t bring charges against former American International Group Inc. executive Joseph Cassano related to the insurer’s collapse, according to a person familiar with the investigation.

The Justice Department found after a two-year investigation that there was insufficient evidence to charge Cassano, who was the former chief executive officer of AIG’s Financial Products division, the person said.

The Justice Department and civil investigators from the Securities and Exchange Commission were examining comments made in 2007 by Cassano and other AIG executives. They were probing whether executives misrepresented the value of AIG’s portfolio of “super senior” credit-default swaps, which insured bond losses tied to the U.S. housing market. [So what else is new.]

Nervous lawmakers anticipating an unstoppable flood of corporate and union money into the fall political campaigns have fo und one way to fight back: by loosening the rules for the major political parties, allowing them to exert more influence of their own.

Little-noticed language in campaign finance bills would help parties and their candidates get around restrictions on working together on political campaigns â€" essentially allowing parties to tap into their deep well of funds to more directly help their favored candidates.

Another provision would require broadcasters to offer political parties the same low advertising rates they give to candidates.

The measures are part of a package of changes introduced in Congress after the Supreme Court’s rejection in January of longstanding restraints on direct corporate and union spending.

The US Chamber of Commerce has said it is preparing to spend $50 million on midterm elections, an early sign of a corporate media blitz to come.

Powerful unions are also planning massive spending on the fall campaigns. Officials from the American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees have told The Hill newspaper that the union plans to top $50 million in spending, while the Service Employees International Union reportedly plans to spend $44 million.


Six investment banks including UBS AG, Citigroup Inc. and Deutsche Bank AG agreed to report European dark trades executed on their internal systems as the industry comes under closer regulatory scrutiny.

Starting today, the banks, which also include Morgan Stanley, JPMorgan Cazenove Ltd. and Credit Suisse AG, will report European equity trades matched in their internal crossing engines to Markit Ltd. At the end of the trading day, Markit will collate, check and validate the data and publish the aggregated trading volume the next afternoon, said the Association for Financial Markets in Europe, which represe nts the banks.

Dark pools, which allow investors to buy and sell securities away from regulated exchanges so they don’t have to disclose positions, are at the center of a regulatory storm as U.S., European and U.K. securities watchdogs scrutinize market structure, responding to the worst financial crisis since the Great Depression.

Regulators disagree on how much trading banks carry out in dark pools. The U.K.’s Financial Services Authority says dark pools account for 1.25 percent of trades, whereas the Federation of European Securities Exchanges, which represents exchanges, estimates the figure is closer to 40 percent. The lack of reliable information on volumes and pricing of securities in dark pools has posed a problem for regulators trying to keep pace with market innovation.

of OTC trading,” said John Serocold, managing director of AFME. The move provides “verified data where previously there has bee n only speculation and by giving a clear indication of the actual levels of trading in crossing engines.”

A measure of the U.S. money supply, created but abandoned by the Federal Reserve, has turned negative in the past year and signals disinflation or outright deflation, according to economists who track the figure.

The CHART OF THE DAY shows M3 has shrunk 5.4 percent in the past year, an indication the economy may face deflationary pressure as fewer dollars chase the same amount of goods, according to economists Paul Ashworth and Paul Dales at Capital Economics Ltd. in Toronto. They began compiling a measure of M3 after the Fed discontinued it in 2006.

“Sharp falls in the money supply tend to go hand in hand with very, very low rates of inflation if not deflation,” Dales said. The decline in M3 “suggests there is perhaps greater downward pressures on inflation than M2 suggests.”

T he core inflation rate rose last month by 0.9 percent from April 2009, the smallest increase since January 1966, after a 1.1 percent year-over-year advance the prior month.

The Fed reports two measures of the money supply each week. M1 includes currency held by consumers and companies for spending, money in checking accounts and travelers checks. M2 adds savings and private holdings in money-market mutual funds. M3 encompassed M2 along with large time deposits, repurchase agreements, Eurodollar accounts and institutional money-market mutual funds.

M1 and M2 have risen as the Fed boosted bank reserves by creating new money to purchase up to $1.43 trillion in housing debt.

M3 has fallen along with bank lending, as banks chose not to use the increase in reserves as leverage for new loans. Many types of account balances have declined, including those tracked by M3. One such component, institutional money fund balance s, fell to $1.94 trillion in April from $2.52 trillion a year ago.

The Fed stopped measuring M3 in 2006, saying it “does not appear to convey any additional information about economic activity that is not already embodied in M2 and has not played a role in the monetary-policy process for years.” The Fed said the costs of collecting the measure outweighed the benefits.

Defaults on apartment-building mortgages held by U.S. banks climbed to a record 4.6 percent in the first quarter, almost twice the year-earlier level, as more borrowers failed to repay debt approved near the market peak, said Real Capital Analytics Inc. in a report.

Defaults on so-called multifamily mortgages rose from 4.4 percent in the fourth quarter and from 2.4 percent during the same period in 2009, the New York-based real estate research firm said today. Commercial-mortgage defaults also rose in the first quarter for loans against office, retail, hotel and industrial properties, Real Capital said.

“Apartment defaults are leading other commercial real estate,” Sam Chandan, global chief economist at Real Capital, said in an interview. “Banks tended to make more aggressively underwritten apartment loans earlier during this last cycle. Credit and pricing reached their peaks for office properties and other commercial assets later.”

The global recession cut demand for U.S. apartments, office space, retail shops, hotels and warehouses during the past two years as jobs disappeared and consumers cut spending. Defaults on apartment-building mortgages surpassed the previous record, set in 1993, for the past three consecutive quarters.

The U.S. savings-and-loan crisis drove apartment-building defaults to 3.4 percent in 1993. Defaults on other types of commercial property debt peaked at 4.6 percent in 1992, according to Real Capital.

The proportion of defaults on office, retail, hotel and industrial properties rose to 4.2 percent in the first quarter of this year, the company said.

U.S. apartments may lead a rebound in commercial real estate as vacancies peak in 2010 and the economy adds jobs, property research firm Reis Inc. said May 19. Reis estimates apartment vacancies will peak at 8.2 percent in 2010, the highest level since the firm began tracking the number in 1980. The number should start to decline in 2011, Reis said.




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Indications: U.S. futures point to bounce after durables data

Stock Assault 2.0 - Artificial Intelligence Stock Market Software Alert Email Print

By Steve Goldstein, MarketWatch

NEW YORK (MarketWatch) -- U.S. stock futures maintained their gains Wednesday after data on durable-goods orders showed a better-than-expected rise in April and as Wall Street debates whether the economic rebound is set to extend or abruptly end.

S&P 500 futures rose 9.6 points to 1,082.60 and Nasdaq 100 futures rose 15.5 points to 1,831.00. Futures on the Dow Jones Industrial Average climbed 72 points.

Dow mostly recovers from big drop

The stock market pares its losses but stays on track for a decline fueled by European worries. Plus, WSJ's Brett Arends says investors should ignore the panic and look for solid value; Pyongyang says it will "totally freeze" its relations with South Korea; and how to avoid rip-offs when buying tickets to concerts.

The Commerce Department said durable-goods orders climbed 2.9% in April, with airplane demand supporting the rise.

U.S. stocks ended with mild losses Tuesday, as worries over Korea tensions and Spanish bank health that had sent the Dow Jones Industrial Average down as much as 293 points were seemingly quelled by the end of the day, with the Dow finishing just 22 points in the red and the S&P 500 posting modest gains.

Data showing improving U.S. consumer confidence helped stem the overseas worries, and on the technical side, the S&P 500 only briefly traded below February lows.

The wild moves over the last two sessions -- a strong start and a weak finish Monday, and a weak start and a strong finish Tuesday -- underscore the lack of conviction in markets, strategists said.

Global Dow

• MarketWatch Topics: Greece • Asia Markets | Europe Markets | Lat. Am. • Canadian Markets | Israel Stocks | London • U.S.: Market Snapshot | After Hours

Tools • Latin American/Canadian indexes • European indexes | Asian indexes

More on the Markets • Bond Report | Oil News | Earnings Watch • Currencies | U.S. Economic Calendar

/conga/story/misc/international.html 79118

"We often see a decent rebound after a strong selloff, as risk reduction flows fade and sidelined buyers come in, but it is not clear whether we are there yet," said strategists from Danske Bank. "Event risk is also still high in these fragile markets."

That bounce was seen in overseas markets as well on Wednesday, with the Kospi climbing 1.4% in Seoul and the FTSE 100 up 2.1% in early afternoon London trade.

New-home-sales figures are expected after the U.S. market opens.

The Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development hiked its global and U.S. GDP estimates for 2010 and 2011, and the U.S. Treasury will be auctioning $40 billion of 5-year notes.

Speaking from Tokyo, Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke argued against proposed legislation that would subject the central bank to more scrutiny.

U.S. Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner continues his overseas tour with a meeting with Britain's new chancellor, George Osborne.

Of companies in the spotlight, luxury builder Toll Brothers /quotes/comstock/13*!tol/quotes/nls/tol (TOL 21.43, +0.82, +3.98%) narrowed its quarterly loss.

BP /quotes/comstock/13*!bp/quotes/nls/bp (BP 42.61, +0.05, +0.12%) is due to attempt its "top-kill" operation to stem the flow of oil in the Gulf of Mexico. BP said the operation may take two days.

Apple Inc.'s /quotes/comstock/15*!aapl/quotes/nls/aapl (AAPL 249.62, +4.40, +1.79%) music-business practices are the subject of an informal inquiry by the U.S. Justice Department, The New York Times reported Wednesday. Specifically, the agency is looking at whether the Cupertino, Calif., technology giant, which runs the hugely popular iTunes music library, pressured music publishers not to give Amazon one day of exclusive access to music that's about to be released so the Seattle online retailer /quotes/comstock/15*!amzn/quotes/nls/amzn (AMZN 124.18, -0.68, -0.54%) could create marketing promotions around that music, the Times reported.

Oil futures recaptured the $70-a-barrel mark, and metals futures gained as well.

The euro /quotes/comstock/21o!x:seurusd (CUR_EURUSD 1.2223, -0.0149, -1.2043%) slipped 0.8% to $1.2258.

Steve Goldstein is MarketWatch's London bureau chief.


Indications: U.S. futures point to bounce before durables data

Stock Assault 2.0 - Artificial Intelligence Stock Market Software Alert Email Print

By Steve Goldstein, MarketWatch

LONDON (MarketWatch) -- U.S. stock futures traded higher Wednesday ahead of data on durable-goods orders as the debate on whether the economic rebound is set to extend or abruptly end continues.

S&P 500 futures rose 9.6 points to 1,082.60 and Nasdaq 100 futures rose 15.5 points to 1,831.00. Futures on the Dow Jones Industrial Average climbed 78 points.

Dow mostly recovers from big drop

The stock market pares its losses but stays on track for a decline fueled by European worries. Plus, WSJ's Brett Arends says investors should ignore the panic and look for solid value; Pyongyang says it will "totally freeze" its relations with South Korea; and how to avoid rip-offs when buying tickets to concerts.

U.S. stocks ended with mild losses Tuesday, as worries over Korea tensions and Spanish bank health that had sent the Dow Jones Industrial Average down as much as 293 points were seemingly quelled by the end of the day, with the Dow finishing just 22 points in the red and the S&P 500 posting modest gains.

Data showing improving U.S. consumer confidence helped stem the overseas worries, and on the technical side, the S&P 500 only briefly traded below February lows.

The wild moves over the last two sessions -- a strong start and a weak finish Monday, and a weak start and a strong finish Tuesday -- underscore the lack of conviction in markets, strategists said.

Global Dow

• MarketWatch Topics: Greece • Asia Markets | Europe Markets | Lat. Am. • Canadian Markets | Israel Stocks | London • U.S.: Market Snapshot | After Hours

Tools • Latin American/Canadian indexes • European indexes | Asian indexes

More on the Markets • Bond Report | Oil News | Earnings Watch • Currencies | U.S. Economic Calendar

/conga/story/misc/international.html 79118

"We often see a decent rebound after a strong sell-off, as risk reduction flows fade and sidelined buyers come in, but it is not clear whether we are there yet," said strategists from Danske Bank. "Event risk is also still high in these fragile markets."

That bounce was seen in overseas markets as well on Wednesday, with the Kospi climbing 1.4% in Seoul and the FTSE 100 up 2.1% in early afternoon London trade.

Durable-goods orders and new-home sales figures highlight Wednesday's economic releases.

The Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development hiked its global and U.S. GDP estimates for 2010 and 2011, and the U.S. Treasury will be auctioning $40 billion of five-year notes.

Speaking from Tokyo, Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke argued against proposed legislation that would subject the central bank to more scrutiny.

U.S. Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner continues his overseas tour with a meeting with Britain's new Chancellor, George Osborne.

Of companies in the spotlight, luxury builder Toll Brothers /quotes/comstock/13*!tol/quotes/nls/tol (TOL 20.61, +0.09, +0.44%) narrowed its quarterly loss. Toll shares rose 3.6% in premarket trade.

BP /quotes/comstock/13*!bp/quotes/nls/bp (BP 42.56, +0.70, +1.67%) is due to attempt its "top-kill" operation to stem the flow of oil in the Gulf of Mexico. BP said the operation may take two days.

Apple Inc.'s /quotes/comstock/15*!aapl/quotes/nls/aapl (AAPL 245.22, -1.54, -0.62%) music-business practices are the subject of an informal inquiry by the U.S. Justice Department, The New York Times reported Wednesday. Specifically, the agency is looking at whether the Cupertino, Calif., technology giant, which runs the hugely popular iTunes music library, pressured music publishers not to give Amazon one day of exclusive access to music that's about to be released so the Seattle online retailer /quotes/comstock/15*!amzn/quotes/nls/amzn (AMZN 124.86, +2.74, +2.24%) could create marketing promotions around that music, the Times reported.

Oil futures recaptured the $70-a-barrel mark, and metals futures gained as well.

The euro /quotes/comstock/21o!x:seurusd (CUR_EURUSD 1.2260, -0.0112, -0.9053%) slipped 0.2% to $1.2323.

Steve Goldstein is MarketWatch's London bureau chief.


NYSE Arca Morning Update - 08:30:00 ET

NYSE Arca Morning Update for Wednesday, May 26, 2010 :

STOCKS TRADING ON NYSE Arca AT A PRICE 15% OR MORE AWAY FROM
THE PREVIOUS TRADE DAY'S CONSOLIDATED CLOSE PRICE (AS OF 08:30:00 ET)

Stock Tuesday's Close Current Price Pct Change Current NYSE ARCA Vol
CJBK $3.08 $7.00 127% 17,335
GTXI $3.01 $1.90 (36.9%) 50,018
ONCY $2.58 $3.11 20.4% 600


10 MOST ACTIVE STOCKS ON NYSE ARCA AS OF 08:30:00 ET

BASED ON DOLLARS TRADED: | BASED ON SHARES TRADED:
Stock $ Volume Price PctChg | Stock Share Vol Price PctChg
SPY $122714767 $108.85 1.0% | C 11,159,504 $3.94 4.0%
C $43,783,334 $3.94 4.0% | SPY 1,128,036 $108.85 1.0%
AAPL $28,095,958 $250.00 2.0% | LYG 965,108 $3.11 2.6%
IWM $26,528,987 $64.75 0.9% | BP 606,315 $42.00 ( 1.3%)
GLD $26,275,059 $118.70 1.1% | USO 553,901 $32.40 1.8%
BP $25,441,866 $42.00 ( 1.3%) | BAC 453,120 $15.84 2.1%
USO $17,998,561 $32.40 1.8% | IWM 409,461 $64.75 0.9%
QQQQ $11,699,327 $45.13 0.9% | QQQQ 259,244 $45.13 0.9%
BAC $7,167,649 $15.84 2.1% | GLD 221,377 $118.70 1.1%
TEVA $5,852,812 $55.36 ( 1.9%) | FAS 203,400 $24.04 4.5%


Price changes may be affected by symbol splits and dividends.

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