Category: Uncategorized

  • Oil rises on prospects of less aggressive U.S. rate hike

    Oil rises on prospects of less aggressive U.S. rate hike

    Oil prices rose on Friday amid prospects of a less aggressive U.S. rate hike, although worries about a recovery in demand capped gains.

    Brent crude futures for September delivery added 2.3% to trade at $101.37 per barrel, while WTI crude rose 1.9% to $97.61.

    “Oil is trading very much to the beat of Federal Reserve policy and the implications it could have on both demand destruction and the U.S. dollar,” said Stephen Innes, managing partner at SPI Asset Management.

    “With the market falling back to base-case 75 [basis point] hike next week versus 100 [basis point] yesterday, oil prices and the broader market have a little more breathing room today,” Innes said.

    The Fed’s most hawkish policymakers on Thursday said they favored another 75-basis-point interest rate increase at the U.S. central bank’s policy meeting this month, not the bigger rate raise that traders had raced to price in after a report Wednesday showed inflation was accelerating.

    The rate hike uncertainty and weak economic data pushed both oil contracts to lows on Thursday which were below the close on Feb. 23, the day before Russia invaded Ukraine in what Moscow calls “a special military operation.”

    Still, both Brent and WTI had clawed back nearly all losses by the end of the trading session.

    However, concerns about the outlook for demand continued to keep a lid on oil prices.

    ’“Sentiment hasn’t been helped by renewed Covid-19 outbreaks in China, which threaten to halt the recovery in demand. High prices also appear to have blunted demand for gasoline in the U.S.,” ANZ Research analysts said.

    China’s refinery throughput in June shrank nearly 10% from a year earlier, with output for the first half of the year down 6% in the first annual decline for the period since at least 2011, data showed on Friday.

    Meanwhile, U.S. President Joe Biden will on Friday fly to Saudi Arabia, where he will attend a summit of Gulf allies and call for them to pump more oil.

    However, spare capacity at members of the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries is running low, with most producers pumping at maximum capacity, and it is unclear how much extra Saudi Arabia can bring into the market quickly.

  • Dow pops 400 points as Wall Street applauds latest bank earnings, strong June retail sales

    Dow pops 400 points as Wall Street applauds latest bank earnings, strong June retail sales

    Stocks jumped on Friday as traders digested a fresh batch of bank earnings and retail sales for June that came in ahead of expectations.

    The Dow Jones Industrial Average popped 449 points, or 1.46%. The S&P 500 jumped 1.21% and Nasdaq Composite added 1%, but stocks remained on track for weekly losses.

    A new round of bank results from Wells Fargo and Citigroup offered further insight into the state of the economy. Wells Fargo rose 2.8% even as quarterly profits declined 48% and the bank set aside funds for bad loansCitigroup jumped 5.2% as it beat estimates and benefited from a rising rate environment.

    A day earlier, investors combed through troubling reports from JPMorgan Chase and Morgan Stanley, which kicked off major bank earnings, and also weighed the likelihood of larger interest rate hikes from the Federal Reserve and looming recession concerns.

    “I don’t have a lot of bullishness on our ability to grow earnings in this environment,” G Squared Private Wealth CIO Victoria Greene said Thursday on CNBC’s “Closing Bell: Overtime.” “I don’t think it was bad or tragic, you know, but I think unfortunately, this earnings season, any miss on earnings or margins is going to be punished and any actual beats may actually be picked apart.”

    Shares of UnitedHealth, American Express and Salesforce led the Dow’s recovery, rising more than 2% each. All major sectors in the S&P 500 moved higher on the day with the exception of utilities, which slipped 1%.

    Financials jumped more than 1%, boosted by bank shares. Marathon Petroleum and Valero Energy jumped 2% each as oil prices rose. Shares of Tesla, Nvidia, Amazon Alphabet and Meta Platforms gained more than 1%.

    For the week, the Dow is down 1%, while the S&P and Nasdaq have slipped 1.55% and 2.3%, respectively.

    June retail sales came in ahead of expectations on Friday, rising 1% on a monthly basis and ahead of Dow Jones’ estimate of 0.9% and indicating that consumers are bolstering retail spending even as inflation hits record highs. Preliminary consumer sentiment data also came in ahead of expectations.

    In corporate news, Pinterest shares surged 14.7% following a Wall Street Journal report that said activist investor Elliott Management took a stake of more than 9% in the social media company.

  • China’s GDP growth misses expectations in the second quarter

    China’s GDP growth misses expectations in the second quarter

    • China eked out GDP growth of 0.4% in the second quarter from a year ago, missing expectations as the economy struggled to shake off the impact of Covid controls. Analysts polled by Reuters had forecast growth of 1% in the second quarter.
    • However, retail sales in June rose by 3.1%, recovering from a prior slump and beating expectations for no growth from the prior year.
    • In the second quarter, mainland China faced its worst Covid outbreak since the height of the pandemic in early 2020.

    BEIJING — China eked out GDP growth of 0.4% in the second quarter from a year ago, missing expectations as the economy struggled to shake off the impact of Covid controls.

    Analysts polled by Reuters had forecast growth of 1% in the second quarter.

    Industrial production in June also missed expectations, rising by 3.9% from a year ago, versus the 4.1% forecast.

    However, retail sales in June rose by 3.1%, recovering from a prior slump and beating expectations for no growth from the prior year. Major e-commerce companies held a promotional shopping festival in the middle of last month.

    Retail sales in June saw a boost from spending across many categories including autos, cosmetics and medicine. But catering, furniture and construction materials saw a decline. Within retail sales, online sales of physical goods grew by 8.3% from a year ago in June, slower than the 14% growth the prior month.

    Fixed asset investment for the first half of the year came in above expectations, up 6.1% versus 6% predicted.

    Overall fixed asset investment picked up on a monthly basis, rising by 0.95% in June from May to an undisclosed figure. While investment in infrastructure and manufacturing maintained a similar or better pace of growth from May to June, that in real estate worsened. Investment in real estate in the first half of the year fell by 5.4% from a year ago, worse than the 4% decline in the first five months of the year.

    Unemployment across China’s 31 largest cities fell from pre-pandemic highs to 5.8% in June, but that for the age 16 to 24 category rose further to 19.3%.

    Read more about China from CNBC Pro

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    The statistics bureau described the latest economic results as “hard-earned achievements” but warned about the “lingering” impact of Covid and “shrinking demand” at home. The bureau also noted the rising “risk of stagflation in the world economy” and tightening monetary policy overseas.

    In the second quarter, mainland China faced its worst Covid outbreak since the height of the pandemic in early 2020. Strict stay home orders hit the metropolis of Shanghai for about two months, while travel restrictions contributed to supply chain disruptions.

    By early June, Shanghai, Beijing and other parts of China were on their way to resuming normal business activity. In the last few weeks, the central government has cut quarantine times and eased some Covid prevention measures.

    But different parts of China have had to reinstate Covid controls as new cases spike.

    As of Monday, Nomura said regions that account for 25.5% of China’s GDP were under some form of lockdown or heightened control. That’s up from 14.9% a week earlier.

    Major investment banks have repeatedly cut their full-year China GDP targets due to the impact of Covid controls. Among firms tracked by CNBC, the median forecast was 3.4% as of late June.

    The official GDP target of “around 5.5%” was announced in early March.

  • Morgan Stanley misses analysts’ estimates on worse-than-expected investment banking revenue

    Morgan Stanley misses analysts’ estimates on worse-than-expected investment banking revenue

    • Morgan Stanley reported second-quarter earnings and revenue that were below analysts’ expectations.
    • The bank’s results were hurt by a steep 55% decline in investment banking revenue.
    • The results confirm what some analysts had feared for Morgan Stanley, which runs one of the larger equity capital markets operations on Wall Street.

    https://www.cnbc.com/2022/07/14/morgan-stanley-ms-2q-2022-earnings-.html

  • EU hikes inflation forecast to 8.3% for 2022 as Russia-Ukraine war drives soaring prices

    EU hikes inflation forecast to 8.3% for 2022 as Russia-Ukraine war drives soaring prices

    • In May, the European Commission expected inflation in the euro area to hit 6.1% in 2022, before falling to 2.7% in 2023. Now, both forecasts have been revised up to 7.6% and 4%, respectively.
    • For Europe as a whole, the inflation forecasts have been revised up from 6.8% in 2022 and 3.2% in 2023, to 8.3% and 4.6% respectively.
    • Many economists are pricing in a recession for the euro zone either later this year or in 2023, but — for now at least — European officials are refusing to talk about the possibility of a recession.

    https://www.cnbc.com/2022/07/14/eu-hikes-inflation-forecast-to-7point6percent-as-russia-ukraine-war-fuels-price-increases.html

  • World’s largest chipmaker TSMC posts record profit allaying fears over semiconductor headwinds

    World’s largest chipmaker TSMC posts record profit allaying fears over semiconductor headwinds

    • TSMC, the worlds biggest chipmaker, posted record net profit in the second quarter.
    • However, TSMC CEO CC Wei said that some of the company’s capital expenditure would be “pushed out into 2023.”
    • The strong results and outlook, but caution on spending, highlights the careful path chipmakers are walking at a time of concern about rising prices and the impact on consumer demand.

    https://www.cnbc.com/2022/07/14/tsmc-q2-2022-chipmaker-posts-record-profit-and-strong-guidance.html

  • Coachers Corner – June 2022

    Coachers Corner – June 2022

  • Earnings Season

    Earnings Season

    RTMA July 11