Marketmind: Fresh spur from Meta and Europe's banks
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[April 27, 2023] A
look at the day ahead in U.S. and global markets from Mike Dolan
The Big Tech earnings season is going some way to justifying the
striking outperformance of its mega cap shares this year, with Meta
Platforms the latest to impress overnight and Amazon advancing ahead of
its readout on Thursday.
Perhaps even more surprising, Europe's big banks are wowing the gallery
too - showing limited, if any, fallout from the failure of ailing Credit
Suisse at the end of the quarter.
And so the glass appears half full again despite background tensions
around regional U.S. banks and as wider markets brace for several weeks
of a U.S. debt ceiling standoff.
Overall, world markets are holding the line as they parse the blizzard
of incoming corporate updates and still-mixed messages from macro
signals on the state of the economy.
Wednesday's shaping to be an "up day" so far, with Wall St futures and
bourses around the world firmly in positive territory ahead of the open.
Revitalised by the craze around what some see as a quantum leap in
artificial intelligence developments this year, Meta stock jumped more
than 12% after the bell as chief executive Mark Zuckerberg said AI was
flattering sales and forecast revenue growth far above expectations.
With Amazon reporting later, its stock rose another 2% ahead of the bell
too.
The updates underlined Wednesday's outperformance of the Nasdaq - which
pushed half a percentage point higher even though the S&P500 ended
marginally in the red. Nasdaq futures were up another 1% before
Thursday's open.
But the mega caps flatter the move. After a torrid 2022 as interest
rates spiralled higher, the narrow FANG+TM index - which captures
digital giants Meta, Alphabet, Apple and others - is up a whopping 32%
for 2023 so far - almost twice the gain in the Nasdaq 100 and six times
that of the 5% gain in the S&P500.
The nuts and bolts side of the economy and the stock market looks less
rosy.
The Dow Transports index sank 3.6% on Wednesday, by contrast, leading to
its biggest two-day decline since May 2022 - hurt by news of
weaker-than-expected capital goods data and Tuesday's weak United Parcel
Service results.
The health of the wider economy will get its most comprehensive
examination in the release of first-quarter U.S. gross domestic product
numbers later on Thursday. The forecast is for slowing of annualised
real GDP growth to 2.0% from 2.6% in the final quarter of last year.
But in many respects the GDP and even the earnings season are in the
rear view mirror now that we're almost in May and more updated numbers,
such as the weekly update on jobless claims, may pack as much of a punch
as investors await next month's Federal Reserve policy decision.
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The logo of Meta Platforms' business
group is seen in Brussels, Belgium December 6, 2022. REUTERS/Yves
Herman/File Photo
The messy debt ceiling problem keeps the immediate horizon cloudy
however, with the latest number crunch on Treasury tax receipts
putting the "X date" - when the money runs out in the absence of a
debt cap extension - somewhere in late July.
The U.S. House of Representatives on Wednesday narrowly passed a
bill to raise the government's $31.4 trillion debt ceiling that
includes sweeping spending cuts over the next decade. But the bill
is unlikely to pass the Senate, and President Joe Biden would veto
it if it did.
Despite disruptions to the price of short-term Treasury bill coming
due around that X date, BlackRock claims it has been buying U.S.
Treasuries in anticipation of an economic slowdown and a protracted
debt limit fight.
Two-year Treasury yields hit their lowest in three weeks on
Wednesday but have backed up a touch to snug just under 4% today.
The dollar was marginally weaker, with crude oil prices struggling
to recover from their latest lunge lower this week.
In Europe, Barclays share price jumped 4.5% after a profit beat
rooted in its credit card business. Deutsche Bank rose more than 2%
after its forecast-beating results included plans to cut 800 jobs in
a new cost-saving drive.
The boss of Britain's antitrust regulator said blocking Microsoft's
acquisition of "Call of Duty" maker Activision Blizzardwas the right
decision for the UK after both companies said it sent the wrong
message to the global tech industry.
Events to watch out for on Thursday:
* U.S. Q1 gross domestic product, weekly jobless claims, March
pending home sales, April Kansas City Fed manufacturing survey
* U.S. corp earnings: Amazon, Intel, Mastercard, Eli Lilly, Merck,
AbbVie, Comcast, Bristol-Myers Squibb, Amgen, Honeywell,
Caterpillar, Gilead Sciences, BYD, Mondelez, Northrop Grumman,
Hershey, Keurig Dr Pepper, Valero, Newmont, Altria, Activision
Blizzard, Pinterest, Snap, Domino's Pizza, American Airlines,
Eastman Chemical, Mohawk, Hasbro, Harley-Davidson, Linde, Hertz,
Weyerhaeuser, Principal Financial, Capital One, S&P Global, Wills
Towers Watson, Verisign, Cincinnati Financial etc
* European Central Bank board member Fabio Panetta presentation on
digital euro
* U.S. Treasury auctions 7-year note
(By Mike Dolan, Editing by Hugh Lawson mike.dolan@thomsonreuters.com.
Twitter: @reutersMikeD)
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