Marketmind: Banks to test soft landing thesis
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[April 14, 2023] A
look at the day ahead in U.S. and global markets from Mike Dolan
World markets have surged this week on renewed hopes of disinflation,
peak interest rates and a soft economic landing - and earnings from Wall
Street's biggest banks now test the thesis.
Friday sees first-quarter updates from JP Morgan, Wells Fargo and
Citigroup as investors assess the fallout from last month's U.S.
regional banking crisis.
Although annual profit growth for the financial sector at large is
expected to be positive, earnings for the top six banks are forecast to
have dropped 10% over the year - with a mixed readout that ranges from
JPM being flattered by depositor backflows to dour investment bank
readings for some of the rest.
Markets will be most focussed on bank guidance on how much the March
bank failure will crimp lending going forward.
Investors appear to have put the episode well behind them, however.
The S&P500 and MSCI's global stock index have hit their highest in more
than two months as U.S. consumer and producer price reports for March
showed a faster drop in inflation than most had expected and as the
tight labor market weakens gradually.
Next month's expected interest rate rise from the Federal Reserve is now
expected to be the last and futures see up to 70 basis points of cuts
from that point to year-end.
And with China's booming trade numbers for last month also suggesting
the world economy at large will comfortably skirt recession this year,
"soft landing" hopes are back in vogue. China's economic surprise index,
for example, hit its most positive reading in 17 years.
Although stock futures gave back a little ahead of Friday's open, Wall
St's VIX volatility gauge recorded its lowest close on Thursday since
the start of last year.
The combination of ebbing bond yields and easing stress is seeing the
dollar take much of the heat, with the DXY index that measures its
strength against other leading currencies hitting its lowest in a year
early on Friday.
And with disinflation and rate cuts expected to proceed faster in the
United States than in Europe, the U.S.-Germany two -year bond yield
premium hit its lowest since late 2021. The euro hit its highest since
March last year.
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Traders work on the floor of the New
York Stock Exchange (NYSE) in New York City, U.S., April 10, 2023.
REUTERS/Brendan McDermid
Bank earnings aside, Friday also sees the release of U.S. retail and
industry figures for last month.
For inflation watchers, oil prices slipped back again as the
International Energy Agency said rising global oil inventories
likely influenced OPEC's recent decision to cut supply - noting that
OECD industry stocks in January hit their highest level since July
2021.
Year-on-year crude prices are down 23%.
Elsewhere, Singapore's central bank left its monetary policy
settings unchanged, reflecting the city-state's concerns about its
growth outlook and surprising economists who had expected another
round of tightening.
The tense geopolitical backdrop was focussed on North Korea, which
announced it had tested a new solid-fuel intercontinental missile -
a development experts said would facilitate missile launches with
little warning.
Key developments that may provide direction to U.S. markets later on
Friday:
* U.S. March retail sales, industrial production, import/export
prices; April University of Michigan consumer sentiment, Feb
business/retail inventories
* U.S. Federal Reserve Board Governor Christopher Waller speaks.
Bundesbank President Joachim Nagel speaks; Bank of England
policymaker Silvana Tenreyro speaks
* U.S. corporate earnings: JPMorgan, Citigroup, Wells Fargo,
BlackRock, PNC Financial Services, UnitedHealth
* Brazil's President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva meets China's
President Xi Jinping in Beijing
(By Mike Dolan, editing by Christina Fincher, mike.dolan@thomsonreuters.com.
Twitter: @reutersMikeD)
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