>>> Europe : Brokers Upgrades & Downgrades - 17th of June 2024

>>> Up
* Crest Nicholson Raised to Add at Peel Hunt
* Toll Brothers Raised to Neutral at Goldman; PT $124

>>> Down
* KMC Properties Cut to Neutral at SpareBank; PT 7.60 kroner
* SSP Cut to Sell at Goldman; PT 160 pence

>>> Initiation
* Bowhead Specialty Rated New Equal-Weight at Morgan Stanley

>>> Call
* CONTINENTAL EUROPEAN EQUITIES DOWNGRADED TO NEUTRAL AT CITI
* US EQUITIES UPGRADED TO OVERWEIGHT VS NEUTRAL AT CITI
* Evotec Loses Clean Sweep of Buys as Intron Double-Downgrades
* Goldman Sachs Boosts S&P 500 Year-End Target to 5,600 From 5,200

>>> What to look at today - 17th of June 2024

Asian stocks fell as investors parsed the potential impact of political volatility in France and elsewhere, while traders awaited policy decisions from major central banks due this week. MSCI’s Asia Pacific Index fell the most in two weeks, with Japanese stocks leading the decline. Hong Kong shares rose, then pared the gains, after data that showed Chinese retail spending beat forecasts. Benchmark 10-year Treasuries slipped and US equity futures were little changed. Markets including Singapore, India and Indonesia are closed for holidays.  The move to haven assets came as risk sentiment soured, with a gauge of global stocks falling the most in two weeks as France’s snap parliamentary election renewed investors’ focus on political volatility worldwide. The greenback inched higher.  European equity futures rose, signaling potential recovery after declines last week. The euro steadied after falling the most in two months last week. French bond futures declined. The PBOC kept its one-year MLF interest rate unchanged at 2.5%. A slew of key economic data came mixed. While May retail spending beat estimates, industrial expansion slowed in May, a sign that deep imbalances in the economic recovery may be easing at least a little. Chinese property developers’ shares fell after home prices declined at a faster pace in May, as the country’s most forceful efforts to support the property market took time to revive demand.  A coalition of France’s left-wing parties presented a manifesto to pick apart most of Macron’s seven years of economic reforms and set the country on a collision course with the EU over fiscal policy. Far-right leader Marine Le Pen said she won’t try to push out President Emmanuel Macron if she wins France’s snap parliamentary election, in an appeal to moderates and investors. The spread between French and German bonds widened sharply last week. After the Federal Reserve pared back projections for US monetary easing this year, policymakers from the UK to Australia are likely to signal this week that they’re still not convinced enough about disinflation to start lowering borrowing costs themselves. Emerging market policy makers, including in Indonesia and Brazil, are also likely to push back on rate cut expectations. Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis President Neel Kashkari over the weekend said the central bank can take its time and watch incoming data before starting to cut interest rates, echoing sentiment from Cleveland Fed President Loretta Mester — who still sees inflation risks as tilted to the upside.  US stocks struggled to gain traction Friday after a gauge of consumer sentiment sank to a seven-month low. The S&P 500 closed mildly lower, led by a drop in industrial shares. Tech outperformed, with Adobe Inc. up 15% on a strong outlook.  This week, traders will also be watching inflation readings in Europe and the UK to help finesse bets on the global monetary policy outlook. Meantime, a swath of Fed officials including Dallas Fed President Lorie Logan, Chicago Fed President Austan Goolsbee and Fed Governor Adriana Kugler are due to speak.   In commodities, oil slipped after its biggest weekly advance since early April.

Nikkei -1.93% Hang Seng +0.31% CSI -0.20% Shanghai -0.54% Shenzen +0.10%

Eur$ 1.0702 CNH 7.2688 CNY 7.2558 JPY 157.48 GBP 1.2679 CHF 0.8909 RUB 89.6301 TRY 32.7746 WTI$ 78.13 -0.38% Gold 2,320 -0.54% BTC 66,356 -0.20% ETH 3,581 -0.50%

S&P -0.00% Nasdaq +0.05% EuroStoxx +0.45% FTSE +0.38% Dax +0.20% SMI +0.03%

Macro :
- European Traders Seek Cover on France Vote Call: Options Watch
- Bill Gates Says He’s Ready to Put Billions Into Nuclear Power
- Kashkari Says Fed Well-Placed to Take Its Time Ahead of Rate Cut
- US-Saudi Nuclear Deal Near, Congress Briefed on Details
- Goldman Sachs Boosts S&P 500 Year-End Target to 5,600 From 5,200
- Latest Polls Say UK Conservatives Head for Election Wipeout
- Germany Mulls Migration Pact With Uzbekistan to Deport Afghans

Keep an eye on :
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- AIR FP : FAA Probes Suspect Titanium Used in Airbus, Boeing Jets
- ALO FP : Alstom Signs €430M Contract for 10 Elizabeth Line Trains in UK
- AMS SM : Amadeus Sees 9%-12.5% Annual Revenue Growth in 2023-2026
- AAPL US : Apple’s Intelligence Rollout Will Stretch Into 2025: Power On
- ARAMCO AB : War, Money, Oil and the Shaping of Aramco’s Giant Share Sale
- ASCL LN : Ascential Says Performance is in Line With Expectations
- ADSK US : Activist Starboard Value Has Stake in Autodesk -- WSJ
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- CABK SM : Apollo Buys CaixaBank Loans, Is Bidding on Santander Portfolio
- CO FP : Casino Completes Reverse Share Split Announced April 24
- CFR SW : Yoox Net-a-Porter exits China to focus on more profitable markets
- BN FP : Danone Bets Aging Populace Will Drive Medical Nutrition Demand
- DIS US : Disney Wins China’s Approval to Screen ‘Deadpool’ in July
- ENGI FP : ENGI FP Option Trading Highest Since Oct 2023
- EQNR NO : India in talks with Equinor for strategic petroleum reserves, securing long-term LNG deals
- ESSITYA SS : Essity Sets Out New Financial Targets, Plans SEK3b Share Buyback
- Everton : Roma Owner Friedkin Is Said to Be in Advanced Talks for Everton
- TMO US : Fisher Sells Stake of Up to $3 Billion to Advent, Abu Dhabi Fund
- GNC LN : Greencore Recalls Sandwiches, Wraps, Salads Amid E. Coli Concern
- HL/ LN : Hargreaves Lansdown Price Isn’t Main Issue, Co-Founder Tells FT
- HTZ US : Hertz 5% Note Sets New Low, Is Biggest Decliner in High Yield
- INGA NA : ING Targets 2027 Fee Income of €5B With New Mid-Term Goals
- IPH FP : Innate Pharma Says SAR’579 Shows Clinical Benefit
- MRO LN : Melrose Founders Seek to Raise >£40m in Rosebank Listing: Sky
- NOVOB DC : Novo Nordisk CEO Will Testify at Senate Panel, Sanders Says
- PFV GY : Pfeiffer Vacuum Technology to Leave SDAX Index June 24
- PKTM AV : Pierer Sees FY Motorcycle, Bicycle Sales Down 10% to 15%
- PURMO FH : Apollo-Led Consortium Raises Purmo Offer to €11.15 Per Share
- SAMPO FH : Finnish Insurer Sampo Agrees to Buy Denmark’s Topdanmark
- SAN FP : Benta Lyon Makes Offer for Servier’s Biogaran, AFP Reports
- SBBB SS : SBB’s Bond Exchange Is Not Distressed Exchange, Fitch Says
- SU FP : Schneider Premium Boost to Siemens on Data Center, Grid Exposure
- TEN IM : finish 3rd tranche of share buy back, will start 4th tranche
- HO FP : Thales to Quadruple Ammo Prod Capacity at La Ferté Saint Aubin
- TOP DC : Sampo to Buy Topdanmark at a Valuation of DKK366.38/Share
- NCH2 GY : The previously announced deletion of Thyssenkrupp Nucera from the SDAX will not be implemented
- UTDI GY : United Internet Sees EU185 Million Impairment Loss on Kublai
- VAF PL : Cristiano Ronaldo Buys 10% Stake in Porcelain Maker Vista Alegre
- VK FP : Vallourec Signs Supply Contract with Equinor in Brazil

FT : Chinese industrial output growth slows as property crisis weighs on economy

Chinese industrial output growth slows as property crisis weighs on economy
Retail sales beat expectations in May but real estate market slump deepens

China’s industrial output growth slowed last month while property prices fell more sharply as policymakers struggled to overcome a deep real estate slump and reinforce stability in the world’s second-largest economy.

Industrial production expanded 5.6 per cent year on year in May, data from the National Bureau of Statistics showed on Monday, lagging an analyst forecast of 6 per cent in a Reuters poll and April’s growth rate of 6.7 per cent.

New home prices in China’s “first-tier” cities fell 3.2 per cent year on year last month, compared with a 2.5 per cent decline in April. Property investment in the five months to the end of May also declined, losing 10.1 per cent year on year, while residential property sales tumbled 30.5 per cent.

The data underlines the challenges for Beijing as policymakers struggle to stabilise the property market, which has suffered a prolonged slump that has weighed on wider economic growth. China’s central bank last month announced a fund to help local governments buy up unused housing stock in what was seen as a boost for the market.

Policymakers have turned to industrial production, infrastructure investment and manufacturing to meet economic growth targets, leading to strong exports but also accusations of overproduction from China’s trading partners. Exports in May rose 7.6 per cent year on year in dollar terms, beating expectations.

Fixed-asset investment, meanwhile, rose 4 per cent in the five months to the end of May from the same period last year, compared with a Reuters analyst poll forecast of 4.2 per cent. That figure was also down from 4.2 per cent in the January-April period.

Retail sales offered one positive sign, rising 3.7 per cent year on year, exceeding analyst forecasts of 3 per cent and a 2.3 per cent reading in April. Policymakers have sought to stimulate consumer spending to help offset weakness in the property sector, but many Chinese consumers have held off on bigger-ticket purchases.

Goldman Sachs analysts said the May data and their own research on activity in the first half of June suggested “significant cross-sector divergences remain in the economy — strong exports and manufacturing activity, relatively stable consumption, and still-depressed property activity”.

The NBS said in a statement that the economy continued its upward trend and maintained overall stability in May.

“However, it is also important to recognise that the current external environment is complex and severe, and domestic effective demand remains insufficient,” it said. “The economy’s continued upward trend still faces many difficulties and challenges.”

Separately, the People’s Bank of China on Monday maintained the one-year medium-term lending facility rate, which manages banking sector liquidity, at 2.5 per cent, in line with expectations.

Despite weakness in the domestic economy, Citi analysts said China’s central bank did not want to cut the interest rate further for fear of undermining banks’ net interest margins.

Lower rates could also affect stability of the renminbi exchange rate against the dollar given expectations that interest rates in the US will remain “higher for longer”, the Citi analysts added.

WSJ : Corporate Tax Rate Spurs Political Fight With More Than $1 Trillion at Sta

Corporate Tax Rate Spurs Political Fight With More Than $1 Trillion at Stake
Biden wants to raise current 21% rate to 28% while Republicans consider further cuts

WASHINGTON—The 21% U.S. corporate tax rate is the biggest single variable in the sprawling 2025 tax debate, and the two parties are trying to turn that dial in opposite directions with major consequences for companies’ profits and federal revenue.

The rate could climb as high as 28% if Democrats sweep November’s elections and move as low as 15% if Republicans gain full power.

President Biden’s plan for a 28% rate would reverse half of Republicans’ 2017 rate cut, pushing the U.S. corporate rate back near the highest among major economies. A 15% rate—some Republicans are heading that way, but the party hasn’t settled on a plan—would match the lowest level since 1935, boosting profits and rewarding shareholders. Presumptive Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump told corporate executives last week that he wanted a 20% rate.

Each percentage point is worth more than $130 billion over a decade in tax revenue, creating a $1 trillion-plus gap between the poles of the parties’ positions and giving the largest U.S. companies an outsize interest in the election’s outcome.

“Why would we want to put U.S. companies in an uncompetitive situation? And if we did that, why would we expect that we would attract investment to the U.S.?” said Jon Moeller, chief executive at consumer-goods maker Procter & Gamble. Moeller leads tax-policy advocacy for the Business Roundtable, the collection of large-company executives who met with Trump last week.

The group is planning an eight-figure spending campaign to support maintaining the 21% rate and extending international tax-law changes that lapse after next year.

The fight over the corporate rate makes up part of the wider tax-policy questions that lawmakers will wrestle with next year as large pieces of the 2017 tax law are scheduled to expire. Also on the table: tax rates for individuals, the child tax credit, the state and local tax deduction, tax rates for closely held businesses and the estate-tax exemption.

Corporations won tax cuts during Trump’s first term, and they would benefit if he wins again. In 2017, many companies pushed for lowering the corporate tax rate to 25% from 35%, aiming for the middle of the pack among peer countries. Trump and congressional Republicans got the rate down to 21%.

Unlike other pieces of that same law, the corporate rate cut doesn’t expire. Republicans were trying to give companies a long-term signal that they could put profits and investment in the U.S. instead of in other countries and get similar after-tax returns.

But tax policy is only as permanent as the political majority that creates it. Democrats tried to raise corporate tax rates after taking power. That plan fell short after Sen. Kyrsten Sinema (I., Ariz.) objected, and the 21% rate remained, though Democrats created a separate 15% corporate minimum tax.

Easy political choice for Democrats
Within the Democratic Party, raising the corporate tax is among the easiest political choices, because it generates so much money for other priorities. It lets Democrats direct attention to companies that enjoyed lower taxes and then raised prices; they have pointed to studies showing that the 2017 law yielded modest boosts in investment and delivered wage gains mostly to higher-income workers.

Democrats also point to U.S. corporate tax revenue as a share of the economy as being low internationally; that is misleading because, unlike elsewhere, the U.S. taxes a significant share of U.S. business income on owners’ individual returns, not through the corporate tax.

“The corporate tax share is already low and corporate profits are at record highs,” said Lael Brainard, the White House national economic adviser. “Any way you look at it, we are not raising enough from the corporate side.”

The corporate tax is projected to generate about 8% of U.S. revenue over the next decade, far less than individual income or payroll taxes, according to the Congressional Budget Office.

The corporate tax is one of the most progressive ways of raising revenue, with much of the burden falling on higher-income households, but the reality of who pays it is more nuanced than just saying “companies” or “rich people.” Economists and government agencies generally agree that shareholders ultimately bear much of the cost, with workers and consumers paying some, too. Shareholders, generally, are wealthier than the population as a whole.

The corporate tax is one of the few ways the U.S. can, indirectly, tax foreign investors in U.S. securities and nonprofits with large tax-free endowments.

But the shareholder base also includes pension funds, 401(k) accounts and some middle-income households. Biden and Democrats play down effects on those groups. They also don’t count corporate tax increases as violating the president’s pledge to protect households making under $400,000 from tax hikes.

Republicans see 21% rate as successful
Republicans and executives see the 21% corporate tax rate and accompanying changes to international tax rules as successful. They note that no U.S. companies have inverted—taken a foreign address for tax savings—since 2017 and they warn that a higher rate would harm the economy. That is a change from the prior few years, when companies such as Johnson Controls and Medtronic inverted.

Higher rates now would be more onerous than a decade ago, Moeller said. That is because the 2017 law broadened the tax base, removing tax breaks such as one for domestic manufacturing, so a 28% tax now would be 28% on more income.

Lawmakers are just beginning to weigh trade-offs within the corporate tax system and the tax code more broadly.

Democrats aren’t necessarily united behind Biden’s 28% rate. Rep. Richard Neal (D., Mass.), likely the chairman of the House Ways and Means Committee if Democrats win a House majority, said he still likes the bill his panel approved in 2021. That had a 26.5% rate, along with international-tax changes that companies sought and higher minimum taxes they opposed. Rates aren’t all that matter to companies, Neal said.

“The rate is the advertised number,” he said. “The deductions and exclusions frequently become more important to them.”

Senate Finance Committee Democrats will meet soon to discuss the 2025 tax debate, and Sen. Mark Warner (D., Va.) said he is still in wait-and-see mode on Biden’s call for a 28% rate.

However, he said: “It’s interesting when I hear from some corporate CEOs who argue for a competitive tax rate but then also complain about our $34 trillion debt.”

Republicans don’t have a fixed plan, either.

“I’m not going to get pinned in a numbers game,” said Rep. Jason Smith (R., Mo.), chairman of the Ways and Means Committee. Smith has said some Republicans might want to raise the rate.

“I would go lower,” said Rep. Ralph Norman (R., S.C.). “Taxes—I don’t care what the liberals say—taxes let people spend their own money, incentivizes our economy.”

Even those who might want to lower the 21% rate recognize that it doesn’t expire. And to the extent Republicans feel constrained by budget deficits, they might want to devote more attention to the tax pieces that do expire and carry a $4 trillion price tag for full extension.

“I don’t support raising taxes. I’m not a fan of raising rates,” said Rep. Ben Cline (R., Va.). “I wouldn’t support raising rates, but I would be premature to say that the corporate rate and what it is shouldn’t be part of the conversation.”

WSJ : ING Groep to Grow Mid-Term Income, Return on Equity

ING Groep to Grow Mid-Term Income, Return on Equity
The group guided for its total income to grow at a compound annual growth rate of between 4% and 5% in the 2024 to 2027 period

ING Groep INGA -1.47%decrease; red down pointing triangle expects to grow its income and for its return on equity to rise in the mid-term, the Dutch lender said as it laid out its financial targets to 2027.

The bank guided for a return on equity—a profitability measure calculated by dividing a company’s net income by its shareholders’ equity—of 14% for the period, beating analyst expectations of 13.6% taken from a company-compiled consensus. This is above its previous target to reach a return of 12% by 2025.

The group guided for its total income to grow at a compound annual growth rate of between 4% and 5% in the 2024 to 2027 period, which compares with 3% growth it targeted for the 2021 to 2025 period. It also expects to make 5 billion euros ($5.35 billion) in fee income by 2027, it said Monday ahead of its capital markets day.

It forecasts a cost income ratio in the 52% to 54% range by 2027 while consensus stands at 53.6%, it added.

ING also reiterated its common equity tier 1 ratio target of around 12.5% by the end of 2025.

“We increase capital allocation to our retail business while focusing on growth combined with improving capital efficiency in wholesale banking”, the lender said.

WSJ : Bryson DeChambeau Edges Rory McIlroy to Win the U.S. Open

Bryson DeChambeau Edges Rory McIlroy to Win the U.S. Open
The 30-year-old American won his second career major with a one-shot victory at Pinehurst No. 2

When Bryson DeChambeau won his first major at the 2020 U.S. Open, he was at the forefront of golf’s power revolution. In a sport where the top players were chasing distance, nobody pursued it more relentlessly than the player known as the mad scientist, who intentionally packed on weight to turbocharge his length off the tee.

But just as it looked like he was leaving the competition in the dust, DeChambeau was short circuited by injuries and bad form. By the time he joined LIV Golf midway through 2022, he had won just once more since that triumph and had become something of an afterthought in the game’s biggest tournaments.

This week, though, DeChambeau made it clear that he’s back in the most emphatic way possible. That’s because he’s a U.S. Open champion once again after an epic and sometimes ugly duel with Rory McIlroy that came down to the final hole.

DeChambeau won the U.S. Open at Pinehurst No. 2 at 6-under par, one stroke ahead of McIlroy who at one point had erased the three-stroke lead with which DeChambeau started the day and was alone at the top of the leaderboard. After McIlroy missed a short putt on the 18th, DeChambeau came through with the shot of the tournament: a brilliant wedge out of the bunker to avoid bogeying the final hole himself.

“That was probably the best shot of my life,” DeChambeau said afterward.

He followed that up with a short putt for par—and it was time for him to pump his fists and scream. The U.S. Open was DeChambeau’s.

Although they weren’t in the same group, McIlroy and DeChambeau were locked in a heavyweight fight all day. DeChambeau struggled out of the gate, while McIlroy heated up with a birdie on the opening hole. Then near the turn he really turned it on with four birdies on five holes between Nos. 9 and 13. At one point, McIlroy led DeChambeau by two strokes. But soon the gap narrowed and before long they were level once again.

Down the stretch, both of them wrestled with the pressure of the moment. DeChambeau missed a 4-footer for par on the 15th to give McIlroy a one-stroke lead. McIlroy coughed it up seven minutes later when he missed one from under 3 feet on the 16th.

It all came down to the final hole—where they both hit wayward drives. First, McIlroy went into Pinehurst’s trademark wiregrass and it looked like he had scrambled to save par. That’s when he missed another short putt, this time from under 4 feet.

Next up was DeChambeau, who badly hooked his tee shot and had to take his second shot hunched over beneath a tree where the ball was nestled next to a root. From there he went into the bunker, where he came through with an all-time up-and-down to avoid a playoff.

The victory was a testament to how DeChambeau has evolved as a golfer and is no longer merely someone who hits monstrous drives. He showed touch around the greens and scrambled out of some dicey situations, all while playing to the crowds that these days adore him.

“When that pressure is on and I execute like I know how I can, there’s no better feeling in the world,” DeChambeau said heading into the final round.

While DeChambeau entered the final round with a three-stroke lead over McIlroy and Frenchman Matthieu Pavon, it was hardly a guarantee it would hold. That’s because Pinehurst has the potential to steal that many strokes from a player on a single hole, owing to the false edges on the greens and the clusters of wiregrass that can turn shots into nightmares. And a shaky start that included a bogey on the fourth hole, made it clear that he wouldn’t be running away with anything quickly.

But when he ran into trouble off the tee, his other clubs kept saving him. On the eighth hole, his tee shot went severely to the right but he managed to save par anyway. He repeated the feat on 18.

This U.S. Open will be remembered just as much as a victory for DeChambeau as it will be a loss for McIlroy. The Northern Irishman has four major wins but none since 2014, and in this one he had a two-shot lead with five holes to play before bogeying three of the last four holes, including two on putts that were essentially tap-ins.

That meant a one-over 71 was good enough for DeChambeau to take his second career major—and be the one celebrating on the final green.

WSJ : Activist Starboard Value Has Stake in Autodesk

Activist Starboard Value Has Stake in Autodesk
Starboard met with executives of the design-software maker in recent weeks

Starboard Value has a roughly $500 million stake in Autodesk ADSK 1.24%increase; green up pointing triangle and is pushing for changes at the design-software maker, according to people familiar with the matter.

Starboard met with Autodesk executives in recent weeks to discuss concerns related to the company’s operations, corporate governance and the handling of a recent accounting probe that tanked the stock. The activist thinks the company should improve its margins and make changes to its board, the people said.

Autodesk has a market capitalization of nearly $50 billion. Shares of the San Francisco-based company are down 7% so far this year.

Autodesk provides engineering, 3D-design and entertainment software and services. Its customers have included Amazon Studios and Hyundai Motor Group, according to its website.

Autodesk shares have fallen steeply since touching a record high in August 2021. Shares took a tumble in April when the company delayed its annual financial report and disclosed it had opened an investigation into its accounting practices around free cash flow and operating margins.

Starboard in private conversations with Autodesk criticized the company for not disclosing the investigation and other material updates until after the company’s window for shareholders to nominate director candidates closed in late March, the people familiar with the matter said.

A securities filing shows Autodesk’s board and the Securities and Exchange Commission were aware of the probe in early March, weeks before Autodesk alerted shareholders.

Starboard is considering taking legal action to ask for Autodesk’s director-nomination window to be reopened and for the company’s annual shareholder meeting, currently set for July 16, to be delayed, the people added.

Later in May, Autodesk said the monthslong investigation stemmed from how the company was accounting for billings from multiyear software contracts. The delay in Autodesk’s annual filing stoked investors’ anxiety, but the company said the probe didn’t result in any adjustments to its financials. Its investigation did find that decisions about spending, collections and accounts payable were informed by how they were going to affect certain financial metrics.

Late last month, Autodesk named its previous audit committee chair, Betsy Rafael, as interim chief financial officer. She succeeded Deborah Clifford, who moved to the role of chief strategy officer.

The software maker said in a filing earlier this month it is cooperating with separate investigations by the SEC and the Justice Department following its internal probe.

The company’s current chief executive, Andrew Anagnost, took over the role in June 2017 after a stint as interim co-CEO. Anagnost succeeded Carl Bass, who resigned in February 2017 after Autodesk faced a pair of activists that secured board seats.

New York-based Starboard invests across sectors but is especially active in technology, including recent efforts at Salesforce, Wix.com and GoDaddy. Recently, the firm run by Jeff Smith has also secured board seats at Algonquin Power & Utilities and Outback Steakhouse parent Bloomin’ Brands.