Earnings and gas worries keep Europe subdued
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[July 26, 2022] By
Marc Jones
LONDON (Reuters) - European shares limped
lower and the region's bond markets rallied on Tuesday as some
disappointing earnings, this week's looming U.S. interest rate hike and
an escalating gas crisis kept the mood cautious.
Asia had been buoyed overnight by new Chinese plans to tackle its
property crisis and by tech giant Alibaba applying for a primary listing
in Hong Kong [.SS], but Europe couldn't keep it going.
The pan-European STOXX 600 index stalled as higher commodity stocks
[O/R] and a profit upgrade from consumer giant Unilever were offset by a
6% dive in UBS shares and broader recession fears. [.EU]
"The key question we have as these earnings come out is how much pricing
power do these (consumer facing) firms have," said Diamond Hill
international equities portfolio manager Krishna Mohanraj, referring to
the pressures of higher inflation.
Shares in U.S. retailer Walmart had slumped 10% after the bell after it
slashed its forecasts on Monday due to those exact issues..
But Unilever, which makes everything from laundry detergent to ice
cream, raised its full-year profit forecasts in Europe owing to what its
CEO Alan Jope said had been "strong pricing to mitigate input cost
inflation".
European Union countries were also preparing to approve weakened
emergency proposals to curb their gas usage. Russia's Gazprom had warned
on Monday that it would reduce flows further this week due to another
maintenance issue.
Dutch and British "day ahead" prices jumped 8% and 16.5% respectively on
Tuesday and a fall in euro zone bond yields in the fixed income markets
came with analysts now increasingly pricing in a recession in the bloc.
"The potentially forced 15% reduction that all member states would have
to adhere to was very unpopular amongst several members," Deutsche
Bank's Jim Reid said. "Expect lots of carve-outs and compromises to
appear if a plan that can progress is agreed upon".
Investors are also awaiting a likely 75 basis point Federal Reserve
interest rate increase on Wednesday - with markets pricing about a 10%
risk of a larger hike, as well as waiting to see whether economic
warning signs prompt a shift in rhetoric.
The International Monetary Fund is set to publish its closely watched
world forecasts later which are expected to point to even slower growth
and higher inflation.
"We are leaning to the view that 75 bps is most likely but won't be the
end unless they see some demand destruction and some tempering of
inflation," said John Milroy, an investment adviser at Ord Minnett.
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A man wearing a protective mask, amid the coronavirus disease
(COVID-19) outbreak, walks past an electronic board displaying
various countries' stock indexes including Russian Trading System (RTS)
Index which is empty, outside a brokerage in Tokyo, Japan, March 10,
2022. REUTERS/Kim Kyung-Hoon
TECH PROBLEMS
Global tech giants Microsoft and Google are both reporting after the bell on
Wall Street later, followed by Facebook owner Meta tomorrow and Apple and Amazon
on Thursday.
It adds up to more than $7.5 trillion of market cap, Deutsche Bank's Reid
pointed out. "Although with these 5 stocks being down between around -13%
(Apple) YTD to around -50% (Meta), with the other three down around -20 to -25%,
this figure would have been closer to $10 trillion at the start of the year."
GM, NXP Semiconductors, Raytheon Technologies, Coca-Cola and McDonald's will
also report later. [.N]
In Asia, MSCI's broadest regional index outside Japan had bounced 0.5%.
Chinese stocks had jumped after reports the country would set up a fund of up to
$44 billion to help property developers. [.SS]
Hong Kong's Hang Seng Index ended 1.7% higher on the Alibaba news although
Japan's Nikkei fell 0.16%. [.T]
In currencies, the dollar was flat not too far below recent milestone highs as
uncertainty continued to swirl around the interest rate and economic outlook. [/FRX]
The euro hovered at $1.0215 but was hemmed in by uncertainty over Europe's
energy security, which is not helped by a looming cut in the westbound flow of
Russian gas.
The yen steadied at 136.54 per dollar. The U.S. dollar index, which touched a
20-year high this month, was down slightly at 106.380. [FRX/]
Oil prices rose further on expectations Russia's reduction in natural gas supply
to Europe could encourage a switch to crude, with Brent futures last up 1.3% at
$106.45 a barrel and U.S. crude up 1.25% at $97.92 a barrel.
Benchmark 10-year Treasury yields fell to 2.875% and Germany's benchmark 10-year
bond yield fell to a two-month low of just below 1% as growth worries gave
support to bonds . [US/] [GVD/EUR]
(Additional reporting Kane Wu in Hong Kong; Editing by Edmund Klamann)
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