Daily Archives: May 11, 2007

The 52-Week Low Club

Furniture Brands (FBN) April sales slump. Down to $14.40 from 52-week high of $24.60.

Distributed Energy (DESC) Electric power system company misses numbers. More painful that having a tooth out. Shares drop 44% in one day. New 52-week low is $.55 compared to 52-week high of $6.85.

Fuwei Films (FFHL), a Chinese maker of plastic films, posts poor earnings. Drops to $7.10 from 52-week high of $18.43.

Actions Semiconductor (ACTS) Chinese fabless chip company had drop in first quarter profit. Down to $5.87 from 52-week high of $12.24.

Trump Entertainment (TRMP) Weak quarter makes sale of company less likely. Down to $13.61 from 52-week high of $23.80.

Douglas A. McIntyre

Overlooked Metals Stocks: Lundin (LMC)

Stock Tickers: LMC, ZEUS, AA, AL, X, MT, FCX

When you look at the large metals companies such as US Steel (X-NYSE), Alcoa (AA-NYSE), Rio Tinto (RTP-NYSE), Alcan (AL-NYSE), Arcelor Mittal (MT-NYSE), Freeport McMoRan (FCX-NYSE) and many other giants in the metals sector either in the midst of a merger or rumored to be in a merger, it just makes you wonder if there are many much smaller companies that have been overlooked.  These all have to be evaluated on their own outside of any merger hopes, but there are still some interesting names.

We are running 4 or 5 niche-oriented stocks in the metals sectors and this is the first of the series. Gone are the days that these can be found at 6-times earnings, so the "cheap" term has to be thought of in the light that we are in a metals world driven by foreign demand and further driven by merger speculation.  We are only focusing on companies that have niche businesses or operations that make them seem attractive or cheap on their own merits.

One company that fits the bill is Lundin Mining Corp. (LMC-NYSE).  This is a $3.6 Billion market cap stock, so it is hard to call it a stealth play or one that has been entirely overlooked.  But Lundin is still one that the bulk of the investor population does not know or at least does not follow.  It is essentially a recombined company of the EuroZinc that was purchased last year and of several roll-ups.  It has its registered offices in Canada but operational headquarters in Sweden (and family owned control in Switzerland).  Lundin is not bound by many of the same limitations and geographic restrictions as American companies and it hardly has much Wall Street following.

Its main operations are copper, zinc, and lead, and those of course create other side and byproducts.  This is one that is still acquiring companies and it is soon to get more nickel exposure.  It is currently in an agreement with Canadian listed base metals producer Rio Narcea Gold Mines, Ltd. and in a separate agreement with Tenke Mining Corp. to merge. Rio Narcea will contribute to cash flow from its Aguablanca nickel mine in Spain. Tenke offers a highly promising project in the medium to longer term through its holding in the Tenke Fungurume project, which is one of the largest high-grade undeveloped copper-cobalt deposits in the world, with a planned production start-up in late 2008.

The company turned in lower than expected results and this actually allows us to evaluate it with less rose-colored glasses and on a more conservative basis.  It turned in revenues of $193.9 million in dollar terms and net earnings of $53.7 million, or $0.19 EPS.  It also is somewhat thin volume with usually about 1 million shares per day.

Lundin has a large project coming on this year in Portugal and another in 2008 in Congo.  It operates in Sweden, Portugal, Ireland, Russia, Spain, and elsewhere. What is more likely instead of this company being acquired is that the company keeps growing by smaller accretive acquisitions where it can make them.  The company is also under a Lundin Family consortium in Switzerland, so this would not be a company that an outside could easily just go out and make a hostile tender for.  It is under new leadership from inside the company and it has not been without operational deaths and accidents. 

Any buyer of Lundin Mining stock better be comfortable with somewhat of a lack of transparency and be willing to risk a “sum of the parts” out 12 to 24 months after the real results and constitution are known about all of the projects that are coming on-line over the next year.  This is not one where speculators should be hoping that someone comes along to just acquire it. That isn’t likely, or at least not right now with some unknown project values, and not at current prices.  The data is also still outstanding as far as who owns what percentage of the company because not all of the SEC filings from institutional buyers have been made fresh and up to date yet. 

This one has been kept somewhat quiet and has more reserved holders because of the aggressive acquisitions and limited “new-co” history.  Jim Cramer has noted this one before at lower and higher prices, but outside of my following the name for a few months and whatever Cramer will say here and there, this one is very under-followed by Wall Street.  We fully understand that this one is not as straight forward on the financials or what the exact value will be 12 months out, but we are willing to venture forth on the company’s prospects.  Sometimes you have to ride the fringes to look for opportunities.  Lundin looks like an opportunity and is definitely on the fringes.

Stay tuned, because we’ll be following up on this one periodically.  Yesterday we noted Olympic Steel (ZEUS-NASDAQ) as the first stock of this feature.

Jon C. Ogg
May 11, 2007

Jon Ogg can be reached at jonogg@247wallst.com; he does not own securities in the companies he covers.

Cramer says Buy JMP, Sell Refiners

Jim Cramer talked about refiners and an IPO on today’s STOP TRADING segment on CNBC.  He says he is shifting from a Buy to a Sell on the refiners because margins may have peaked.  He does not think margins will collapse at all, but it’s time to take some off the table.  Valero (VLO) at $74 is one he’s had enough with.  Chevron (CVX) is one that he’s had enough of.  JMP Securities (JMP), the boutique investment banking firm IPO from today, is one that he thinks is a great investment banking niche that you can play.  You can buy into it as a great firm.

Jon C. Ogg
May 11, 2007

Jon Ogg can be reached at jonogg@247wallst.com; he does not own securities in the companies he covers.

Foot Locker, Inc. – Why Bother?

Big drop for Foot Locker, Inc. (NYSE:FL) falling 7% today due to a Q1 guidance reduction and same-store sales slipping 5.1%. Last night in after-hours trading shares of Foot Locker were down 10% and today they hit a new 52-week low.

Foot Locker LogoI didn’t think people still went to Foot Locker? Which was a big name say 10 to 15 years ago and the decline in same-store sales validates that thought. Foot Locker has that RadioShack (RSH) feel to it, out-of-date yet still manages to hang on with all the increased competition of specialty and discount retailers. Now that consumers are not willing to throw around their cash like Paris Hilton due to higher gas prices, a cooling economy and everything else – how will a chain like Foot Locker survive?

What good ol’ Foot Locker needs to do is bring in the dream team of Eddie Lampert (CEO of Sears Holding (SHLD)) and Julian Day (CEO of RadioShack (RSH)) and perform the same miracle they did at their once dying retail chains (which appear to be still dying) by closing the weak stores, cutting costs, and getting rid of the all the unnecessary expenses.

Despite the bashing, Foot Locker does pay out a 13 cent quarterly dividend, they have 20% of the U.S. market share in athletic footwear, and last year they had a net income of $264 million on $5.6 billion in revenue. It’s probably not fair to compare them to dying retailers like Sears and RadioShack, but guys like Big 5 (BGFV), Finish-Line (FINL), Dick’s Sporting Goods (DKS), and others (not to mention the Costco’s (COST) and Wal-Mart’s (WMT) – big boys) all want to take away Foot Locker’s 20% market share. The same-store sales figure of a 5.1% decline is proof that other hungry companies are slowing taking away Foot Locker’s bread and butter.

Foot Locker, Inc has been around a long time, but that doesn’t mean Jack to Wall Street or the American consumer. They now compete with a ton of rivals, not to mention the online guys like Zappos.com or Overstock.com (OSTK). So if consumers aren’t buying from Foot Locker, why would you want to buy the company stock?

Jail House RockPlus, its time to update that Foot Locker uniform those employee’s have to wear. All you have to do is turn the stripes to side and they look like a Jail House uniform. Maybe Paris Hilton should try out that look, before she spends the next 45 days in the slammer. Dancing to the Jail House rock Paris?

Frank Lara Jr.

Frank Lara Jr. can be reached at franklara@247wallst.com; he does not own securities in the companies he covers.

Google Stock Looks Cheap, Believe It or Not

From Chad Brand of Peridot Capitalist

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TIVO: Cable Operators Trying to Screw Us With SDV

From Internet Outsider

Jason Jones: Tivo and the CableCard consortium face a threat from Switched Digital Video (SDV) offered by cable operators, according to MultiChannel News. SDV sends individual channel streams to viewers upon request rather than broadcasting channels to all users.  This requires two-way communication and is theoretically more efficient.  The industry has recently agreed upon the TiVo-friendly CableCard standard, which is a one-way technology and cannot support SDV–but the cable operators seem intent on going ahead with SDV.

Read More »

Uranium Stocks Surge Despite Slow Uranium Contract Trading

Stock Tickers: USU, NMX, CCJ, EMU, URRE, URZ

This morning, if it is a stock related to uranium then it is probably up.  This is in the face of what is a very slow launch of uranium contract trading on NYMEX (NMX-NYSE) that we alerted last Friday.

USEC Inc. (USU-NYSE) is trading up 5% more at $23.94 and the stock earlier today traded a dime above the old yearly high of $24.34.  This is actually a multi-year high that may in fact be an all-time high.

Cameco (CCJ-NYSE) is also up 2% to $50.68 today.  If you listened to their conference call last week you would scratch your head over this.  Almost every single analyst that asked questions after the update to the company’s Cigar Lake floode was vicious and lashing.  The company didn’t really address the concerns from how it sounded.

Cramer’s pick, Energy Metals Corp. (EMU-NYSE) is trading up more than 5% on the day.  Uranium Resources (URRE-NASDAQ/OTC) posted a 300% revenue gain to $4.6 million.  This is a tiny number on a microcap stock, but those are things that swing traders and metals speculators look for.  Shares are up almost 4% to $9.90.  Even the small uranium wild catting play, Uranerz Energy (URZ-AMEX) is up 1% today.

This all flies in the face of what has been a very slow start to the Nymex uranium contract trading.  According to the website at Nymex, the open interest was a whopping 37 contracts since the contract debuted on Monday.  The large uranium miners and processors said they were going to stay on the sidelines for a while to see what would happen and how the contracts would be received.  Based on that open interest it doesn’t look like the big layers are coming in to trade the contract any time soon.

Jon C. Ogg
May 11, 2007

Jon Ogg can be reached at jonogg@247wallst.com; he does not own securities in the companies he covers.

Why the Chinese Love Nokia

This morning Nokia (NOK) issued a release that China Postel Mobile Communications Co, Ltd. would purchase mobile devices worth roughly $2.5 Billion (US Dollars) in 2007.  This is the largest cell phone distributor in China and its market share was said to be over 30% in 2006.  The companies have been working together since 1998 and China Postel has distributed more than 37 million from Nokia since that time.

Nokia’s market cap is $97 Billion in equivalent, but its dollar adjusted revenues appear to be some $54 Billion in 2006.  Nokia has so far been successful in its fight against Qualcomm (QCOM) over CDMA royalties, and this fight is helping it further in being a lower-cost provider.  China is an enormous opportunity and it is already one of the top consumer markets for items like this.  But there is still price sensitivity for 90% of the country, and Nokia is that answer.  Nokia might not be the only game in town but it shows that price and relationships can win the day.  This would represent close to 5% of the company’s entire revenue for the year.  If that isn’t proof that the Chinese market loves Nokia then what is?

Jon C. Ogg
May 11, 2007

Jon Ogg can be reached at jonogg@247wallst.com; he does not own securities in the companies he covers.

CME Bids Higher for CBOT AND Itself

Stock Tickers: CME, BOT, ICE, ISE, NMX, NYX, NDAQ

The Chicago Mercantile Exchange (CME-NYSE) decided it was not going to let the Chicago Board of Trade (BOT-NYSE) get acquired by The IntercontinentalExchange Inc. (ICE-NYSE).   This is further proof that the "Exchange Wars" are heating up, and that the value of exchanges is still there.

The CME is revising its offer by 16% to .35 shares and CBOT holders will own approximately 34.6% of the combined company.  The board of directors will also hav3 10 of the 30 seats filled with CBOT members.

To top it off, and to act as the final "you can’t compete with this offer" the CME has announced that it will make a cash self tender offer for approximately 12% of the combined company at a fixed price of $560.00 that will commence shortly after the close of the merger.  What that does is essentially takes some of the market risk out of the CME stock since this is an all stock deal.  That is a $3.5 Billion tender.

Both companies had already spent much time and money on the merger, and this should provide a lock-up for the deal.  IntercontinentalExchange (ICE) will have a hard time being able to compete with this, although its shares are now up 1.4% at $136.71.  CBOT (BOT) shares are up 2$ at $197.95 pre-market; CME (CME) shares are up 6% at $528.50 pre-market.

This is also spilling over into the other excnages, and here are their gains pre-market: NYMEX Holdings (NMX) up 1% at $120.50, International Securities Exchange (ISE) up 0.1% at $65.10, NYSE (NYX) up 0.7% at $82.38, and NASDAQ (NDAQ) unchanged at $31.53.

Jon C. Ogg
May 11, 2007

Jon Ogg can be reached at jonogg@247wallst.com; he does not own securities in the companies he covers.

Full Research Summary (May 11, 2007)

ABY cut to Neutral at Prudential.
AEO raised to Buy at Sun Trust Robinson Humphreys.
ALTI raised to Buy at First Albany.
ALU raised to Outperform at Credit Suisse.
AMAT raised to Buy at UBS.
AMGN cut to Sell at Citigroup; also cut at JPMorgan, Morgan Stanley, HSBC, and Lazard.
BBSI started as Outperform at JMP Securities.
BOW cut to Neutral at Prudential.
BRLC cut to Hold at Cantor Fitzgerald.
CL started as Buy at Stifel Nicolaus.
CHINA started as Buy at Cantor Fitzgerald.
CHRT raised to Neutral at HSBC.
CNQ cut to Sector Perform at RBC.
CPKI raised to Outperform at FBR.
DOW started as Buy at UBS.
DRH started as Buy at Deutsche Bank.
ENN started as Hold at Deutsche Bank.
EXLS raised to Buy at Citigroup.
FSR started as Buy at Citigroup.
GFA raised to Overweight at HSBC.
GLBC cut to Hold at Deutsche Bank.
GRFF raised to Buy at WR Hambrecht.
HIH cut to Neutral at Baird.
IMO raised to Outperform at RBC.
ISE cut to Neutral at B of A.
JCP target cut to $100 at AGEdwaqrds.
LHO started as Hold at Deutsche Bank.
NETL started as Buy at Deutsche Bank.
PRTS raised to Outperform at RBC.
RCL started as Buy at Stifel Nicolaus.
SMOD started as Strong Buy at JMP Securities.
SQNM started as Outperform at Rodman & Renshaw.
SUG raised to Overweight at JPMorgan.
WEN cut to Hold at Citigroup.
WWW started as Buy at Citigroup.
ZQK started as Hold at Citigroup.

Jon C. Ogg
May 11, 2007

Jon Ogg can be reached at jonogg@247wallst.com; he does not own securities in the companies he covers.

Pre-Market Stock News (May 11, 2007)

(AAPL) Apple’s talks about the Beatles are reportedly close to being settled.
(ALL) Allstate is going to stop selling homeowners insurance policies in California.
(ALU) Alcatel-Lucent earnings came out, forecasts 10% revenue gains; shares trading up 1.5% in overseas trading.
(AMGN) Amgen trading down another 3% pre-market after 4 downgrades after negative FDA news yesterday.
(BMY) Bristol-Myers Squibb settled the DOJ Plavix investigation.
(BOT) CBOT may now be considering the ICE bid over the CME bid according to WSJ.
(BRLC) Syntax-Brillian fell 15% after missing earnings and issuing even more shares in offering.
(CRXX) CombinatoRx noted positively in Business Week.
(DNDN) Dendreon trading down 5% after conference call.
(FL) Foot Locker shares fell almost 10% on an earnings warning.
(HELE) Helen of Troy $0.30 EPS vs $0.27e.
(JOBS) 51job traded up 7% after beating expectations.
(MOVI) Movie Gallery -$0.47 EPS vs -$0.53e.
(NVDA) NVIDIA trading up 5% after beating earnings and strong guidance.
(NWS) News Corp could reach $30.00 if it buys Down Jones according to Business Week.
(STI) Sun Trust Banks saw enough call option buying activity yesterday that it is being considered potentially as takeover speculation.
(THQI) THQ Interactive fell 4% after outlook disappointed the bulls.
(WCRX) Warner Chilcott $0.23 EPS vs $0.18e.
(WDC) Western Digital is likely to see its multiple expand according to Barron’s.
(WEN) Wendy’s largest holder is trying harder to get the company to sell itself.

Jon C. Ogg
May 11, 2007

Jon Ogg can be reached at jonogg@247wallst.com; he does not own securities in the companies he covers.

Europe Markets 5/11/2007

Markets in Europe are down at 8 AM

BT (BT) is off 1% to 316.25. Reuters (RTRSY) is off 1.2% to 594.25. DeutscheBank (DB) is off 1.2% to  112.42. SAP (SAP) is off 1.9% to 34.25.

Alcatel-Lucent (ALU) is up 1.4% to 9.86. France Telecom (FTE) is down 1.5% to 21.56. ST Micro (STM) is down 1.3% to 14.3. Credit Suisse was down 1.5% to 90.95.

Data from Reuters.

Douglas A. McIntyre

AMZN – Amazon: When to Short and When Not

By CrossProfit

05/10/2007

In our previous article from February 2007 we noted that the party was about to begin. Naturally we had no way of knowing in advance exactly when or to what extent, shape or form this would occur.

This time around we are being inundated with requests to write a follow-up analysis. The vast majority of queries lean towards the possibility of shorting AMZN at current levels. Those who follow our articles know that when we feel that a potential short opportunity is feasible, we are not bashful and state so openly.

It is true to say that the majority of our views, general outlook and articles have been bullish. This mirrors the nature of the stock market. We do not follow the statistics on this issue; however, of the cuff we would say that the market in general and individual stocks in particular goes up about 75% of the time. Even in a bear market there could be more up days than down days, just the intensity of the downside outweighs the upside. This is not the case today.

This however, is not the reason that we are not issuing a short alert.

Read More »

Are iPods Bad for Pacemakers? (AAPL)

CNET news is running a story that was also briefly noted on CNBC this morning: Apple’s (AAPL-NASDAQ) iPods can cause interference with the electromagnetic equipment inside pacemakers.  Now before you go taking away grandpa’s iPod loades with Kiss and Jimmy Hendrix, you should know that the study was conducted and the data presented by a 17-year old high school student.  That doesn’t mean it can’t be true, but this proves just how much “user generated news and testing” is flattening news and information in the world.

You can read the full story here to determine how much credibility, and relevance, you give this.  Also keep in mind that the percentage of iPod owners that are also people with pacemakers is probably a much lower percentage of total iPod owners.  It might have just been playing Twisted Sister for grandpa that started causing the interference.  This is just downright weird.

Jon C. Ogg
May 11, 2007

Jon Ogg can be reached at jonogg@247wallst.com; he does not own securities in the companies he covers.

Earlybird Analyst Calls (May 11, 2007)

ABY cut to Neutral at Prudential.
AEO raised to Buy at Sun Trust Robinson Humphreys.
ALTI raised to Buy at First Albany.
AMAT raised to Buy at UBS.
AMGN cut to Sell at Citigroup.
BBSI started as Outperform at JMP Securities.
BOW cut to Neutral at Prudential.
CHINA started as Buy at Cantor Fitzgerald.
CNQ cut to Sector Perform at RBC.
CPKI raised to Outperform at FBR.
DRH started as Buy at Deutsche Bank.
ENN started as Hold at Deutsche Bank.
GLBC cut to Hold at Deutsche Bank.
HIH cut to Neutral at Baird.
IMO raised to Outperform at RBC.
ISE cut to Neutral at B of A.
JCP target cut to $100 at AGEdwaqrds.
LHO started as Hold at Deutsche Bank.
NETL started as Buy at Deutsche Bank.
PRTS raised to Outperform at RBC.
SMOD started as Strong Buy at JMP Securities.
SQNM started as Outperform at Rodman & Renshaw.
SUG raised to Overweight at JPMorgan.

Jon C. Ogg
May 11, 2007

Jon Ogg can be reached at jonogg@247wallst.com; he does not own securities in the companies he covers.

AMD And JetBlue: Fire Everyone

The lesson to be learned from the recent stock price movements of Advanced Micro Devices (AMD) and JetBlue (JBLU) is that you cannot fire enough and you also can’t fire high enough up the management chain.

JetBlue pushed out its CEO, probably due to the severe customer service problems the airline had in a snow storm this past February. When the company bounced him from the corner office, its shares rose almost 5% to just under $11.

Over at AMD (AMD) word made it to the street that the troubled chip company would fire 450 people. Oddly, the CEO is not going. AMD’s stock moved up almost 4% to just above $14.

Both JetBlue and AMD have been trading a bit above 52-week lows, and it is difficult to say whether the stock price gains will hold. But, if they do, it may be a lesson in letting people go.

Douglas A. McIntyre

The Mob Breaks Up Magna’s Bid For Chrysler

There are some things that Wall St can’t make up, so investors have to go to The Wall Street Journal to find them. A Russian aluminum executive who may be worth over $1 billion is putting $1.54 billion into Magna International (MGA), the Canadian car parts operation that wants to buy Chrysler. The investment carries with it six of the company’s fourteen board seats.

Even if the US could block a Magna purchase of Chrysler because the investment may be considered undesireable and Chrysler does work for the federal govenment, the move by the Canadian company still borders on surreal. To think that DaimlerChrysler (DCX) would sell the company to an entity with ties to organized crime is beyond the pale. The UAW would probably not smile on the deal either, despite Jimmy Hoffa’s history.

Look for Chrysler to be sold to another firm or stay with Daimler.

Douglas A. McIntyre

Bill Ford: Worst CEO In History?

Shareholders came at Bill Ford, former CEO and now chairman of Ford (F), like a pack of rabid dogs during the company’s annual meeting.

According to Reuters:

Sam Joanette, a Ford shareholder who said he lost $1 million in Ford stock, said Bill Ford Jr. was "responsible for the destruction of the company."

"You are a failure … You are the worst chairman and CEO to ever lead the company," Joanette said.

Ford might be somewhere on a "worst CEO" list, but he really only made one mistake. He and his succeesor started the down-sizing of Ford much later than GM began its effort. As Ford’s US market share collapsed, it was still carrying too much cost, and the shareholders were beaten up because of the delay. The actual difference in the performance of Ford and GM shares over the last two years is fairly small.

Ford has brought in over $20 billion in new debt to weather the current storm. It may not be enough, but even if it is, common shareholders get pushed back a few rows on the bus.

And, Bill Ford and his family are still in control.

Douglas A. McIntyre

Media Digest 5/11/2007 Reuters, WSJ, NYTimes, FT, Barron’s

According to Reuters, former Fed chief Alan Greenspan still believes that there is a one-third chance that the US economy will go into recession this year.

Reuters writes that the CEO of Google (GOOG) announced that the company might look at large M&A targets but its primary focus will be small tech companies.

Reuters writes that Alcatel-Lucent (ALU) has forecast that Q2 revenue will be 10% above Q1.

Reuters writes that the head of Google said the the company will focus on software applications, not just search and text ads.

The Wall Street Journal writes that the CBOT (BOT) is weighing taking a buy-out bid from Intercontinental Exchange (ICE) over one from the Chicago Mercantile Exchange (CME).

The WSJ writes that a Russian aluminum magnate who may have ties with organized crime is buying a piece of Magna International (MGA). Magna is viewed at the most likely buyer of Chrysler (DCX)

The WSJ also reports that Sara Lee (SLE) rejected calls for an accelerated share buy-back and said that it doubted it was a takeover target. .

The WSJ also reports that the largest shareholder in Wendy’s (WEN) is trying to get the company to put itself up for sale.

The WSJ also reports that the FDA has called for more limited use for cancer patient anemia drugs from Amgen (AMGN) and Johnson & Johnson (JNJ).

The New York Times writes that shareholders at Ford (F) attacked the company’s chairman, Bill Ford, for his role in the car company’s poor performance.

The New York Times also reports that revenue rose at Vonage (VG) but litigation still raises questions about the company’s future.

The FT writes that AIG (AIG) faces $128 million in sub-prime load costs.

Barron’s writes that Western Digital (WDC) is likely to see the multiple on its stock expand.

Douglas A. McIntyre

Asia Markets 5/11/2007

Markets in Asia fell sharply.

The Nikkei fell 1% to 17,653. Canon (CAJ) fell 1.8% to 6910. NTT Docomo (DCM) fell 1.4% to 206000. Softbank fell 1% to 2545. Sony (SNE) fell 1.7% to 6450. Toyota (TM) rose 1.1% to 7450.

The Hang Seng fell 1.2% to 20,506. China Life (LFC) fell 1.8% to 24.65. China Mobile (CHL) fell 1.7% to 70.7. HSBC (HBC) fell .8% to 144.9. PCCW (PCW) fell .4% to 4.92.

The Shanghai Composite dropped .7% to 4,022.

Data from Reuters

Douglas A. McIntyre