(BofA-ML) Gulf Keystone Says Gross Kurdistan Payment of $15m Authorized

And the waiting is the hardest part

With a final solid payroll number under the belt, focus now turns squarely to the Fed’s
September 17th rate hike decision. Here we first describe the economic and policy
backdrop and then look at likely market responses to alternative Fed scenarios. Our main
economic and policy conclusions are as follows:
• The fundamental backdrop for growth has improved with healing from the financial
crisis and relative calm on the fiscal front.
• After a wobbly start to the New Year, the data now point to steady 3% or so GDP
growth and an even stronger recovery in the labor market.
• Inflation will likely remain weaker than both Fed and consensus forecasts, however,
the Fed seem willing to blame the weakness on temporary factors and focus on
upside pressure from a tightening labor market.
• There has been a regime shift at the Fed. Until 2013 the Fed was resolutely focused
in healing the economy and avoiding a “Japan Scenario.” With healing well
advanced, however, now they have shifted to “data dependent” mode. The Fed’s
“bias” is to act, all it needs is confirmation in the data.
• Three scenarios seem plausible for the Fed: our base case is that markets stabilize
and the Fed hikes this month, the second most likely scenario is that the Fed
remains uncomfortable with market fragility and delays hiking until October or
December; and the least likely scenario is that shocks to the economy worsen,
damaging growth and turning a temporary delay into a semi-permanent delay.
• What happens after the hike? We continue to expect rate hikes at every other
meeting, or at less than half the usual pace. Moreover, the risk is that that they
start out even slower, hiking every third meeting. We will revisit this question as
the Fed focus shifts and they drop more hints about the pace of hiking.
What does all this imply for capital markets?
• As this goes to press, a September move is only partially priced in. However, the
first hike will likely be seen by many as a “policy mistake” limiting pressure on the
rates market. The bigger shock will come if the Fed follows through with a
sequence of hikes.
• Rate hikes will not come as a big surprise to the currency market, but our work
suggests that the sharp move higher in the dollar in the last year was mainly due to
growth concerns and easings by other central banks. With Fed hikes not fully priced
in, we expect modest further upward pressure on the dollar versus a wide range of
currencies in the period ahead.
• Some volatility in Emerging Markets (EM) is likely, but the current situation differs
significantly from the 2013 “taper tantrum.” Taper talk was a surprise; a rate hike
now is not. Moreover, EM currencies are a lot cheaper and are undervalued
according to Compass FX, our valuation model. Also, there are only small external
imbalances in the Fragile Five. Finally, positioning is less extreme and institutional
investors dominate the market. These have proved to be more resilient than the
retail investors in 2013.
• In the near term credit should react favorably to liftoff as it is supported by US data
and market stability. However, further into the rate hiking cycle credit markets will
struggle as they were big beneficiaries of the Fed’s super easy policy in recent
years. This as retail and institutional investors “unreach from yield” and switch back
to safer fixed income assets and equities.
• For stocks, growth matters most, and the backdrop of a gradual tightening cycle
should be supportive of stocks, outperforming bonds and cash, as long as growth
improves. In our view, we have yet to see the highs in stock prices for this cycle, but
a delay in the Fed liftoff would prolong the uncertainty, overhang on the market,
thereby extending volatility.
• Higher US rates will impact commodities in a number of ways. As a first order
effect, higher US rates will likely drive up the US dollar further, likely impacting
commodity prices negatively in the short-run. A key second order effect, however,
will be reduced funding capacity across the commodity sector, a factor that should
ultimately lend support to commodity prices in 2016.
• Putting it all together, the Fed exit is good for the dollar and volatility, roughly
neutral for stocks and bearish for commodities and bonds, particularly for credit.
Overall, we see positive, but lower returns for a diversified investor.

>>> ECB HAS MADE DRAFT DECISION ON COMMON EQUITY TIER 1 RATIOS THAT EURO ZONE'S

  • ECB HAS MADE DRAFT DECISION ON COMMON EQUITY TIER 1 RATIOS THAT EURO ZONE'S LARGEST BANKS NEED TO HOLD - SOURCES
  • ECB TO SEND DRAFT DECISIONS TO BANKS, WHICH HAVE TWO WEEKS TO RAISE ANY ISSUE - SOURCES
ECB sets capital requirements for euro zone's top lenders

FRANKFURT, Sept 7 (Reuters) - The European Central Bank's supervisory arm has set the capital levels the euro zone's largest lenders have to hold and will communicate its draft decisions to the banks shortly, two sources with knowledge of the matter said on Monday.
The draft decisions on the minimum Common Equity Tier 1 capital cover most of the 123 banks under the ECB's supervision, one of the sources said.
"There was a supervisory board meeting on Thursday and Friday and the decisions were taken," the source said.
"They (banks) are given a deadline: here’s a draft decision, please revert to us within two weeks if you have an issue.”

(DB) Long Term Asset Return : Scaling the Peaks

Looking at three of the most important assets (bonds, equities and housing) across 15 DM countries, with data often stretching back two centuries, we are currently close to peak valuation levels relative to history. Indeed when aggregated, current levels are higher on average across the three asset classes than they were back in 2007/08 and certainly higher than in 2000. At the equity market peak back in the summer months of 2015 we were pretty much at the peak. So this recent correction should be seen in this context.

(UBS) Eur. Eq. Strat. : European Eq. not cheap, more Ern dowg (ie china)

Back to School: China, US Rates and Earnings…

Q.1: Is the European profit recovery still intact?
After the holiday period, we look at 4 key questions for European equities. Recent
market moves and growth scares have raised questions over earnings. Still we see the
profit cycle intact supported by: (1) the first top-line growth (ex-commodities) since
2012, (2) the Euro is still a tailwind (TWI currently down 8% YoY), (3) operational
leverage is starting to kick in, and (4) the Banks make up over 100% of the market’s
2015E EPS growth and over one-fifth of 2016E. Q2 earnings were one of the best
beats in 5 years and in August, despite the correction, there were net earnings
upgrades in the Eurozone.

Q.2: What are European Equites now pricing in?
After the 15% fall since mid-April are European Equities now cheap? Not obviously so –
the P/E has fallen back to 14.1x, in line with the long run average. But this is on very
depressed earnings. We need to adjust valuations for the stage of the cycle: both Trend
earnings and CAPE suggest European equities are c.20% cheap. If we simply look at
forward P/Es, the European equity market appears more expensive now than it was at
the peak in June 2007 – not something we believe to be the case.

Q.3: What are the risks between now and year-end? (China, US rates, Greece…)
The key question is: "Does the slowdown in China and EM derail the US and European
recovery?" We think not. But we foresee continued weakness for China exposed stocks
as earnings downgrades accelerate. We think the first US rate hike (when it comes) will
have relatively limited impact on European equities given it has been well telegraphed,
the US cycle and Europe have decoupled and we are starting from extremely low levels.

Q.4: What to buy within the market? (Domestic stocks, Banks and Cyclicals)
We focus on domestic cyclicals: the macro momentum in Europe is better than in many
overseas markets and European companies with high domestic exposure are seeing
earnings upgrades. We overweight Banks and Cyclicals. Countries: most preferred =
Italy, Spain, Portugal and France.

(UBS) European Utilities : More EPS downgrades to come

More EPS downgrades to come and major dislocations within the sector: time to cherry pick

Commodity move and sell-off created major dislocations: changing views…
Over the past 10 years, the dispersion between the best and worst performing utilities has averaged 85%: this is a sector where it is possible to generate alpha. Following the recent drop in commodities and emerging markets FX, we have re-run our power price models and updated our earnings estimates. As a result, we turn incrementally cautious on commodity names where we envisage (i) c25% downside risk to consensus EPS, (ii) 2017E PE above 17x, and (iii) double-digit dividend risk. We would skew our Utilities portfolio even more in favour of Southern EU integrated (13x PE, 16-15.5% DY) and regulated names (c14.5x PE, >5% DY) where the EPS power is largely unchanged.

Turning incrementally negative on commodity names: -25% consensus EPS risk
Our new forecasts on commodity names are c25% below consensus. However, stocks appear to discount the current backdrop differently: French names largely reflect the new commodity scenario; German utilities only partially discount balance sheet risks, whilst purely unregulated utilities (FUM, VER, CEZ, CNA) do not discount the new scenario and face 10-20% downside to our base-case fair values, with 35-45% downside risk in a downside scenario. For all these names, the earnings guidance that will be disclosed at 9M and FY results is likely to be a negative catalyst.

SE integrated & Networks: cheaper, more growth and better strategies
We continue to prefer integrated utilities in Southern Europe – Enel and EDP above all – on stronger growth prospects, larger share of regulated/contracted profits and higher dividends. The relative attractiveness of fully regulated names has also risen, thanks to the lower-for-longer outlook on interest rates and the recent sell-off: we favour Snam.

Still significant downside on some commodity names; rest of sector looks ok
The earnings downgrades on commodity names will put pressure on 1/3 of the sector market cap. For the rest of the space, however, we estimate a smaller or non-existent EPS risk. In fact, most regulated / Southern EU integrated names (i) invest for growth, (ii) pay >5% (and growing) yield and, in many cases, (iii) are well positioned to capture the wind, solar and smart grid megatrends. The main risk to our "commodity" thesis is a move up in coal/gas forward curves. This would most likely depend on economic growth in Asia, which accounts for ¾ of seaborne coal and LNG global consumption.

(BofA-ML) Glencore - Upgrade to Neutral

Upgrade to Neutral
We upgrade GLEN to Neutral on the company’s announced debt reduction plan. Unlike
other management teams in the sector, GLEN’s has acknowledged its debt problem and
is taking steps to address it. Total initiatives would generate $10 bn in cash similar to
the figure outline in our recent note: “Framing value and the $50 bn question, part II”.
We set a PO of GBp160, about 1x our DCF derived SOTP. We think the plan goes some
way to addressing some of our concerns on GLEN’s financing, we do still have a
question mark on Chinese demand and hence (only) upgrade to Neutral. Even after the
reductions, the company will still be quite highly geared (new target net debt low 20
billions). On spot EBITDA, this is around 3x geared.

Key elements of the plan
$2.5bn equity raise: 78% underwritten by investment banks, 22% covered by
commitments from Glencore senior management including CEO and CFO. Cutting
dividend saving $3.9bn approximately : final 2015 div: $1.6bn, interim 2016: $800mn,
final 2016: $1.5bn. $2bn to be raised from asset sales (precious metals streaming,
minority participation of 3rd party strategic investors in certain agricultural assets).
$1.5bn working capital reduction. $500mn - $1bn cut in industrial assets capex to end
FY16. $500mn-$800mn reduction in long-term advances made by Glencore. The overall
anticipated capital expenditure on industrial assets in 2015 and 2016 is now US$10
billion to US$10.5 billion.

Copper cuts: Putting money where mouth is
Glencore has also announced plans to cut production at certain African copper assets
which remove up to 400 kt from the market over the next 18 months. We think this
should tighten the copper market and help put a floor under prices. Glencore’s CEO, Ivan
Glasenberg, is putting his money where his mouth is, having often chastised fellow
CEOs for oversupplying commodity markets. Wow!

(BarCap) French Telcos - Spectrum auction upside

Company and regulator discussions at our Telecom & Media conference suggest a
benign outcome for October’s 700Mhz spectrum auction is increasingly likely. We
update forecasts assuming a €0.75/Mhz/POP spend, Orange and Iliad taking
2x5Mhz paired, and NUM-SFR and Bouygues 1x5Mhz paired. Our 2Q operational
and pricing review suggests no step change in relative momentum, with NUM-SFR
ceding fixed subscriber share to peers, but delivering gross adds ARPU ahead of
blended. A two-tier mobile market persists, with 4G differentiation at Orange and
Bouygues growing, in our view. The race for fibre continues, with Altice indicating a
willingness to extend coverage beyond the 15m households/2020E plan. With 4 to
3 mobile consolidation seemingly off the table for now, we prefer exposure to
Orange and Iliad (OW) vs. NUM-SFR, Altice, Bouygues (EW).


OW Orange and Iliad, EW NUM-SFR, Altice, Bouygues: Orange and Iliad remain our
preferred picks in France. Orange: our SoP PT is €17/shr (€18 prior), implying 23%
potential upside. Trades on 5.8x 2016E EV/EBITDA, on 12x EV/OpFCF. Iliad: our SoP PT
is €230/shr (€260 prior), implying c.19% potential upside. Trades on 7.7x 2016E
EV/EBITDA, 21x EV/OpFCF. NUM-SFR: our SoP PT is €51/shr (€52 prior), implying
c.16% potential upside. Trades on 8.7x 2016E EV/EBITDA, 16x EV/OpFCF. Altice: Our
SoTP PT is €23/shr, implying -3% downside (our former PT was €100/shr. This move
reflects the change in share count/equity distribution with the cross border merger of
Altice and Altice SA, and the subsequent creation of the A and B shares. Our coverage is
of the A share.) It trades on 9x 2016E EV/EBITDA, 16x EV/OpFCF. Bouygues: our SoP
PT is €36/shr (€38 prior), implying c.6.5% potential upside. Trades on 5.1x 2016E
EV/EBITDA, 10x EV/OpFCF.

(JPM) BMW - Meeting with CFO - Update

We attended the 7-series launch with the CFO of BMW, Dr Friedrich
Eichiner, and came out reassured BMW is executing the strategy well into
the launch of the new 7-series. In this note we provide detailed feedback
from the event and a review of our Overweight investment case.

 FY15 will be a transition year. FY15 is a transition year for BMW,
which precedes a three-year product renewal cycle beginning with
launch of the new 7-series and X1 in 2H15. While FY15 may see effects
of these models being in the run-out phase, FY16 will see the full-year
benefits of these new launches. This will be followed by the new 1-, 5-
series and X3 in 2017 and the new 3-series and X5 in 2018.
 Efficient management of old product portfolio. Discounts at BMW
have remained more or less stable in its major markets – Europe, China
and the US – despite having an old product cycle with the 7-series and
X1 in the run-out phase. This tells us that BMW is actively managing
the inventory of old 7-series and X1 to prevent excessive discounts in
the run-out phase. While this strategy may hurt volumes, it should pay
dividends through lower pricing deterioration.
 China: Shifting focus to local production. BMW is revising its China
strategy and plans to increase its focus on local production by planning
to produce six models locally in China vs. three in FY14. The higher
focus on local production will still be beneficial for BMW’s pre-tax
earnings helped by royalties, component exports and JV earnings. We
believe the China contribution to BMW's earnings will return to growth
from FY16 onwards.
 Meeting with Dr Eichiner, CFO of BMW, supports our OW rating.
BMW sees market conditions as mixed with Europe remaining strong,
US seeing minor pricing pressure mainly due to the weaker Euro while
China remains very uncertain. Dr. Eichiner reiterated BMW is on track
to hit FY15 targets. We believe the 7-series will compete well against
competitors and will mark the beginning of BMW’s new product cycle.

(CS) Cap. Goods : Deep dive into Power & Automation

We initiate coverage of the large-cap European Electricals with Outperform ratings on Philips and Schneider and Neutral ratings on ABB and Siemens. In this report, we undertake a deep dive into the Automation and Power end-markets and the respective key players, drawing on the breadth of Credit Suisse's global coverage. For the Healthcare segment and Philips specifically.

* Stock calls: In the current low-growth deflationary environment, we make the following stock calls.
- Schneider (Outperform, TP €63) – we favour its c40% exposure to a cyclical recovery in Construction via B&P and its strategic direction in Automation Software, with an undemanding valuation vs ABB and Siemens.
- Philips (Outperform, TP €26) – we expect earnings stabilisation to bring the potential Lighting IPO/disposal into focus, driving a re-rating.
- Siemens (Neutral, TP €91) – despite the self-help angle of cost-cutting and portfolio rationalisation, we think the benefits are at risk of being absorbed by tough volume and pricing dynamics in several key end-markets.
- ABB (Neutral, TP CHF 19) – we see ABB's attractive Robotics exposure, drive for margin recovery in Power Systems and large buyback as balanced out by a challenging end-markets outlook for c60% of the company and by
an already rich valuation.