June 24, 2013 Newsletter

Dear Friends,

Tangents:

As Carolann is out of the office this afternoon, I will be sending the newsletter on her behalf.

Are you looking for a fresh new taste to spice up your summer cooking?  Here are 4 herbs for your garden and your kitchen:

1 ) Mint: The most common variety of mint is spearmint. Also called garden mint, it is the main type you’ll see growing in backyard gardens and sold at grocery stores. It can help flavour condiments and it is great in salads, salad dressings, dips and potato and vegetable dishes. It can also be blended into marinades for meat, such as lamb.  Mint can also be used to flavour beverages such as smoothies, tea or lemonade. It is a great garnish to add to just about anything needing a splash of colour!

2) Basil: The most common type of basil grown and sold commercially is sweet basil, also called Italian basil. It has fairly smooth green leaves and a clove-like scent. Basil is wonderful to use in or to garnish soups, salads, brushetta or pasta sauces. You’ll also see basil added to seafood dishes such as steamed mussels, pizza and meat and poultry dishes, or sliced and sprinkled on saucy meatballs or chicken parmesan.

3) Oregano: This herb is also a member of the mint family and is closely related to another herb called marjoram. It has an inviting, almost spicy aroma with a slightly bitter taste. Some say it has hints of clove, pepper and pine.  This is a great herb to use in summer dishes, such as sprinkling it on grilled vegetables, using it in marinades and adding it to salads and soups.

4) Tarragon: This is a perennial herb and is a member of the daisy family. Its narrow leaves have a mild, peppery taste and it has a licorice-like aroma and flavour. There are two main types of tarragon. There is a more refined, bolder tasting French tarragon. And the milder-tasting Russian tarragon that is heartier and widely grown. There are many possibilities to use tarragon including using it to flavour dips, vinegar, salad dressings and sauces. Tarragon is a great herb to chop up and add to omelettes, stews, steamed vegetables, soups, and roast chicken.

Today In History:

1922 – The American Professional Football Association took the name of The National Football League.

1962 – The New York Yankees beat the Detroit Tigers, 9-7, after 22 innings.

1964 – The Federal Trade Commission announced that starting in 1965, cigarette manufactures would be required to include warnings on their packaging about the harmful effects of smoking.

1998 – Walt Disney World Resort admitted its 600-millionth guest.
Disney movies, music and books

2002 – A painting from Monet’s Waterlilies series sold for $20.2 million.

“Try not to become a man of success but a man of value” -Albert Einstein

Photos of the Day –June 24th, 2013

Fireworks light up the sky over the Neva River and the Peter and Pawel Fortress during the annual school leavers night show in St. Petersburg, Russia.

The largest full moon of the year, also referred to as a ‘super moon,’ rises behind New York’s Lower Manhattan as a plane passes by Sunday night. Gary Hershorn/Reuters

Market Closes for June 24th, 2013

Market 

Index

Close Change
Dow 

Jones

14659.56 -139.84 

 

-0.94%

S&P 500 1573.09 -19.34 

 

-1.21%

NASDAQ 3320.757 -36.489 

 

-1.09%

TSX 11836.86 -158.80

 

-1.32%

 

International Markets

Market 

Index

Close Change
NIKKEI 13062.78 -167.35

 

-1.26%

 

HANG 

SENG

19813.98 -449.33

 

-2.22%

 

SENSEX 18540.89 -233.35

 

-1.24%

 

FTSE 100 6029.10 -87.07

 

-1.42%

 

Bonds

Bonds % Yield Previous % Yield
CND. 

10 Year Bond

2.488 2.447
CND.  

30 Year

Bond

2.931 2.905
U.S.  

10 Year Bond

2.5368 2.5384
U.S.  

30 Year Bond

3.5473 3.5902

Currencies

BOC Close Today Previous
Canadian $ 0.95193 0.95631

 

US  

$

1.05050 1.04568
Euro Rate 

1 Euro=

Inverse 

Canadian  

$

1.37859 0.72538
US 

$

1.31231 0.76201

Commodities

Gold Close Previous
London Gold  

Fix

1282.92 1295.42
Oil Close Previous 

 

WTI Crude Future 95.09 93.59
BRENT 101.55 101.30

 

Market Commentary:

Canada

By Katie Brennan

June 24 (Bloomberg) — Canadian stocks fell to a seven- month low as commodities producers slumped amid concern a cash crunch in China will hurt growth in the world’s biggest consumer of materials and energy.

All 10 industries in the Standard & Poor’s/TSX Composite Index retreated, led by a 3.8 percent decline in raw-materials producers. Teck Resources Ltd. and Endeavour Silver Corp. lost at least 6.8 percent as copper and silver prices tumbled.

Enbridge Inc. slid 2 percent as three oil pipelines in Alberta remained closed by a leak related to flooding.

The S&P/TSX fell 158.80 points, or 1.3 percent, to 11,836.86 at 4 p.m. in Toronto, the lowest level since Nov. 15. The benchmark index is down 4.8 percent this year. Trading volume was 2.7 percent below than the 30-day average.

“There’s weakness across the board. It’s getting ugly,” said John Kinsey, fund manager with Caldwell Securities Ltd. in Toronto. He helps manage about C$1 billion ($953 million).

“People are very nervous on a number of fronts. Europe is just a mess but China and the U.S. are the two economies that everybody is focused on. China numbers show the economy is slowing there. That is something that has everybody worried.”

The S&P/TSX extended its monthly loss to 6.4 percent as China’s central bank signaled it would provide no relief from a cash squeeze. China is the world’s second-largest economy and Canada’s second-biggest trading partner behind the U.S. The country’s benchmark money-market rates last week climbed to a record as the central bank refrained from using open-market operations to provide liquidity.

Investors are also considering whether growth in the U.S. is strong enough for the Fed to begin phasing out stimulus later this year. U.S. durable goods orders probably rose and house prices continued to recover, economists said before reports this week. The S&P/TSX trimmed an early drop of 2 percent after Fed Bank of Dallas President Richard Fisher said investors shouldn’t overreact to plans to slow bond purchases.

Each of the benchmark index’s 10 sectors retreated at least 0.4 percent. The index that tracks producers of raw materials plunged 3.8 percent to the lowest since December 2008 as all but one of its 55 members declined.

Teck Resources, Canada’s largest diversified miner, fell 6.8 percent to C$21.22 and Endeavor Silver slid 10 percent to C$3.35, its lowest level since August 2010. Copper futures plunged to the lowest in almost three years and silver lost 1.8 percent.

Energy producers declined 1.5 percent. Oil prices rose for the first time in four days on supply concerns, reversing an early drop that took crude to a three-week low. Niko Resources Ltd. fell 2.3 percent to C$6.85 and Penn West Petroleum Ltd. lost 2.4 percent to C$11.29.

Enbridge dropped 2 percent to C$42.64. The company closed one pipeline after discovering a 750-barrel spill on June 22. Two more lines, also in Alberta, were shut as a precaution. Enbridge, Canada’s biggest pipeline operator, has not given a timeline for service resumption. Alberta has the third-largest proven oil reserves in the world, after Saudi Arabia and Venezuela, according to the provincial government.

US

By Lu Wang and Stephen Kirkland

June 24 (Bloomberg) — U.S. stocks fell after Chinese equities entered a bear market on concern a cash crunch will hurt growth. Treasuries pared losses on speculation investors overreacted to a possible reduction of central bank stimulus.

The Standard & Poor’s 500 Index sank 1.2 percent at 4 p.m. in New York, trimming an earlier drop of 2 percent. Ten-year Treasury note yields rose one basis point after earlier jumping to the highest level since 2011. The CSI 300 Index of China’s biggest companies tumbled 6.3 percent, the most since August 2009 and taking its drop from this year’s high to more than 20 percent. Copper fell to the lowest level in almost three years and aluminum extended the longest slump since 1987.

Richard Fisher, president of the Fed Bank of Dallas, said investors shouldn’t overreact to the central bank’s plans to reduce the pace of asset purchases. China’s central bank said there’s a reasonable amount of liquidity in the financial system and urged banks to control risks from credit expansion, signaling no relief from a cash squeeze. The nation’s overnight repurchase rate is 6.47 percent, more than double this year’s average.

“Investors have been shaken by the concept of rising interest rates and a reduction in stimulus from the Federal Reserve, coupled with the uncertainty regarding effectively how robust the Chinese central banking system is,”  Ethan Anderson, senior portfolio manager for Rehmann Financial in Grand Rapids, Michigan, said by phone. His firm manages about $1.5 billion. “We found ourselves in a headline-dependent environment, which is difficult for investors to function.”

Global equities tumbled last week, with the MSCI All- Country World Index sinking the most in more than a year, after Fed Chairman Ben S. Bernanke said bond buying may be scaled back this year should risks to the U.S. economy continue to decrease. The equity gauge has fallen 8.7 percent from its peak on May 21, trimming this year’s gains to 2 percent.

Two Federal Reserve presidents with opposing views on how much stimulus the U.S. economy needs today emphasized that policy remains accommodative. Fisher, who doesn’t vote on monetary policy this year, said in a speech in London that “what we’re talking about here is dialing back.” He said, “The word ’exit’ is not appropriate.”

Fisher, in an interview with the Financial Times published on its website today, said investors behaved like “feral hogs” after the June 19 comments by Bernanke.

Minneapolis Fed President Narayana Kocherlakota, who has called for easier policy, said to reporters in a conference call that the Fed must emphasize in its statement that policy will remain accommodative “for a considerable time” after the end of quantitative easing.

“Fisher’s comments seemed to dial back some of the negative rhetoric that people had in terms of Chairman Bernanke’s comments last week,” Michael James, a managing director of equity trading at Wedbush Securities Inc. in Los Angeles, said in a phone interview. “This remains a trader and sentiment-driven market that’s susceptible to swings in either direction at a drop of a hat.”

All 10 industries in the S&P 500 fell today, with raw- material and financial companies dropping the most. Bank of America Corp. and JPMorgan Chase & Co. tumbled more than 2 percent. Boeing Co. and Hewlett-Packard Co. slid at least 2.1 percent to pace declines among the largest companies.

The S&P 500 slumped to its lowest level since April during the day, briefly slipping below a 2007 closing high of 1,565.15. The index surpassed that peak in March, recovering all its losses from the financial crisis.

The benchmark gauge has fallen 5.8 percent since a record on May 21, ending its longest run in more than six years of going without a retreat of 5 percent, data compiled by Bloomberg show. The index spent 149 days through June 21 without incurring a 5 percent loss from a peak, the longest since a 173-day stretch ended Feb. 20, 2007, about eight months before the financial crisis sent the market plunging 57 percent.

The S&P 500 has also lost 3.5 percent in June, poised to snap a streak of seven straight monthly advances, the longest winning streak since September 2009. The index has rallied as much as 147 percent from its March 2009 low.

The Chicago Board Options Exchange Volatility Index, the measure of options on the S&P 500 known as the VIX, added 6.4 percent to 20.11.

While U.S. equity volatility reached a six-month high last week, expected stock swings are less than half as much as peaks in the last four years and traders are pricing in little increase for the rest of the year. Even after the gauge of options prices on the S&P 500 increased 67 percent since March through last week, it would have to rise 134 percent more to reach its average high of 44 from 2009 to 2012, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. VIX futures expiring in six months trade only 10 percent higher than the index.

The Stoxx Europe 600 Index slipped 1.7 percent, declining for a fifth day in the longest losing streak in 13 months. The gauge erased its gain for the year, and extended its retreat from the May 22 high to more than 10 percent. The volume of shares changing hands in Stoxx 600 companies was 27 percent greater than the 30-day average, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.

Erste Group Bank AG slid 8.5 percent as Austria’s biggest lender said it will sell about 660 million euros ($865 million) of new shares in the third quarter to help repay state aid.

The MSCI Emerging Markets Index fell for a fifth day to a one-year low, losing 1.7 percent. Benchmark gauges in South Africa, the Czech Republic, the Philippines and Thailand lost at least 2.4 percent.

The Hang Seng China Enterprises Index of mainland companies listed in Hong Kong slid 3.2 percent. The Shanghai Composite Index, which tracks the largest mainland market, tumbled 5.3 percent, with trading volume 11 percent higher than the 30-day average. Goldman Sachs Group Inc. cut its 2013 forecast for China’s economy and said the cash squeeze is hurting growth.

Chinese banks must control liquidity risks from fast capital expansion, especially credit, the central bank said in a statement dated June 17 and issued today, signaling no relief to a cash squeeze which risks exacerbating an economic slowdown.

“China has had a credit binge for way too long,” Vasu Menon, the head of content and research at OCBC Bank Ltd. in Singapore, told Bloomberg TV. “The government is trying to rebalance the economy, trying to downsize the shadow banking system. All that means credit is going to remain fairly tight.”

Treasuries pared earlier losses as yields at the highest levels since 2011 attracted traders. The 10-year note yield rose one basis point to 2.54 percent after climbing as much as 13 basis points to 2.66 percent.

Bonds slid across the globe earlier on expectation that a reduction in accommodation from the Fed will lead to an eventual end of record low central bank borrowing rates. The yield on Australia’s 10-year government bond surged 28 basis points to 4.04 percent, reaching the highest since April 2012. Germany’s 10-year bund yield rose nine basis points to 1.81 percent, the highest since March 2012.

U.K. 10-year yields reached 2.59 percent, the highest in almost 20 months, and Switzerland’s 10-year rate exceeded 1 percent for the first time since Oct. 31, 2011.

The dollar declined less than 0.1 percent to $1.3123 per euro after appreciating to the strongest level since June 5. The U.S. currency rose earlier versus the majority of its 16 major counterparts before U.S. reports tomorrow that economists said will show durable-goods orders gained and house prices increased. The U.S. currency weakened 0.2 percent to at 97.72 yen, while the Swedish krona slid to a seven-month low versus the dollar.

Copper fell 2.3 percent to settle at $3.0285 a pound after touching $2.9935, the lowest for a most-active contract since July 2010. Aluminum slid for the 13th consecutive day, the longest slump since at least June 1987.

Gold and silver fell as platinum plunged to the lowest since November 2009. Gold futures declined 1.2 percent to settle at $1,277.10 as Goldman Sachs trimmed its price forecasts through 2014. Silver dropped 2.3 percent to $19.493 an ounce and platinum slumped 2.9 percent to $1,329.10 an ounce, after reaching the lowest level since November 2009.

Crude oil gained for the first time in four days after three pipelines in Alberta were shut because of flooding. Crude for August delivery rose 1.6 percent, the most since June 3, to settle at $95.18 a barrel. Earlier, prices fell as much as $1.02 to $92.67 a barrel, the lowest level since June 4. Enbridge Inc. has yet to restart the pipelines shut by a leak related to severe flooding and hasn’t offered a timeline for service resumption.

 

Be magnificent!

 

To find what you seek in the road of life, the best proverb of all is that which says: “Leave no stone unturned” –
Edward Bulwer Lytton


Karen Parnham

Assistant to Carolann Steinhoff

Queensbury Securities Inc.

 

St. Andrew’s Square

Suite 340A, 730 View St.,

Victoria, B.C. V8X 3Y7

Tel: 778-430-5808

Fax: 778-430-5828