- Corporate earnings reports and news
- Global market indices
- Commodity sector news
- Currencies
- Key data to move markets this week
- Global macro updates
Corporate Earnings News
A better than expected season? According to Refinitiv I/B/E/S data, as of 8 February 2023, the 22Q4 Y/Y blended earnings growth estimate is -2.9%. Of the 297 companies in the S&P 500 that have reported earnings to date for 22Q4, 69.0% reported above analyst expectations compared to a long-term average of 66%. The 22Q4 Y/Y blended revenue growth estimate is 4.9%.
Has the best bot already won? Alphabet saw $100 billion in market value wiped off its shares on Wednesday after it posted a short GIF video of its new AI chatbot, Bard, in action via Twitter, promising it would help simplify complex topics. It instead delivered the wrong answers. On Tuesday, Microsoft announced it was revamping its Bing search engine and Edge Web browser with artificial intelligence. It is developing an intelligent chatbot with startup Open AI that will work within Bing's search results, creating AI that can summarise web pages, synthesise disparate sources, even compose emails and translate them. According to Refinitiv, Microsoft expects every percentage point of share it gains will bring in another $2 billion in search advertising revenue.
It’s a sad world after all. The Walt Disney Company on Wednesday announced a new restructuring under recently reinstated CEO Bob Iger, cutting 7,000 jobs as part of an effort to save $5.5 billion and make its streaming business profitable. The layoffs represent an estimated 3.6% of Disney's global workforce. The restructuring will include the formation of Disney Entertainment, which will bring together Disney Studios, General Entertainment, Animation, Disney+, 20th Century Studios, Searchlight, and Hulu. ESPN will remain a separate entity and include ESPN+. A third division will be Disney Parks, Experiences, and Products and also includes gaming and publishing. The new structure is effective immediately. Shares of Disney rose 8% to $120.77 in after-hours trading on Wednesday.
Corporate Earnings calendar 9 February - 16 February 2023
Thursday: Abbvie, Pepsico, Philip Morris, PayPal Holdings, AstraZeneca, Unilever, Expedia Group, Siemens, Aegon, S&P Global, British American Tobacco, Duke Energy, Zurich Insurance Group, Kellog, Verisign, Baxter International, Ventas, Cloudflare, BorgWarner, Tapestry, Bruker Corporation, Motorola Solutions, DexCom, Credit Agricole, Swisscom, Willis Towers Watson, Tyson Foods, Credit Suisse
Friday: Enbridge, Global Payments Inc., Magna International, Mettler- Toledo, Fortis, Mr Cooper Group
Monday: Palantir Technologies, Lattice Semiconductor, Otter Tail Corporation, Treehouse Foods, SolarEdge, FirstEnergy, Check Point Software, Arista Networks, Cadence Design Systems
Tuesday: Know Labs, Coca-Cola, Airbnb, Upstart Holdings, Marriott
Wednesday: The Kraft Heinz Company, Barrick Gold, The Trade Desk, Cisco Systems, QuantumScape, Roku, Twilio, Analog Devices, Kering, Equinix, Synopsys, Albemarle, Welltower, American Water Works Company, Martin Marietta Materials, Ameren
Thursday: Applied Materials, Nestle, Airbus, Southern Company, Digital Realty Trust, Cenovus Energy, Consolidated Edison, Epam Systems, PPL Corporation, West Pharmaceutical Services, HubSpot
US Stock Indices
Nasdaq 100 3.27% MTD and 14.25% QTD
Dow Jones Industrial Average 0.21% MTD and 3.05% QTD
NYSE 0.63% MTD and 4.94% QTD
S&P 500 2.14% MTD and 8.45% QTD
Mega caps had another mixed week with Microsoft, although , managing to erase gains on Wednesday that put its market value above $2 trillion. Amazon , Apple very slightly , Nvidia , Tesla , and Meta Platforms .
Information Technology stocks such as Intel Corporation, Texas Instruments, Applied Materials, Autodesk, Cisco Systems, and Advanced Micro Devices were all this week.
Energy stocks such as BP and Exxon Mobil were this week as they reported record Q4 profits. Other energy stocks such as Shell, Baker Hughes Company, Hess, Phillips 66, and Occidental Petroleum Corporation were also all over the week.
Materials and Mining stocks were mixed with DuPont de Nemours and LyondellBasell Industries and Albemarle, Westrock Company, and Newmont Corporation .
European Stock Indices
Stoxx 600 1.38% MTD and 8.14% QTD
DAX 1.88% MTD and 10.69% QTD
CAC 40 0.53% MTD and 9.98% QTD
IBEX 35 2.14% MTD and 12.13% QTD
FTSE MIB 2.11% MTD and 14.57% QTD
FTSE 100 1.46% MTD and 5.82% QTD
Other Global Stock Indices
MSCI World Index 0.95% MTD and 8.12% QTD
Hang Seng 2.56% MTD and 7.59% QTD
Fixed Income
US 10-year Treasuries to 3.62%.
German 10-year bunds to 2.36%.
UK 10-year gilts at 3.31%.
Short-dated eurozone bond yields were up this week after the ECB said it would cut the interest rate it pays governments on deposits while US yields have risen after Federal Reserve chair Jerome Powell acknowledged on Tuesday that interest rates may need to move higher than expected given the strength of the labour market and it threatening the ability of the Fed to progress in lowering inflation.
Commodities
Spot Gold to $1,874.58 per ounce.
Spot Silver to $22.28 per ounce.
West Texas Intermediate crude to $78.47 a barrel.
Brent crude to $85.09 a barrel.
Oil rose this week on hopes of China’s re-opening supporting demand and a slowing pace of US interest rate rises meaning a softer landing. The earthquake that hit Turkey and Syria on Monday stopped crude oil flows from Iraq and Azerbaijan out of the Turkish port of Ceyhan. According to Refinitiv, BP Azerbaijan has declared force majeure on Azeri crude shipments from the port. Iraq's pipeline to Ceyhan resumed flows on Tuesday. However, US crude oil stocks rose to their highest level since June 2021 and oil production rose to its highest since April 2020.
Currencies
The USD gained this week on changing expectations about just how high the Fed will go. The GBP is 0.21% YTD against the USD and the EUR 0.07% YTD.
Bitcoin 0.04% MTD and 38.52% YTD.
Ethereum 4.76% MTD and 37.93% YTD.
Note: As of 5 pm 8 February 2023 EST
Key data to move markets this week
Europe:
Friday: EU leaders summit and a speech by ECB executive board member Isabel Schnabel.
Monday: Eurogroup meeting.
Tuesday: EcoFin meeting, Eurozone GDP, and Eurozone unemployment change data.
Wednesday: Spanish Harmonised Index of Consumer Prices and Eurozone Industrial production.
Thursday: ECB Economic Bulletin.
UK:
Friday: GDP, Industrial production, Manufacturing production, and a speech by Bank of England Chief Economist Huw Pill.
Tuesday: Average earnings data, Claimant count change, Claimant count rate, and ILO unemployment rate.
Wednesday: CPI, Core CPI, PPI, PPI core output, and RPI.
US:
Friday: Michigan Consumer Sentiment Index, University of Michigan 5-year Consumer Inflation Expectations Survey, and a speech by Federal Reserve board member Fred Waller.
Tuesday: CPI and CPI ex food and energy.
Wednesday: Retail sales.
Thursday: Building permits, Housing starts, Initial jobless claims, Continuing jobless claims, Philadelphia Fed Manufacturing Survey, PPI, and PPI ex food and energy.
Global Macro Updates
An ever aggressive Fed? Fed chair Jerome Powell suggested on Tuesday that the Fed may raise its benchmark interest rate higher than the 5.00% to 5.25% peak range that the central bank anticipated before last Friday's strong employment showing of 517,000 new jobs in January. Fed Bank of Minneapolis President Neel Kashkari Min said Wednesday that surging jobs growth was proof that the Fed needed to “raise rates aggressively.” The need for further tightening was also stressed by Fed Bank of New York President John Williams who said on Wednesday that the Fed has more work to do on rates, but that he still sees a peak rate of 5.25% as "reasonable" with 25-basis-point hike increments.
The ECB’s tightening path to go higher. According to Dutch central bank governor Klaas Knot, the ECB may need to deliver another 50 basis points interest-rate increase after a planned hike of that size at March’s meeting. In a MNI Market News webcast he said, “I consider it highly unlikely that the March hike will be our endpoint and if underlying inflation pressures do not materially abate, maintaining the current pace of hikes into May could well remain warranted.” This sentiment was echoed by Latvian central bank governor Martin Kazaks who, as noted by Bloomberg, said on Wednesday, “It’s natural to expect rate increases will slow to smaller increments, but we’re not there…I’m very aligned with the 50 basis-point increase in March and after March I don’t see a reason to take a pause or stop rate increases.” These comments followed Executive Board member Isabel Schnabel's statement on Tuesday that the unprecedented monetary tightening to date has had little effect on inflation.
A crypto banking problem? As noted by the Financial Times, Binance hosted 55% of the world’s spot crypto trading in January, an increase of 7% since the collapse of FTX in November, according to data from research provider CryptoCompare. This comes after Binance said it will suspend deposits and withdrawals of US dollars via bank accounts. Binance said in January that its US banking partner Signature Bank would no longer handle user transactions less than $100,000. Almost none of Binance’s customers make US dollar bank transfers, and Binance’s US division is not really affected by the suspension. However, it does point to weaknesses between banks and crypto. According to Coindesk two weeks ago, Caitlin Long-founded Custodia Bank (formerly Avanti Bank), with its focus on crypto assets, was denied its application for membership by the US Federal Reserve Board. This is an additional sign of difficulty between crypto holders, banks, and regulators with Signature, as noted by Bloomberg, saying in December that it intended to shed up to $10 billion in deposits from digital asset clients and crypto bank Juno only resuming its services after having to pause them in early January.
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