Morning Bid: BOJ eases market migraine, Super Micro aches
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[August 07, 2024] A
look at the day ahead in U.S. and global markets from Mike Dolan
In an extraordinary round trip over the past week, world markets have
rebounded sharply from days of turbulence - thanks in part to Bank of
Japan almost apologizing on Wednesday for its role in the ruckus - and
traders now try to figure out what's next.
Japan's benchmark Nikkei stock index returned to Friday's close at one
point earlier - completing a near 5,000 point, 12% roundabout in just
three days and ending Wednesday's session about 1% higher.
As volatility gauges subsided back toward long-term averages, the BoJ's
influential deputy governor Shinichi Uchida underscored the market
recovery by saying the burst of market volatility that followed last
week's interest rate rise and promise of more may in turn force the
central bank to hold back.
"As we're seeing sharp volatility in domestic and overseas financial
markets, it's necessary to maintain current levels of monetary easing
for the time being," Uchida said in a speech to business leaders in the
northern Japanese city of Hakodate.
At the heart of the problem over the past week was that the BoJ move
seemed to puncture an estimated half trillion dollar yen-funded currency
'carry trade', catapulting the currency higher in the process. About
two-thirds of those short yen positions may have already been unwound,
according to estimates by JPMorgan.
The dollar/yen exchange rate has now rebounded 4% from Monday's 7-month
low to reclaim a foothold above 147.
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The VIX 'fear index' of U.S. stock market volatility has now returned to
23 - almost a third of Monday's peak and back closer to its historic
average of 19.3.
Along with more sober assessments of the likelihood of U.S. recession
any time soon, Wall Street's recovery looks set to continue later today
- with futures for all major indexes all up more than 1% ahead of the
bell.
To the extent that global growth jitters were part of the market hiccup
of the past week, Chinese trade numbers for July also helped settle
things down a bit. Although Chinese export growth missed forecasts,
imports were ahead of expectations.
Attention then switches back to the fundamentals of the earnings season
and supercharged Federal Reserve rate cut bets.
If worries about pricey tech stocks and a reappraisal of the artificial
intelligence theme was another reason for last week's upheaval, then
Super Micro Computer's miss overnight may keep nerves jangling in that
sector.
Super Micro's gross margins came in below estimates as high costs tied
to the production of servers with the latest AI chips weighed on profits
and sent its shares down 14%.
The read-across to other major chipmakers was limited so far - with AI
torchbearer Nvidia still up 1.5% in pre-market trading on Wednesday.
What's more, overall second-quarter earnings remain impressive.
Aggregate annual S&P500 profit growth is tracking 13.7% - more than two
points higher than pre-season estimates, according to LSEG data.
And there are some big winners despite the recent tech wobble. Uber's
results beat Wall Street estimates on Tuesday on the back of steady
demand for its ride-sharing and food-delivery services, lifting its
shares 5%.
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Traders work on the floor at the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) in
New York City, U.S., July 3, 2024. REUTERS/Brendan McDermid/File
Photo
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In interest rate markets, the broader stock market stabilization has
tempered the Fed view somewhat.
But a hefty 41 basis points of cuts next month is still priced by
futures market and more than 100bps is still in the mix by the
yearend.
Tuesday's $58 billion three-year Treasury auction went off without a
hitch and some $42 billion of benchmark 10-year goes under the
hammer later today.
With a yield of 3.93%, Treasury is getting 10-year funding more than
20bp cheaper than if the auction was held this time last week.
As to recession worries more generally, there's little on
Wednesday's diary to shift the dial on that - with tomorrow's
jobless claims data likely to be a focus given the sudden bout of
angst about labor market weakness.
For most investors, a 'soft landing' remains the best guess and
stepped-up Fed rate cuts will only underscore that.
Franklin Templeton Institute's Stephen Dover points out that the
average one year stock market return after the first Fed rate cut is
almost 5% even when a recession occurs - but it's 16.6% when the
cuts come without a recession materializing.
In Europe, pharma giant Novo Nordisk trimmed its full-year profit
outlook after a sub-forecast sales update for its popular
weight-loss drug Wegovy - stirring worries among investors about
stiffening competition from Eli Lilly.
Elsewhere, politics dominated.
Democratic presidential nominee Kamala Harris and her newly selected
vice presidential running mate, Minnesota Governor Tim Walz,
campaigned for the first time together on Tuesday in Philadelphia.
The tailwind behind Harris' campaign has national opinion polls
showing her slightly ahead of challenger Donald Trump, but betting
markets have cut the odds of her taking the White House.
The PredictIt site now puts her chances of victory at some 57% -
almost 10 points clear of Trump.
Key developments that should provide more direction to U.S. markets
later on Wednesday:
* US June consumer credit
* Bank of Finland governor and European Central Bank policymaker
Olli Rehn speaks
* US corporate earnings: Walt Disney, Warner Bros Discovery,
Marathon, Occidental Petroleum, Mckesson, Atmos Energy, Emerson
Electric, CVS Health, Monster Beverage, Ralph Lauren, Hilton
Worldwide, Zimmer Biomet, Corpay, Global Payments, Equinix, CF
Industries, Bio-Techne, Charles River Laboratories, NiSource etc
* US Treasury sells $42 billion of 10-year notes
(By Mike Dolan, editing by Ros Russell; mike.dolan@thomsonreuters.com)
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