Wall Street gains as Greek election fears ease

(Reuters) – Stocks rose on Thursday in a broad rally on hopes that results from Greek elections over the weekend would ease short-term worries about the country leaving the euro zone.

But trading was volatile as weak data in the U.S. labor market and rising bond yields in Italy and Spain continued to weigh on investor sentiment.

Quick market swings were expected to persist ahead of the Sunday elections. The prospect that the election results could lead to Greece’s exit from the euro zone had pressured U.S. equities for the past several weeks and contributed to a steep decline on Wednesday.

“Greek stocks are in rally mode on hopes for a decisive victory for the conservative New Democracy party. We caught a glimpse of a headline earlier suggesting that 80 percent of Greeks want to remain inside the euro area, which is what we have thought would remain an influential factor throughout the elections,” said Andrew Wilkinson, chief economic strategist at Miller Tabak & Co in New York.

Greek banking stocks surged on Thursday, rising over 20 percent amid market talk that secret opinion polls showing that a government favorable to the international bailout agreement was likely to emerge after the June 17 election.

The Dow Jones industrial average .DJI was up 112.84 points, or 0.90 percent, at 12,609.22. The Standard & Poor’s 500 Index .SPX was up 9.80 points, or 0.75 percent, at 1,324.68. The Nasdaq Composite Index.IXIC was up 16.48 points, or 0.58 percent, at 2,835.09.

The CBOE Volatility index .VIX, Wall Street’s so-called fear gauge, was down 1.5 percent to near 24, after soaring in the previous session.

The number of Americans filing new claims for unemployment benefits unexpectedly rose last week, the latest economic data pointing to sluggish conditions in the United States.

In other U.S. data, consumer prices fell 0.3 percent in May, the biggest drop in over three years.

Further weighing on market sentiment, Moody’s Investor Service cut its rating on Spanish government debt on Wednesday by three notches to Baa3, saying the recently approved euro zone plan to help Spain’s banks will add to the country’s debt burden.

The S&P is flat for the week as sharp drops have been partially offset by some equally strong rallies. So far in the second quarter, however, the index is down 5.9 percent.

“The decline may have gone far enough that prices may at least avoid slipping further, but there is still a lot of uncertainty out there,” said Bruce McCain, chief investment strategist at Key Private Bank in Cleveland.

Nokia Corp (NOK.N) (NOK1V.HE) plans to cut 10,000 more jobs and said its phone unit would post a deeper-than-expected loss in its second quarter because of tough competition. U.S.-listed shares plunged 17.2 percent to $2.31.

(Editing by Dave Zimmerman)

Barnes & Noble’s Riggio settles shareholder suit

(Reuters) – Leonard Riggio, the founder and chairman of Barnes & Noble Inc (BKS.N), agreed on Wednesday to forgo $29 million from a sale of one of his companies to the book retailer in order to settle a shareholder lawsuit, according to court documents.

The lawsuit stemmed from a 2009 agreement by Barnes & Noble, the largest U.S. bookstore chain, to buy back Barnes & Noble College Booksellers Inc for $514 million from Riggio.

Shareholders sued Riggio, Barnes & Noble’s largest investor, alleging the deal overvalued the college bookstores and enriched Riggio at the expense of shareholders.

The transaction was one example of alleged poor corporate governance cited by investor Ron Burkle when he launched a proxy fight for a slate on the bookseller’s board in 2010. Burkle was the company’s second-largest investor at the time, but has since cut his stake to less than 1 percent.

Analysts at the time questioned the wisdom of acquiring a chain with more than 600 bricks and mortar stores as more students and other bookbuyers were migrating toward digital book formats.

Same-store sales at the college bookstore chain, which has 641 stores, are expected to be flat for the full year which ended in April and for which the company will report earnings on Tuesday.

Riggio, owns 29.8 percent of Barnes & Noble shares, according to Thomson Reuters data. In April, Microsoft Corp (MSFT.O) said it was taking a 17.6 percent stake in a new Barnes & Noble subsidiary made up of its Nook digital business and its College bookstore chain.

The lawsuit was a derivative action, meaning the shareholders essentially stepped into the shoes of the company to pursue Riggio for the harm to Barnes & Noble. The recovery will benefit Barnes & Noble and its shareholders only benefit indirectly.

Shares of Barnes & Noble were down 2.3 percent at $14.80 in late afternoon trading on the New York Stock Exchange.

As part of the settlement, Riggio and Barnes & Noble agreed to support a fee for the shareholders’ attorneys equal to one-third of the recovery.

The settlement is subject to approval by Delaware Court of Chancery judge Leo Strine.

Barnes & Noble declined to comment.

The case is In Re Barnes & Noble Stockholder Derivative Litigation, Delaware Court of Chancery, No. 4813.

(Reporting By Tom Hals in Wilmington, Delaware and Phil Wahba in New York; Editing by Tim Dobbyn)

Wall Street ends down amid Greek vote fears

(Reuters) – Wall Street ended lower on Wednesday as fears ahead of the Greek elections over the weekend drove down a market that had been treading water through most of the day.

Based on the latest available data, the Dow Jones industrial average .DJIwas down 78.63 points, or 0.63 percent, at 12,495.17. The Standard & Poor’s 500 Index .SPX was down 9.38 points, or 0.71 percent, at 1,314.80. The Nasdaq Composite Index .IXIC was down 24.46 points, or 0.86 percent, at 2,818.61.

(Reporting By Caroline Valetkevitch; Editing by Leslie Adler)

Analysis: Investors plot hedges for healthcare law ruling

(Reuters) – Investors could be excused for avoiding health insurance and hospital stocks as a U.S. Supreme Court decision nears on President Barack Obama’s healthcare overhaul law – an outcome that could send the companies’ shares down 10 percent or more.

Aside from an educated guess, little real analysis can predict a ruling that has at least a half-dozen possible results for a law that affects wide swathes of the healthcare industry.

“It’s this never-never land,” said Tim Nelson, a healthcare analyst with Nuveen Asset Management. “We’re waiting for the clouds to clear, and we’ll reassess what the fundamental environment looks like when we know what the rules are.”

That has led some on Wall Street to devise complex strategies for profiting from the ruling expected by the end of the month – or at least to hedge their portfolios against significant losses.

They include spreading bets between healthcare sectors whose shares will respond in opposite directions based on a given ruling.

If the law is struck down, for example, stocks of hospital companies such as HCA Holdings Inc or Tenet Healthcare Corp and health insurers that specialize in Medicaid programs for the poor, like Centene Corp or Molina Healthcare Inc, are expected to suffer as they lose out on an expansion of coverage for at least 30 million uninsured Americans.

The same decision could boost shares of larger insurers like Aetna Inc or WellPoint Inc as they avert stricter regulations and higher costs mandated by the law.

CRT Capital Group, an institutional broker-dealer, said its clients were asking for ways to trade healthcare. It is recommending options strategies that amount to bullish bets on three stocks: UnitedHealth Group Inc, the largest and most diversified health insurer; HCA, the largest hospital chain; and rehabilitative services provider Healthsouth Corp.

“We expect that if you put all of these trades on collectively, you would end up making money regardless of the outcome,” said Michael Khouw, head of equity derivatives for CRT Capital, noting that the strategy excludes any broader market moves.

Michael Gregory manages two healthcare funds for an investment firm affiliated with Highland Capital Management LP. He plans to keep equivalent positions in large health insurers, Medicaid insurers and hospital chains.

“We are trying to protect downside exposure in our positions and in the fund for any outcome of the Supreme Court decision,” Gregory said.

WEIGHING THE POSSIBILITIES

The prevailing view before the court held oral arguments in late March was that the law – Obama’s signature domestic policy achievement passed in 2010 – would be upheld.

But based on the tone of questioning from the high court’s justices, investors and analysts project that it is more likely that they will overturn the provision at the heart of the law – a requirement that Americans buy health coverage or pay a penalty, known as the individual mandate.

On Intrade, a popular online betting site for political events, the latest contracts reflected a 70 percent chance the individual mandate would be ruled unconstitutional, up from trades in the mid-30s just before the oral arguments.

Striking down the mandate alone would spook investors in health insurers, because of fears people would buy insurance only when they become sick, driving up companies’ costs.

Analysts believe, however, that the court would also shoot down associated provisions that require health insurers enroll people regardless of health status, a more palatable result for the insurance stocks.

Invalidating the entire law would likely hurt shares of hospital companies, which stand to increase the number of paying patients who otherwise might seek care for free. Some analysts estimate the stocks could fall as much as 10 percent.

Shares of Medicaid insurers also might drop 10 percent or more on the law’s demise as they would not benefit from a planned expansion of the government-supported program.

But a decision that negates the whole legislation is expected to send shares of larger, more diversified insurers higher as they would stand to avoid such measures as government review of premium rate increases, requirements of spending on medical care and fees on the sector starting in 2014.

“You throw the whole thing out, the group is going to rally 5 to 10 percent,” said David Heupel, a healthcare analyst with Thrivent Investment Management. “A lot of this money that we assumed was going away because of reform, managed care will get to keep.”

FEASTING ON THE AFTERMATH

Citigroup analyst Carl McDonald, who covers health insurers, told clients recently that the best trading strategy into the decision is to hold an equal dollar amount of commercial insurers, which have large businesses serving employers, and Medicaid insurers.

Combining the probabilities of six possible decisions and their expected stock reactions should yield a return of 2.2 percent under his strategy, McDonald said in a research note.

Aside from UnitedHealth, commercial insurers that serve employers might include WellPoint, Aetna and Coventry Health Care Inc. Medicaid-focused insurers include Amerigroup Corp, Centene, Molina, and WellCare Health Plans Inc.

McDonald calculated that a strategy of holding only the commercial stocks would lead to returns of 2.9 percent, when all the probabilities are considered, but he was hesitant to back this plan because of the potential downside.

“We see … two potential outcomes where the loss from being long just the commercial names could be 10-15 percent, which could occur if the Supreme Court surprised most observers and just struck the individual mandate,” McDonald said.

It is the potential for such sharp declines – however remote – that will keep many long-term investors away from shares of insurers and hospital chains until after the ruling.

“It would take a pretty strong stomach to do it ahead of the decision,” said Chris Konstantinos, a portfolio manager with Riverfront Investment Group. “I would be surprised to see the stocks bid up ahead of that.”

Les Funtleyder, a portfolio manager at Miller Tabak, is banking on sharp reactions after the decision as a chance to scoop up his favored stocks, such as UnitedHealth or Community Health Systems Inc, the No. 2 U.S. hospital chain.

“Because we’re long-term opportunistic investors, if there’s an over-reaction, which we highly suspect there will be one way or the other, we’ll likely take advantage of that,” Funtleyder said. “You’re talking about a trading event – at best a couple of days – and we’re looking out for the future.”

(Reporting by Lewis Krauskopf; editing by Michele Gershberg and Matthew Lewis)

Apple’s car navigation plans hit Harman shares

(Reuters) – Shares of Harman International Industries Inc fell as much as 10 percent on Tuesday after Apple Inc outlined plans to offer voice activated real-time traffic updates and turn-by-turn navigation in cars.

Harman, known for its audio devices, also makes car navigation products for luxury car makers such as Volkswagen AG’s Audi and Daimler’s Mercedes.

Shares in car navigation system maker Garmin Inc had also fallen in trading on Monday after Apple said it will enter the market by integrating its Siri voice application into car navigation systems.

Apple plans to make it easier for drivers to get directions by tapping a button on the steering wheel to launch Siri, a feature known as Eyes Free.

“Within the next 12 months, Siri will be the backbone for ‘Eyes Free’ service, integrating Siri and maps into automobiles,” JPMorgan analyst Mark Moskowitz said.

Dutch vehicle navigation systems maker TomTom, however, is likely to benefit from Apple’s move as it struck a deal to license its maps to the iPhone maker.

Apple is working with several automakers, including Audi, BMW AG, General Motors, Honda Motor Co, Mercedes and Toyota Motor Corp, to introduce the voice navigation system.

J.D. Power and Associates in January ranked Harman as the top supplier of factory-installed auto navigation systems.

Harman shares were down 9 percent on Tuesday on the New York Stock Exchange, adding to their 5 percent fall on Monday. Garmin shares, which fell 9 percent on Monday, were up 3 percent on the Nasdaq.

Navigation-technology provider TeleNav Inc’s shares also fell as much as 12 percent and Robert W. Baird cut the stock to “underperform,” saying Apple’s new mobile mapping service may force the company to reduce prices.

(Reporting by Supantha Mukherjee in Bangalore; Editing by Anthony Kurian, Viraj Nair)

Volkswagen says tax man to benefit from Porsche tie-up

(Reuters) – Volkswagen’s (VOWG_p.DE) finance chief said the car company would integrate sportscar maker Porsche as soon as possible, also signaling that media reports of a tax-exempt way to soon complete the transaction were exaggerated.

“We aim to complete the integrated automotive group as quickly as possible,” Chief Financial Officer Hans Dieter Poetsch told journalists on the sidelines of a ceremony at the VW headquarters in Wolfsburg on Tuesday.

Business weekly WirtschaftsWoche reported on Saturday that holding company Porsche SE (PSHG_p.DE) found a way to sell the remaining 50.1 percent of its sports car unit Porsche AG to Volkswagen without paying an estimated 1.5 billion euros ($1.9 billion) in tax. <ID:L5E8H90OX>

Porsche SE had previously said it would have to wait until August 2014 to sell the remaining stake tax-free.

“A swifter solution (than 2014) should be in the interest of the tax authorities,” Poetsch said on Tuesday.

(Writing by Ludwig Burger)

Fed’s Tarullo says shadow banking creates risks

(Reuters) – A top Federal Reserve official on Tuesday renewed a call for tighter rules governing the so-called shadow banking system, in which financial firms exchange large amounts of cash, to prevent a repeat of the panic that provoked the financial crisis of 2007-2009.

Fed Governor Daniel Tarullo did not comment on the outlook for the economy or monetary policy in the speech, which covered similar ground to remarks he made last month.

Tarullo said that despite financial reforms, the shadow banking system has the potential to destabilize the broader financial system.

“The shadow banking system … has only been obliquely addressed, despite the fact that the most acute phase of the crisis was precipitated by a run on that system,” Tarullo told a conference organized by the San Francisco Fed.

In the wake of the crisis and the painful recession that followed, the Fed has taken on a bigger role in financial oversight and Tarullo has been a leading voice on the topic.

He said regulators and scholars need to do more work on financial institutions that behave like banks but are outside the scope of bank regulators.

“We should act now to address some obvious sources of vulnerability in the financial system,” he said.

Tarullo repeated his support for proposals to bolster the soundness of money market mutual funds. He endorsed a suggestion that supervisors set limits on banks’ reliance on funding provided by money market funds.

(Reporting By Edwin Chan, writing by Mark Felsenthal; Editing by Padraic Cassidy, Dave Zimmerman)

Wall Street rebounds; Spanish yields come off highs

(Reuters) – Stocks bounced back in midday trade on Tuesday as investors snapped up beaten down shares in energy and industrial sectors while Spanish bond yields came off their highs, giving relief to the market.

The S&P 500 is down 6.3 percent for the month on concerns about the ongoing financial crisis in Europe and signs of slowdown in the U.S. economy. Even after a $125 billion aid package to Spain that was announced over the weekend, the S&P fell more than 1 percent on Monday, as questions remained about the terms of the bank-rescue deal and the impact it could have on Spanish debt levels.

Trading was volatile. Wall Street dipped earlier as yields on Spain’s 10-year bond hit a euro-era high, pointing to continued stress in the nation’s debt markets shortly after an announced European Union bailout.

“Into their close, both Spanish and Italian bonds are bouncing off their (price) lows. The daily egg shells we walk on this week over Spain will of course be followed by Sunday’s election in Greece and what, if anything, the FOMC will announce next week,” said Peter Boockvar, equity strategist at Miller Tabak & Co in New York.

The weekend elections in Greece are viewed as a major headwind that could result in the country leaving the euro zone.

Nicholas Colas, chief market strategist at the ConvergEx Group in New York, predicted swings in equities around the close of European markets, “since that’s where all our catalysts are coming from.

“It is nice to see us holding above 1,300 (on the S&P), which is an important number psychologically, but it is very possible that we see another disappointing sell-off like yesterday,” he added.

The Dow Jones industrial average .DJI was up 111.52 points, or 0.90 percent, at 12,522.75. The Standard & Poor’s 500 Index .SPX was up 10.07 points, or 0.77 percent, at 1,319.00. The Nasdaq Composite Index .IXIC was up 24.87 points, or 0.89 percent, at 2,834.60.

Volatility around the close of European markets is expected to persist until more clarity is received on Greece’s government makeup and the stability of Spain’s banking system.

Energy .GSPE and material .GSPM shares, both of which are heavily tethered to sentiment about Europe, were the top gainers. Energy stocks were up 1.4 percent and materials stocks were up 1.2 percent.

Among the most active, Valero Energy Corp (VLO.N) rose 4.9 percent to $22.95 while Halliburton Inc (HAL.N) was up 2.1 percent to $28.07. U.S. Steel Corp (X.N) rose 2.9 percent to $18.40.

Michael Kors Holdings Ltd (KORS.N) rose 5.2 percent to $40.16 after posting stronger fourth-quarter profit growth and giving a strong full-year outlook.

May U.S. import prices fell 1 percent from April, as expected, according to Labor Department data. Export prices fell 0.4 percent, compared with the expectation for a drop of 1 percent.

(Editing by Dave Zimmerman)

Google, author body end spat on internet books

(Reuters) – Internet search provider Google and authors group Society Men of Letters of France (SGDL) have reached an agreement that ends a dispute dating back to 2006 over the publishing of snippets of books on the internet.

The deal puts an end to an appeal procedure, the two groups wrote in a joint statement on Monday.

“The agreement was reached to promote initiatives in favor of digital books’ development and create diversity, in compliance with copyrights,” they said.

The SGDL, which says it represents 6,000 French and French speaking authors and pays special attention to copyrights with regard to new technological developments, said the agreement would protect their rights on the internet.

(Reporting by Caroline Jacobs; Editing by Mark Potter)

Facebook to join Russell 3000 index

(Reuters) – Facebook Inc is on the preliminary list to join the Russell 3000 index, according to Russell Investments on Monday.

Facebook will be the largest addition to the index in market capitalization. The social network giant made a market debut in May. Among other IPO additions to the Russell 3000 are software maker Splunk Inc and financial services provider EverBank Financial Corp.

Apple, with market capitalization of $540.2 billion, is expected to replace ExxonMobil with $367.7 billion market cap, as the largest company in the Russell 3000, Russell Investments said. Apple grew its market capitalization by 68 percent in the last year.

The combined capitalization of stocks in the Russell 3000, which reflects about 98 percent of the investable U.S. equity universe, will decrease from $16.7 trillion at May 31, 2011 to $15.8 trillion as of May 31, 2012. Similarly, the median market capitalization will decrease from $1.04 billion to $910 million.

“Russell’s index reconstitution reflects the market decline over the past year. That said, returns have been far from uniform,” said Steve Wood, chief market strategist for North America at Russell Investments.

“Even as the flare-up in the euro zone crisis, China’s slowdown and relatively soft U.S. economic data have weighed on investor sentiment in recent weeks, the global markets showed resilience when viewed over the course of a year. Furthermore, Russell Indexes reflected diverse returns and decreased correlations across global markets in the last year, reinforcing the importance of a well-diversified global multi-asset portfolio approach.”

(Reporting by Angela Moon; Editing by James Dalgleish)