Sunday, August 25, 2019

Barrons weekend summary

Barrons weekend summary: positive feature on Nestle 

- Cover on NFL broadcast rights says NFLX, AMZN and GOOGL could eventually compete for the content with current broadcasters CBS, FOX, NBC, and ESPN. NFL could also seek new revenue by selling out of market games and mobile rights to media players like AT&T's DirecTV, Verzion, Comcast's NBC and Disney's ESPN.

Barrons says Nestle is showing good growth under CEO Mark Schneider who joined the company in 2017 and has followed a strategy of divesting non-core assets.

Friday, August 23, 2019

Positive tone sours as trade war escalates

TradeTheNews.com Weekly Market Update: Positive tone sours as trade war escalates
Fri, 23 Aug 2019 16:07 PM EST

Markets opened the week on a positive note helped by talk of fiscal stimulus around the globe and the expectation key central bankers would offer dovish commentary later in the week from Jackson Hole. Weak global growth and continued uncertainty on trade induced speculation that officials in Germany, Washington DC and across Asia were looking for measures to ensure growth. To that end China announced new measures on lending that effectively resulted in the lowering of a key interest rate. The ECB’s Renh emphasized they stand ready to significantly increase stimulus measures, while President Trump kept up his rhetoric calling on the Fed to cut rates by 100 basis points and confirmed the White House is looking at new tax cuts, though not imminently. The Commerce Department granted Huawei an additional 90 day extension on a license that allows the company to conduct some business with US customers, which was taken as a constructive move on the trade front. UK PM Johnson met with key leaders in Europe raising hopes that a path towards a Brexit deal could forged, however unlikely it still appeared. As PM Conte stepped down in Italy markets were encouraged by President Mattarella granting the Five Star and PD parties enough time to come up with a coalition deal to avoid a new election.

The tone changed significantly though as the week drew to a close, as press reports speculated China was readying retaliatory tariff measures. On Friday, China confirmed those reports by announcing plans to levy tariffs on $75B in US goods effective September 1st, with some addition levies going into effect in mid-December, mirroring the timing of the next round of US tariffs. The news came alongside Fed Chairman Powell’s highly anticipated speech at Jackson Hole. Ultimately the Fed Chair offered little in the way of new ground, suggesting the wide array of views held by policymakers will continue for some time. He acknowledged low inflation remains the conundrum of the current central bank era and reiterated that policymakers stand ready to act to keep the expansion going. Futures continued to project a 25 basis point cut as inevitable next month, but the path after that remains unclear, beholden to things like Brexit, Hong Kong, and tariffs as Powell enumerated. The President reacted quickly on twitter, insuating both Chairman Powell and President Xi were both enemies of the US while indicating his administration would soon announce new measures to deal with trade and the byproducts of a Fed Reserve that is not as accommodative as Trump sees fit. The US 2-10 year spread bobbed in and out of negative territory and rates generally moved lower. Stocks and other risk assets tanked into Friday afternoon. Copper hit another 2+ year low and gold prices pushed back towards the highs of the year. The Friday selloff pushed stocks into their fourth straight down week: the S&P500 lost 1/4%, the DJIA dropped 1%, and the Nasdaq fell 1.8%.

Earnings from major retailers led corporate news headlines this week. Home Depot reported a beat but trimmed its sales outlook due to lumber and tariffs. Lowe’s shares surged after its profitability came in well above forecasts despite inclement weather. Kohl’s EPS topped estimates, though same store sales came in under consensus, pushing shares modestly lower. Target posted a large beat and raised its outlook, noting volume boosts from in-store pickup and same-day shipping, sending shares up 20% to record highs. Gap reported revenue below consensus and weaker than anticipated comp sales due to a ‘challenging environment.’ Toll Brothers shares slipped post earnings, though they pointed to a good start in Q4. Salesforce stock rallied on a revenue beat and forecast raise, soothing investor concerns about the cloud giant’s recent acquisition of Tableau Software.



SUN 8/18
*(CN) China PBoC announces new interest rate reform plan, Loan Prime Rate (LPR) as the new Benchmark Reference Rate to be used by banks for lending (aimed at supporting funding for small businesses); to be set monthly
(US) President Trump: China tariffs have cost nothing or very little, China wants to make a deal, we'll see what happens; humanitarian outcome in Hong Kong would be good for trade deal; China President Xi has something in mind to do with trade, reiterates not ready to make a deal with China - speaking from New Jersey

MON 8/19
(DE) Germany reportedly targeting job creation, domestic market in potential stimulus measures as contingency for crisis - US financial press
(US) Commerce Sec Ross: Confirms US granting Huawei another 90 days for some business; Added 46 more subsidy to Huawei 'entity list' - Fox business
(US) President Trump tweets: Fed should cut by at least 100 bps; strong dollar is hurting other parts of the world
(EU) ECB's Rehn (Finland): Reiterates stance that ECB needs to provide a significant degree of monetary stimulus to ensure that financial conditions remain very favorable and to support euro area growth and domestic price pressures"
BIDU Reports Q2 $1.47 v $0.94e, Rev $3.84B v $3.77Be
(US) White House reportedly considering temporary payroll tax cut in effort to reverse weakening economy - Washington Post
(US) State Attorney Generals to move ahead with antitrust investigation of big tech companies, looking at marketplace dominance - US financial press

TUES 8/20
HD Reports Q2 $3.17 v $3.08e, Rev $30.8B v $31.0Be
KSS Reports Q2 $1.55 v $1.52e, Rev $4.43B v $4.46Be

WEDS 8/21
LOW Reports Q2 $2.15 adj v $2.00e, Rev $21.0B v $21.0Be
TGT Reports Q2 $1.82 adj v $1.61e, Rev $18.4B v $18.3Be
(US) Labor Dept: prelim estimate of nonfarm payrolls benchmark revision would reduce March 2019 employment level by 501K, or 0.3% - press
*(US) FOMC MINUTES FROM JULY 31 MEETING: MOST OFFICIALS SAW RATE CUT AS 'MID-CYCLE ADJUSTMENT' OR POLICY 'RECALIBRATION'; TWO POLICYMAKERS WOULD HAVE PREFERRED A 50BPS CUT IN JULY RATHER THAN 25BPS CUT
(JP) Japan Investors Net Buying of Foreign Bonds: ¥499.7B v ¥175.8B prior week; Foreign Net Buying of Japan Stocks: -¥359.6B v -¥187.1B prior week
(KR) Bank of Korea (BOK): Japan export curbs could be more damaging to local economy than tariff hikes; chip exports likely to continue to fall y/y for the duration of 2019

THURS 8/22
(CN) China Commerce Ministry (MOFCOM) spokesperson Gao Feng: despite delayed tariffs from US, any new tariffs to lead to trade escalation; urges US to stop imposing new tariffs
*(FR) FRANCE AUG PRELIMINARY MANUFACTURING PMI: 51.0 V 49.5E (moves back into expansion and highest reading since Nov 2018)
*(EU) EURO ZONE AUG PRELIMINARY MANUFACTURING PMI: 47.0 V 46.2E (7th straight contraction, but highest reading since Jun 2019)
*(EU) ECB ACCOUNT OF POLICY MEETING (JULY MINUTES): Widely agreed on need for accommodative stance for prolonged period
*(US) AUG PRELIMINARY MARKIT MANUFACTURING PMI: 49.9 V 50.5E (lowest since Sept 2009)
(DE) Reportedly Bundesbank sees no need for Germany fiscal stimulus right now
(US) Fed's Kaplan (dove, non-voter): would like to avoid cutting again in Sept, but will have an open mind about taking further action in next few months - CNBC
CRM Reports Q2 $0.66 v $0.47e, Rev $4.00B v $3.95Be
GPS Reports Q2 $0.63 v $0.52e, Rev $4.01B v $4.02Be; affirms FY19 guidance

FRI 8/23
(CN) Global Times Editor-in-chief Hu Xijin tweet: Based on what I know, China will take further countermeasures in response to US tariffs on $300 billion Chinese goods. Beijing will soon unveil a plan of imposing retaliatory tariffs on certain US products. China has ammunition to fight back. The US side will feel the pain.
(US) Fed's Bullard (dove, voter): market has expectations for low inflation, TIPS breakeven suggest only 1% inflation over next 5-years; we should "take out more insurance against the downside risks"; expect "robust debate" about 50bps cut in Sept - TV interviews from Jackson Hole
*(CN) CHINA TO LEVY 5-10% RETALIATORY TARIFFS ON $75B OF US GOODS; effective on Sept 1st and Dec 15th
(US) JULY NEW HOME SALES: 635K V 647KE
(CN) Pres Trump promises to respond to China's tariffs 'this afternoon'; 'orders' American companies to immediately start looking for an alternative to China
(DE) Germany govt document: govt does not see a need for short term economic stimulus; govt does see a recession in Germany, forecasting a second consecutive quarter of contraction in Q3 - German press


Sunday, August 18, 2019

Barrons weekend summary

Barrons weekend summary: cover story positive on oil & gas stocks; 

positive features on AEO, IAC - Oil & gas stocks may be bottoming out with Wall Street having largely abandoned the sector, even though many names provide large dividends (BP CPG.CA CVX CXO DO EOG HAL OXY PSX PXD RDS.A RIG RRC SLB SU.CA SWN VLO XOM CPG RIGN.CH SU)

- Positive feature on AEO: retailer is managing to gain market share in a difficult retail environment, thanks in part to its successful Aerie intimates chain.

- Positive feature on IAC: Barrons note that IAC has appreciated this year largely thanks to its 81% stake in MTCH, which itself has seen strong growth driven by soaring Tinder membership. The growth in MTCH may, however, be obscuring the value of the parent company.

Friday, August 16, 2019

Plunging bond yields keep investors jittery

TradeTheNews.com Weekly Market Update: Plunging bond yields keep investors jittery
Fri, 16 Aug 2019 16:03 PM EST

Global markets spent the week beholden to the specter of crumbling interest rates amid ongoing global uncertainty. Volatility rose and volumes retreated likely amplifying how reversals in sentiment manifested in a whipsawing market. Monday saw Hong Kong’s international airport effectively shut down by protestors, resulting in continued speculation about a potential intervention by the mainland. Also, the Argentine peso, bonds, and stocks all dropped precipitously following a primary defeat for the business-friendly incumbent Macri. On Tuesday, equities rose sharply on what was viewed as a positive development in the US/China trade negotiation. Namely, the US Trade Rep’s office announced that the impending fourth round of China tariffs scheduled to take effect on September 1 will be delayed until December for some key consumer goods, with the explanation that the White House didn’t want to crimp consumers’ holiday spending. Apple and its suppliers along with other key cogs in the consumer electrics chain surged higher. The SMH jumped 3% on the news and USD/CNY dropped 1.5% back toward the key 7.00 level. Gold and silver prices slumped as safe haven trades unwound.

Wednesday stock markets essentially gave back all of the previous day’s gains after global growth concerns resurfaced in force. Weak data out of China and Germany led to further inversions along sovereign yield curves. The widely followed US 2/10-year spread finally dipped into negative territory flashing a well-established recession warning signal for the US economy. Risk assets came under significant pressure, led by selling in stocks. US banking names dropped 2-3% on the day of the inversion, while the Dow finished down a whopping 800 points. Oil prices moved lower alongside weakness in emerging markets and some high yield debt as well. By Thursday, global interest rates continued to move lower. The US 30-year bond yield dipped below 2% for the first time ever, but the 2/10-year spread managed to stay in positive territory. Strong July retail sales data changed the outlook for the Q3 consumption spending data considerably while productivity accelerated higher. The numbers in aggregate will likely resulted in forecasters raising US Q3 GDP forecasts but overall had little effect on trading. Separately, the Euro moved lower and European bond yields dropped to fresh record negative levels following dovish commentary from the ECB’s Rehn underscoring the belief the ECB will do “whatever it takes.” The US 10-year yield subsequently dipped below 1.5% first time since 2016 before moving higher into the Thursday’s closing bell. On Friday, stocks, yields and risk assets continued to bounce back, helped in part by renewed press speculation that Germany could give up balanced budget goals and resort to deficit spending in the event of a recession. For the week, the S&P lost 1%, the DJIA dropped 1.5%, and the Nasdaq gave up 0.8%.

As earnings season wound down, retailers and tech hardware were in focus this week. Walmart reported above consensus and guided higher as its US SSS remained close to 3% and e-commerce sales surged. Macy’s shares plummeted after the company slashed its EPS outlook and noted that rising inventories remain an issue. Applied Materials came under pressure despite beating on the top and bottom line after forecasting a gradual industry recovery starting next year with flattish margins in a challenging environment. Nvidia jumped after posting an earnings and revenue beat, despite seeing weaker than expected data center revenue. Cisco Systems shares fell on declining business in China, saying it is being “uninvited” from bidding on contracts with state-owned enterprises in that country. Deere earnings came up short and the equipment company cut its outlook, citing delayed purchases from farmers amid the US-China trade dispute. Viacom and CBS finally consummated their long-discussed reunion, merging in an all-stock deal to contend within the increasingly competitive media sector.


SUN 8/11
(AR) Argentina Presidental opposition candidate Fernandez beats President Macri in primary vote

MON 8/12
2330.TW Reports Jul (NT$) Rev 84.8B v 74.4B y/y
(HK) Hong Kong closes airport citing serious disruptions in operation; activate emergency center
*(US) JULY MONTHLY BUDGET STATEMENT: -$119.7B V -$120.0BE

TUES 8/13
*(UK) JUN AVERAGE WEEKLY EARNINGS 3M/Y: 3.7% V 3.7%E; WEEKLY EARNINGS (EX-BONUS) 3M/Y: 3.9% V 3.8%E (fastest pace since the 2008-09 global financial crisis)
*(UK) JULY JOBLESS CLAIMS CHANGE: +28K V +31.4K PRIOR; CLAIMANT COUNT RATE: 3.2% V 3.2% PRIOR
(DE) GERMANY AUG ZEW CURRENT SITUATION SURVEY: -13.5 ( lowest level since May 2010.) V -6.5E; EXPECTATIONS SURVEY: -44.1 (lowest since Dec 2011)) V -28.0E
*(US) JULY CPI M/M: 0.3% V 0.3%E; CPI (EX-FOOD/ENERGY) M/M: 0.3% V 0.2%E; CPI NSA: 256.571 V 256.411E
*(CN) CHINA JULY INDUSTRIAL PRODUCTION Y/Y: 4.8% V 6.0%E (slowest growth since Feb 2002); YTD Y/Y: 5.8% V 6.0%E
*(CN) CHINA JULY RETAIL SALES Y/Y: 7.6% V 8.6%E; YTD Y/Y: 8.3% V 8.4%E

WEDS 8/14
*(DE) GERMANY Q2 PRELIMINARY GDP Q/Q: -0.1% V -0.1%E; Y/Y: 0.4% V 0.1%E
*(EU) EURO ZONE Q2 PRELIMINARY GDP: Q/Q: 0.2% V 0.2%E; Y/Y: 1.1% V 1.1%E
700.HK Reports Q2 (CNY) Adj Net 23.5B v 21.1Be, Op 27.5B v 21.8B y/y, Rev 88.2B v 93.4Be
*(US) 2/10-YEAR YIELD CURVE INVERTS FOR FIRST TIME SINCE MAY 2007
M Reports Q2 $0.28 v $0.46e, Rev $5.55B v $5.63Be; strategic initiatives on track
992.HK Reports Q1 Net $162.2M v $152Me, Op 343M v 180M y/y; Rev $12.51B v $12.5Be
*(AU) AUSTRALIA JULY EMPLOYMENT CHANGE: +41.1K V +14.0KE; UNEMPLOYMENT RATE: 5.2% V 5.2%E

THURS 8/15
*(UK) JULY RETAIL SALES (EX-AUTO/FUEL) M/M: +0.2% V -0.2%E; Y/Y: 2.9% V 2.3%E
*(CN) China Finance Ministry State Council Tariff Committee: Will have to take countermeasures on US moves; US actions violates consensus reached in Osaka at G-20 meeting in Jun
(HK) Hong Kong Govt cuts 2019 GDP growth forecast from 2.0-3.0% to 0.0-1.0% citing ongoing political unrest; confirms stimulus measures of HK$19.1B
WMT Reports Q2 $1.27 v $1.21e, Rev $130.4B v $130.5Be
*(US) Q2 PRELIMINARY NONFARM PRODUCTIVITY: 2.3% V 1.4%E; UNIT LABOR COSTS: 2.4% V 2.0%E
*(US) JULY ADVANCE RETAIL SALES M/M: 0.7% V 0.3%E; RETAIL SALES (EX-AUTO) M/M: 1.0% V 0.4%E
*(US) AUG PHILADELPHIA FED BUSINESS OUTLOOK: 16.8 V 9.5E
*(US) JULY INDUSTRIAL PRODUCTION M/M: -0.2% V 0.1%E; CAPACITY UTILIZATION: 77.5% V 77.8%E
(US) Pres Trump: any China trade deal has to be on "our terms" - syndicated radio interview
(EU) ECB's Rehn (Finland): ECB needs to have significant and impactful easing package in Sept; weakening economy justifies a monetary policy response - press interview
(US) Atlanta Fed raises Q3 GDP growth to 2.2% from 1.9%
*(MX) MEXICO CENTRAL BANK (BANXICO) CUTS OVERNIGHT RATE BY 25BPS TO 8.00%; NOT EXPECTED
(US) Fed's Bullard (dove, voter): Would like to take action to make sure we hit our inflation target; doesn't want to prejudge what action Fed might take at next meeting, but wants to take action - Fox Business interview
(US) White House Trade Adviser Navarro: thinks Fed's Bullard virtually guaranteed rate cut at next meeting - Fox Business interview
AMAT Reports Q3 $0.74 v $0.70e, Rev $3.56B v $3.53Be
NVDA Reports Q2 $1.24 v $1.15e, Rev $2.58B v $2.55Be
(JP) Japan Investors Net Buying of Foreign Bonds: ¥173.1B v ¥292.0B prior week; Foreign Net Buying of Japan Stocks: -¥187.0B v -¥339.9B prior week
(CN) China NDRC: To roll out plan to boost population's disposable income for 2019-2020; will stick to deleveraging and avoiding risks, which is not in conflict with stabilizing growth; keep pushing for companies bond-to-equity swap

FRI 8/16
OPEC Monthly Report: cuts outlook on 2019 global demand growth (2nd cut in last 3 months)
*(US) JULY HOUSING STARTS: 1.191M V 1.256ME; BUILDING PERMITS: 1.336M V 1.270ME
*(US) AUG PRELIMINARY UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN CONFIDENCE: 92.1 V 97.0E (lowest since Jan)
(DE) Germany govt reportedly is prepared for deficit spending if recession hits - Der Spiegel


Friday, August 9, 2019

Markets gyrate as trade war bleeds into the currency market

TradeTheNews.com com Weekly Market Update: Markets gyrate as trade war bleeds into the currency market
Fri, 09 Aug 2019 16:14 PM EST

It was a wild week for markets with stocks plunging Monday after it appeared China allowed the Yuan to devalue above the key 7 mark to the US dollar. Interest rates lurched lower amidst intense safe haven flows fueled by a growing narrative the trade war had morphed into a potentially more destabilizing currency war. NYSE decliners led advancers by more than a 10:1 margin and the VIX surged 25%. Futures markets priced in at least another 25 bps cut in September from the Fed and started to price in two additional cuts before next spring. Also, the entire German yield curve entered into negative territory for the first time. After Monday’s closing bell the US Treasury formally designated China a currency manipulator, and China responded by confirming the suspension of purchases of US agriculture products.

Markets attempted to stabilize on Tuesday before several Central banks in Asia came out and surprised markets with more aggressive than expected rate cuts and dovish rhetoric. Wednesday’s outsized move lower in global interest rates was exacerbated by renewed worries of a full-blown currency war and an accompanying “race to the bottom” for central banks. President Trump did little to allay those fears throughout the week. On multiple occasions Trump continued to call the US Fed incompetent while demanding more aggressive rate cuts, even going a step further by overtly tying his view regarding the Fed to his belief the US dollar is overvalued. US stock indices briefly neared or tested Monday’s lows before a powerful reversal rally ensued Wednesday afternoon and carried over into Thursday. Treasury yields also saw sharp reversals from Wednesday morning lows and with that the curve steepened significantly.

Friday’s trade saw risk aversion flows resurface. The PBOC continued to allow the Yuan fix to further above 7 and the Administration confirmed the postponement on a decision about licenses for US companies to restart business with Huawei. Responding to reporters at the White House, President Trump indicated that though the September trade talks were still on it was not out of the question they could be called off. The US/China trade fight continued to take place against a backdrop of growing unrest in Hong Kong. Protests were planned for this weekend spreading to the international airport. Hong Kong’s Chief Executive Lam acknowledged the resulting downward economic pressure is serious and her administration is considering implementing emergency measures to boost the domestic economy. Separately, UK GDP had a negative print for the first time since 2013 and a growing Italian political crisis blossomed after Deputy PM Salvini withdrew his support for the current government, potentially paving the way for new elections this fall. Oil prices rebounded from stiff declines seen earlier helped by jawboning from oil producers. Gold prices consolidated above $1,500 for the first time since 2013 helped by modest weakness in the Greenback and shrinking costs to carry due to falling interest rates. The US 2-10 year yield spread finished the week below 10 bps. In a volatile week the S&P ended down 0.5%, the DJIA lost 0.8%, and the Nasdaq fell 0.6%.

In corporate news this week, Disney reported a larger than anticipated earnings miss, which the company blamed on its Fox acquisition and weak theme park revenue as crowds awaited the full opening of its new Star Wars expansion. Kraft Heinz results did little to quell investor uneasiness about its situation, and the CEO noted an ‘unacceptable’ level of decline. CVS beat and raised outlook as brand name medicine revenue rose. Zillow’s report disappointed the street as the company forecast Q3 losses in its new home-flipping division. Mastercard acquired the real-time payments division of Nets Group for €2.85B to boost its existing account-to-account capabilities. Broadcom confirmed it would acquire Symantec’s Enterprise Security Business for $10.7B in cash in a move to expand its reach beyond chip manufacturing. The FDA rebuked Novartis for withholding manipulated data from regulators involving its gene therapy Zolgensma, though the company responded by saying it had investigated the issue and neither patient safety nor treatment efficacy had been affected.


SUN 8/4
HSBA.UK Reports H1 $0.42 v $0.36 y/y, Pretax $12.4B v $10.7B y/y, Rev $29.37B v $27.29B y/y; confirms plans to cut more than 4K jobs and to buyback $1.0B shares
*(CN) CHINA PBOC SETS YUAN REFERENCE RATE: 6.9225 V 6.8996 PRIOR (weakest yuan fix since Dec 2018)
*(CN) China Offshore yuan -0.5% to 7.0107 (fresh record low); yuan weakens amid PBoC fix and recent trade threat by the US
(CN) China reportedly asked state-run purchasers to halt US agriculture imports

MON 8/5
*(DE) GERMANY JULY FINAL SERVICES PMI: 54.5 V 55.4E (confirms 73rd month of expansion)
*(EU) EURO ZONE JULY FINAL SERVICES PMI: 53.2 V 53.3E (confirms 73rd month of expansion)
*(UK) JULY SERVICES PMI: 51.4 V 50.3E (4th straight expansion)
*(US) JULY FINAL MARKIT MANUFACTURING PMI: 53.0 V 52.2E
*(US) JULY ISM NON-MANUFACTURING INDEX: 53.7 V 55.5E
*(CN) US TREASURY DEPT DESIGNATES CHINA AS CURRENCY MANIPULATOR
(CN) China Commerce Ministry (MOFCOM) confirms has suspended purchases of US agriculture products; have not ruled out putting tariffs on US agri products imported after Aug 3rd, new 10% tariffs on Chinese goods violates G20 agreement

TUES 8/6
*(AU) RESERVE BANK OF AUSTRALIA (RBA) LEAVES CASH RATE TARGET UNCHANGED AT 1.00%; AS EXPECTED
*(US) JUN JOLTS JOB OPENINGS: 7.348M V 7.326ME
*(NZ) NEW ZEALAND CENTRAL BANK (RBNZ) CUTS OFFICIAL CASH RATE (OCR) BY 50BPS TO 1.00%; MORE THAN EXPECTED
DIS Reports Q3 $1.35 v $1.76e, Rev $20.3B v $21.7Be

WEDS 8/7
*(IN) INDIA CENTRAL BANK (RBI) CUTS REPURCHASE RATE BY 35BPS TO 5.40%; MORE-THAN-EXPECTED
*(TH) THAILAND CENTRAL BANK (BOT) CUTS BENCHMARK INTEREST RATE BY 25BPS TO 1.50%; NOT EXPECTED
*(DE) GERMANY SELLS €2.646B VS. €4.0B INDICATED IN 0.0% OCT 2024 BOBL; AVG YIELD: -0.79% (record low) V -0.66% PRIOR; BID-TO-COVER: 1.18X (technically uncovered) V 1.51X PRIOR
*(US) JUN CONSUMER CREDIT: $14.6B V $16.1BE
(JP) Japan Investors Net Buying of Foreign Bonds: ¥286.2B v -¥161.5B prior week; Foreign Net Buying of Japan Stocks: -¥339.9B v +¥36.7B prior week
CVS Reports Q2 $1.89 v $1.70e, Rev $63.4B v $62.6Be
Z Reports Q2 -$0.14 v -$0.15e, Rev $599.6M v $586Me

THURS 8/8
941.HK Reports H1 (CNY) Net 56.1B v 65.6B y/y; EBITDA 151.1B v 145.9B y/y; Rev 389.4B v 391.8B y/y
TKA.DE Reports Q3 Net -€94M v -€90Me, adj EBIT €226M v €227Me, Rev €10.8B v €10.6Be; considers selling units
DTE.DE Reports Q2 adj Net €1.33B v €1.24B y/y, adj EBITDA (adj for leases) €7.26B v €5.93B y/y, Rev €19.7B v €18.4B y/y
KHC Reports Q2 $0.78 adj v $0.75e, Rev $6.41B v $6.64Be
(US) Atlanta Fed maintains Q3 GDP growth at 1.9%
*(US) TREASURY $19B 30-YEAR BOND AUCTION DRAWS 2.335%; BID TO COVER 2.24 V 2.20 PRIOR AND 2.20 AVERAGE OVER LAST 4 AUCTIONS
*(JP) JAPAN Q2 PRELIMINARY GDP Q/Q: 0.4% V 0.1%E; GDP ANNUALIZED Q/Q: 1.8% V 0.5%E (3rd straight quarter of expansion)

FRI 8/9
*(US) JULY PPI FINAL DEMAND M/M: 0.2% V 0.2%E; Y/Y: 1.7% V 1.7%E
(US) Pres Trump: things are going 'very well with China'; not ready to make a deal; Possible next month's trade talks with China could be cancelled; I would not devalue the dollar


Friday, August 2, 2019

Markets digest rate cuts and new volleys in the trade war

TradeTheNews.com Weekly Market Update: Markets digest rate cuts and new volleys in the trade war
Fri, 02 Aug 2019 16:08 PM EST

Investors were inundated by headlines this week streaming in from both the macro and corporate levels. Ultimately US stocks pushed away from the recent all-time highs amid growing concerns surrounding global central bank policies and resurgent trade tensions. Despite earnings season kicking into high gear, the focus was clearly on key central meetings as the BOJ, BOE and Fed all met. Expectations were already high amidst continued disappointing data overseas, and cracks in US manufacturing numbers came alongside benign inflation readings. Wednesday’s FOMC meeting ultimately seemed a bit underwhelming when the Fed decided to cut rates for the first time in 11-years. Two dissenting votes undercut expectations for more accommodation, and Chairman Powell went on characterize the 25 bps cut as a ‘mid-cycle policy adjustment’ rather than a lengthy cutting cycle, disappointing some Fed watchers including President Trump. In the wake of the Fed rate cut, the US dollar index shot up to fresh 2-year highs and the Treasury curve flattened further, while stock markets turned decidedly lower.

On Thursday, markets were further roiled by Trump announcing his intension to put a 10% tariff on the remaining $300B in Chinese goods that have not yet been taxed. The President tweeted the announcement after receiving a disappointing briefing on last week’s trade discussions in Shanghai. The dollar weakened on the tariff news, with the notable exception of Yuan, which moved back to within a few cents of last falls all time high 6.98 in the USD/CNY exchange rate. The oil market was pummeled on concerns about slower trade and global interest rates made fresh legs lower. The US 10-year yield dropped to levels not seen since President Trump was elected and the German Bund yield tested -50 bps for the first time. Futures markets recouped lost expectations for future Fed rate hikes from Wednesday’s FOMC announcement: By Friday, a September rate cut was almost entirely priced in by traders and December futures signaled a better than 50% chance of a third cut by year end.

Friday’s jobs report was mixed but broadly consistent with market expectations. July payrolls were in line with expectations, but June payrolls were revised lower. The U6 dropped while the participation rate moved up, and wages ticked higher, but that came alongside a decline in weekly hours. Rates continued to track lower following the report and stocks stayed heavy. Also this week, the Pound fell to a two-year low as PM Johnson remained adamant that any eventual Brexit deal with the EU will have to exclude the Irish backstop. Investors also kept a wary eye on Hong Kong as reports surfaced that the Chinese army was building up troop levels on the border in preparation for a potential severe crackdown on demonstrators. The trade and political tensions sent gold prices back towards the highs of the year and copper futures approached two year lows. The VIX volatility index surged more than 50% over the course of the week as the S&P fell 3.1%, the DJIA lost 2.6%, and the Nasdaq tumbled 3.9% to notch its worst decline since December.

In corporate news this week, a slew of earnings reports dominated headlines. Apple delivered a better than anticipated top and bottom line, as its drop in iPhone revenue was somewhat offset by strong wearables and services growth. General Motors shares lifted after topping EPS expectations, as the automaker noted that healthy pickup truck and crossover sales offset a sag in income from China. AMD shares fell post-report after blaming a gap in console offerings for its cautious Q4 outlook. P&G rallied after topping earnings expectations and forecasting a strong FY20. Pinterest surged after posting a big revenue beat and raising guidance amid strong ad spending. Square’s earnings miss sent its shares sharply lower, as investors saw its merchant acquisition growth decelerating quicker than expected. Mylan announced it would combine with Pfizer's off-patent unit Upjohn in an all-stock deal to create a generic drug behemoth.


MON 7/29
HEIA.NL Reports H1 Net €1.05B v €1.08B y/y Op €1.78B v €1.9Be, Rev €11.45B v €11.5Be
SAN.FR Reports Q2 Business EPS €1.31 v €1.25e, Business Net €1.64B +4.9% y/y, Rev €8.63B v €8.4Be
*(US) JULY DALLAS FED MANUFACTURING ACTIVITY INDEX: -6.3 V -6.0E
*(JP) BOJ LEAVES INTEREST RATE ON EXCESS RESERVES (IOER) UNCHANGED AT -0.10%; AS EXPECTED; reaffirms forward guidance

TUES 7/30
BAYN.DE Reports Q2 Net €404M v €794M y/y, Adj EBITDA €2.93B v €3.25Be, Rev €11.5B v €11.68Be: Affirms outlook, yet increasingly ambitious
BP.UK Reports Q2 Adj Net $2.81B v $2.82B y/y, Rev $73.8B v $76.9B y/y
066570.KR Reports final Q2 (KRW) Net 106B v 326.5B y/y; Op 652B v 652.2B prelim; Rev 15.6T v 15.6T prelim
*(EU) EURO ZONE JULY BUSINESS CLIMATE INDICATOR: -0.12 V +0.08E
PG Reports Q4 $1.10 v $1.06e, Rev $17.1B v $16.9Be
*(DE) GERMANY JULY PRELIMINARY CPI M/M: 0.5% V 0.3%E; Y/Y: 1.7% V 1.5%E
*(US) JUN PCE DEFLATOR M/M: 0.1% V 0.1%E; Y/Y: 1.4% V 1.5%E
*(US) JUN PERSONAL INCOME: 0.4% V 0.4%E; PERSONAL SPENDING: 0.3% V 0.3%E
*(US) JULY CONSUMER CONFIDENCE: 135.7 V 125.0E (highest since Nov 2018)
(US) Atlanta Fed forecasts initial Q3 GDP growth at 2.0%
*(CN) CHINA JULY OFFICIAL MANUFACTURING PMI: 49.7 V 49.6E (3rd consecutive contraction or reading below 50, lowest level since Nov)

WEDS 7/31
AIR.FR Reports H1 Net €1.2B v €496M y/y, adj EBIT €2.53B v €1.16B y/y; Rev €30.9B v €25.0B y/y
CSGN.CH Reports Q2 (CHF) Net 937M v 647M y/y, Rev 5.58B v 5.34Be; expect usual seasonal Rev slowdown in Q3
BA.UK Reports H1 Underlying EPS 25.0p v 14.8p y/y, EBITA £999M v £874M y/y, Rev £9.42B v £8.82B y/y
*(DE) GERMANY JULY UNEMPLOYMENT CHANGE: +1.0K V +2.0KE; UNEMPLOYMENT CLAIMS RATE: 5.0% V 5.0%E
*(IT) ITALY Q2 PRELIMINARY GDP Q/Q: 0.0% V -0.1%E; Y/Y: 0.0% V -0.1%E
GE Reports Q2 $0.17 adj v +$0.12e, Rev $28.8B v $28.9Be
*(US) JULY CHICAGO PURCHASING MANAGER INDEX (PMI): 44.4 V 51.0E (lowest since Dec 2015)
(US) FOMC CUTS TARGET RANGE BY 25BPS TO 2.00-2.25% (AS EXPECTED); REITERATES FED WILL ACT AS APPROPRIATE TO SUSTAIN EXPANSION; TWO MEMBERS DISSENT
(US) Fed Chair Powell: outlook for US economy remains favorable; want to support faster return to 2% inflation objective - post rate decision press conference
(US) Fed Chair Powell: Sees 25bps rate cut as a 'midcycle policy adjustment' - Q&A
(JP) Japan Investors Net Buying of Foreign Bonds: -¥162.2T v ¥1.03T prior week; Foreign Net Buying of Japan Stocks: +¥37.5B v -¥109.9B prior week

THURS 8/1
SIE.DE Reports Q3 Net €1.14B v €1.18Be, Industrial Business EBITDA €1.94B v €2.19Be, Rev €21.3B v €21.2Be
MT.NL Reports Q2 -$0.44 v $1.84 y/y, EBITDA $1.56B v $1.61Be, Rev $19.3B v $19.0Be
RDSA.NL Reports Q2 CCS EPS $0.43 v $0.60e, Adj CCS Net $3.46B v $4.69B y/y, Rev $90.5B v $91.6Be; announces next tranche of share buyback programme
RIO.AU Reports H1 Underlying Net $4.93B v $4.86Be; underlying EBITDA $10.3B v $10.1Be; Rev $20.7B (+9% y/y); announces special dividend of $1.0B
*(ES) SPAIN JULY MANUFACTURING PMI: 48.2 V 48.0E (2nd straight contraction)
*(UK) JULY MANUFACTURING PMI: 48.0 V 47.6E (3rd straight contraction and lowest since July 2012)
VZ Reports Q2 $1.20 v $1.20e, Rev $32B v $32.4Be
*(UK) BANK OF ENGLAND (BOE) JULY MINUTES: VOTED 9-0 TO KEEP INTEREST RATE UNCHANGED AT 0.75%; maintains forward guidance assuming a smooth Brexit scenario
GM Reports Q2 $1.64 adj v $1.43e, Rev $36.1B v $35.6Be
*(US) JULY ISM MANUFACTURING: 51.2 V 52.0E; PRICES PAID: 45.1 V 49.0E (Manufacturing reading lowest since Aug 2016)
*(US) JUN CONSTRUCTION SPENDING M/M: -1.3% V 0.3%E
(US) Atlanta Fed raises Q3 GDP growth to 2.2% from 2.0% prior
(US) Pres Trump says U.S. will put a "small" additional tariff of 10% on the remaining $300B of goods and products coming from China on Sept 1st
(US) Pres Trump: not concerned about drop in the Dow stocks; we'll be 'taxing' China until US can reach a trade deal with them
*(US) President Trump: New China 10% tariffs can be raised BEYOND 25% is progress remains stalled
FLR Reports Q2 -$3.96 v $0.52e, Rev $4.1B v $4.56Be; withdraws guidance; commenced comprehensive operational and strategic review
(VE) Pres Trump: considering a quarantine or blockade of Venezuela

FRI 8/2
7203.JP Reports Q1 Net ¥683.0B v ¥657.3B y/y; Op ¥741.95B v ¥682.69B y/y; Rev ¥7.65T v ¥7.36T y/y
ACA.FR Reports Q2 Net €1.22B v €1.22Be, Rev €5.15B v €5.10Be
(US) Fox's Edward Lawrence: China is not backing down or adding back any of the concession language in the agreement. The Chinese told the US Trade Rep the US will have to just trust them that China will enforce intellectual property protections.
RBS.UK Reports H1 Net £1.33B v £707M y/y, adj Op £1.7B v £1.0B y/y, Rev £4.08B v £3.6Be; announces special dividend of 12p/shr
ARNC Reports Q2 $0.58 v $0.50e, Rev $3.69B v $3.64Be
*(US) JULY CHANGE IN NONFARM PAYROLLS: +164K V +165KE
*(US) JULY FINAL UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN CONFIDENCE: 98.4 V 98.5E
(US) Atlanta Fed cuts Q3 GDP growth to 1.9% from 2.2% prior


Sunday, July 28, 2019

Barrons weekend summary

Barrons weekend summary: cover story long term positive on PCG; cautious on select software names; cautious on electric vehicle market 
Cover story: The bankruptcy of California utility PCG “is an extreme example of the potential consequences that climate change may create for the utility industry”; Getting through it “will require a balancing act among many players: company officials, politicians, consumer advocates, and investors. At the same time, it offers an opportunity for savvy individual investors with a strong stomach”—who could eventually see an upside of 20% or more in the stock price. 

Features: 1) Cautious on WDAY, NOW, OKTA, ZS: Shares of software companies are up, but investors are overlooking a lack of earnings based on standard accounting to focus on high revenue growth and a large market opportunity—meaning a bubble could be in the making; 2) Barron’s third-annual ranking of robo advisors—topped by Fidelity Co., WiseBanyan, and Wealthfront—finds the sector’s assets have risen to at least $44B, driven by new services, including access to live advisors, sustainable-investing products, and higher-yielding cash accounts; 3) Cautious on F, TSLA: Electric vehicles are the future, and not just because they cut carbon or save on gas—they have more power, but until they’re common, so-called mild hybrids that are cheaper to build and still save on gas and emissions may become popular. 

Tech Trader: Positive on T, Comcast, DISH, VZ, CHTR, ATUS: Companies’ cable divisions are losing customers—but for now, investors don’t mind: fewer video subscribers actually boosts profitability, since video has lower profit margins than broadband, which continues to thrive, boosting average revenue per user, a key metric. 

Trader: Banks, which have been showing signs of technical strength, are one group that might outperform regardless of whether there is a hiccup in inflation or interest rates; A number of data points indicate the potential for a recession on the horizon, but just because these economic indicators look bad now doesn’t mean they have to stay that way, and there are already signs of improvement; Softbank’s second Vision Fund, were it to have a similar formula and comparable returns to the first one, could generate billions of dollars for the company in the years ahead. 

Interview: James Montier, a strategist at Boston-based GMO, talks about a range of topics, including why modern monetary theory is a good model for governments’ interactions with the market and why he’s still waiting for a decline in the U.S. stock market. 

Profile: Don Wordell, manager of the $3.1B Virtus Ceredex Mid-Cap Value Equity fund, explains why dividends, valuation, and fundamentals have to come together for him to consider a stock, and why if any are violated, the stock is sold (top 10 holdings: HUM, ZBH, MPC, ENR, PEG, K, HIG, PNFP, AMP, ABC). 

Follow-Up: Investors are concerned about the government’s plan to investigate Big Tech, but they should ignore the regulatory noise and focus on fundamentals instead. 

European Trader: Positive on Ocadio Group: British firm that licenses artificial intelligence and robotic systems to help supermarkets deliver food ordered online has been called the AMZN of the grocery market and the MSFT of retail—and with new deals in the works, shares could keep rising. 

Emerging Markets: If China’s Science and Technology Innovation Board—known as the STAR market—takes off, it could be a very big deal financially and geopolitically, given that China is home to 94 of the world’s 326 unicorns. 

Commodities: “Commodity investors should consider pigging out on lean hogs: A record-breaking drop in global pork production will mean a massive shortfall of meat, which could spark a rally in hog prices of at least 20% by year end.” 

Streetwise: Things are getting weird for bonds in Europe—even some junk-rated debt there pays less than nothing, and if yields are indeed near bottom, expect central bankers to turn to more-creative means for stimulus during the next downturn.

Saturday, July 27, 2019

Mixed data keeps central banks dovish, stocks plow higher in anticipation of more stimulus

TradeTheNews.com Weekly Market Update: Mixed data keeps central banks dovish, stocks plow higher in anticipation of more stimulus
Fri, 26 Jul 2019 16:38 PM EST

US stock markets had another strong week as Fed rate cut expectations held constant. A deluge of Q2 earnings reports revealed some firms were able to handily top already tempered expectations, but many executives still cited general uncertainty surrounding trade and growth as a lingering headwind. The US economic data, outside of housing, remained stronger both at the margin and relative to expectations. Overseas figures, on the other hand, were squishy, underscored by weakening PMI figures in Europe. That dichotomy allowed the dollar to move higher and UST yields to diverge further from other government bond rates. The signs of economic strength did little though to shake expectations that the Fed will cut rates next week. Thursday’s ECB meeting clearly opened the door to rate cuts and other potential unconventional measures in September. Draghi’s shift further into dovish territory, along with a soft US PCE reading and revision on Friday all but confirmed the Fed will offer up an ‘insurance’ rate cut next week. The US yield curve flattened while gold and crude oil prices consolidated. The S&P500 hit record highs this week, gaining 1.7%, while the DJIA edged up 0.1% and the Nasdaq rose 2.3%.

In corporate news, Google reported a surprise beat on the top and bottom line, helped by its growing cloud business. Amazon opened lower after an earnings miss, pointing to rising delivery costs as the tech giant shifts to one-day shipping. Starbucks was a standout for the week as it raised its outlook and saw much stronger than anticipated SSS growth. Caterpillar reported weaker-than-expected earnings and cut guidance amid higher material costs and further headwinds in China. Facebook had a better than expected quarter, despite regulatory clouds forming on the horizon. Tesla earnings came in well below consensus estimates, though the EV manufacturer did affirm its full-year delivery guidance. Apple signed a deal to acquire the majority of Intel’s smartphone modem business for $1billion. T-Mobile's acquisition of Sprint finally received Justice Department approval, conditioned upon the sale of some assets to DISH, although certain state attorneys general intend to have a say as to whether the deal is ultimately finalized.


MONDAY 7/22
(KR) South Korea official: preparing plans for a semiconductor test bed
CON.DE Cuts FY19 Rev €44-45B, adj EBIT margin 7-7.5% (prior Rev €45-47B, Adj EBIT margin 8-9%) due to decline in global light vehicle production
WHR Reports Q2 $4.01 v $3.80e, Rev $5.20B v $4.90Be
MAXR Chosen by NASA to integrate pollution monitoring payload on an upcoming commercial satellite; slated for launch by 2022

TUESDAY 7/23
UBSG.CH Reports Q2 Net $1.39B v $960Me, Adj Pretax $1.79B v $1.82B y/y, Rev $7.53B v $7.30Be
KO Reports Q2 $0.63 v $0.62e, Rev $10.0B v $9.79Be
*(UK) RESULTS OF CONSERVATIVE PARTY LEADERSHIP VOTE: Boris Johnson elected as party leader (as expected); to become Prime Minister after May steps down on Wed, July 24th
*IMF UPDATES ITS WORLD ECONOMIC OUTLOOK (WEO): cuts 2019 GLOBAL GDP GROWTH FORECAST FROM 3.3% TO 3.2%
*(US) JULY RICHMOND FED MANUFACTURING INDEX: -12 V +5E (lowest since Jan 2013)
*(CN) US NEGOTIATING TEAM REPORTEDLY TO HEAD TO CHINA ON MONDAY FOR FACE-TO-FACE TRADE TALKS - PRESS
TXN Reports Q2 $1.36 v $1.21e, Rev $3.67B v $3.60Be
V Reports Q3 $1.37 v $1.33e, Rev $5.80B v $5.70Be
SNAP Reports Q2 -$0.06 v -$0.10e, Rev $388M v $356Me

WEDNESDAY 7/24
DBK.DE Reports Q2 adj Net €231M v €401M y/y, adj Pretax* €441M v €711M y/y, Rev €6.20B v €6.20Be
*(FR) FRANCE JULY PRELIMINARY PMI MANUFACTURING: 50.0 V 51.6E (4th straight expansion)
*(DE) GERMANY JULY PRELIMINARY PMI MANUFACTURING: 43.1 V 45.2E (7th month of contraction and lowest reading since July 2012)
*(EU) EURO ZONE JULY PRELIMINARY PMI MANUFACTURING: 46.4 V 47.7E (6th straight contraction and lowest since Dec 2012)
UPS Reports Q2 $1.96 v $1.93e, Rev $18.0B v $17.90Be
BA Reports Q2 -$5.82* v -$0.56e, Rev $15.8B v $18.0Be
CAT Reports Q2 $2.83 v $3.12e, Rev $14.4B v $14.5Be
*(US) Robert Mueller testimony: stressed to his staff that the probe needed to be conducted fairly; Report did not exonerate Pres Trump
*(US) JULY PRELIMINARY MARKIT MANUFACTURING PMI: 50.0 V 51.0E (lowest since Sept 2009)
*(US) JUN NEW HOME SALES: 646K V 658KE
DB1.DE Reports Q2 adj €1.58 v €1.55e, adj EBITDA €465.5M v €464.0Me, Rev €724.8M v €725Me
FB Reports Q2 $1.99 adj v $1.90e, Rev $16.9B v $16.4Be
TSLA Reports Q2 -$1.12 v -$0.54e, Rev $6.35B v $6.38Be
*(KR) SOUTH KOREA Q2 PRELIMINARY GDP Q/Q: 1.1% V 0.9%E; Y/Y: 2.1% V 1.9%E
(JP) Japan Investors Net Buying of Foreign Bonds: ¥1.03T v ¥949.6B prior week; Foreign Net Buying of Japan Stocks: -¥110.0B v- ¥93.1B prior week

THURSDAY 7/25
NOKIA.FI Reports Q2 non-IFRS Net €258M v €139M, Rev €5.69B v €5.44Be
ROG.CH Reports H1 (CHF) Net 8.90B v 7.52B y/y, Op 12.36B v 12.2Be, Rev 30.47B v 30.5Be
ABI.BE Reports Q2 Net $2.47B v $2.4Be, adj EBITDA $5.86B v $5.69Be, Rev $13.96B v $13.9Be
BAS.DE Reports Q2 adj Net €6.46B v €6.40Be, Adj EBIT €1.05B v €966Me, Rev €15.16B v €15.1Be
AZN.UK Reports Q2 Core EPS $0.73 v $0.60e, Rev $5.82B v $5.6Be
UNA.NL Reports H1 Net €3.21B v €3.23B y/y, Rev €26.1B v €26.1Be
DGE.UK Reports FY19 EPS 130.8p v 118.6p y/y, adj EBITDA £4.80B v £4.50B y/y, Rev £12.87B v £12.16B y/y; Organic growth +6%
(CN) China Commerce Ministry (MOFCOM) spokesperson Gao: urges US to implement Huawei commitment; reiterates China, US negotiators to meet Jul 30-31st
*(DE) GERMANY JULY IFO BUSINESS CLIMATE: 95.7 (lowest since Feb 2010) V 97.2E; CURRENT ASSESSMENT: 99.4 V 100.4E
MMM Reports Q2 $2.20* v $2.04e, Rev $8.20B v $8.02Be
*(EU) ECB LEAVES MAIN 7-DAY REFINANCING RATE UNCHANGED AT 0.00%; AS EXPECTED; maintains guidance
*(US) JUN PRELIMINARY DURABLE GOODS ORDERS: 2.0% V 0.7%E; DURABLES (EX-TRANSPORTATION): 1.2% V 0.2%E
(EU) ECB's Draghi: Reitereates guidance that interest rates seen at present or lower level at least though H1 2020; seens need for accommodative policy stance for a prolong period of time - Prepared Remarks
(EU) ECB's Draghi: Had broad agreement on assessment on economic outlook; manufacturing outlook is worsening and needs to be taken into account - Q&A
INTC Apple to acquire majority of Intel’s smartphone modem business for $1B, as speculated
AMZN Reports Q2 $5.22 v $5.29e, Rev $63.4B v $62.6Be
GOOGL Reports Q2 $14.21 v $11.50e, Rev $31.7B (ex $7.23B of TAC) v $30.9Be

FRIDAY 7/26
VOD.UK Reports Q1 Rev £10.7B v £10.9B y/y; Service Organic Rev -0.2% v -0.7% q/q
CARBX U.N. Weather agency exec: recent European heatwave now heading for Greenland, may take Greenland ice sheet to record low
*(US) Q2 ADVANCE GDP PRICE INDEX: 2.4% V 2.0%E; CORE PCE 1.8% V 2.0%E
*(US) Q2 ADVANCE GDP ANNUALIZED Q/Q: 2.1% V 1.8%E; PERSONAL CONSUMPTION: 4.3% V 4.0%E
AAPL Pres Trump tweets: "Apple will not be given Tariff wavers, or relief, for Mac Pro parts that are made in China. Make them in the USA, no Tariffs!"


Sunday, July 21, 2019

Barron’s weekend summary

Barron’s weekend summary: positive features on FDX, TGT, and select banks 
Cover story: Investing in Softbank Group “offers a radically discounted bet on the future,” with cheap shares that are arguably priced 30-50% below the value of their underlying assets; Understanding the company and the vision of its leader, Masayoshi Son, takes effort, but could lead to a big payoff for investors. 

Features: 1) Positive on FDX: Investors have sent shares down over concerns about AMZN’s move into logistics, but as e-commerce volume grows, capital spending declines, and better execution results in higher profits, shares could rally to $220, which with a dividend yield of 1.6% could deliver a 33% total return; 2) Positive on TGT: Retailer has managed to withstand pressure from AMZN and the growth of online shopping, while benefiting from the closure of rivals’ stores—and with improved Web operations and low prices, the stock has yet to reach its potential highs; 3) Story looks at what people need to look out for when buying annuities—income generating annuities can be effective tools for those concerned about outliving their money, but investors need to be cautious and inquisitive; 4) Barron’s annual list of the top 100 annuities now includes categories that represent more products and better reflect investors’ buying habits, as well as variable and fixed-index annuities with the highest potential average income based on probability analyses; 5) Positive on KEY, SBNY, USB: Many banks are sensitive to falling interest rates, but investors expect these three to be better positioned for a Federal Reserve interest rate cut, thanks in part to a lower percentage of variable-rate loans versus some peers. 

Tech Trader: Cautious on NFLX: The streaming giant’s strengths—including scale, value, and a vast library—may not be enough to make up for shortfalls in show quality, and its aura of invincibility may be wearing off after its recent report of lower-than-expected subscriber growth. Trader: One hundred and thirty three companies in the S&P 500 are set to report earnings this week, but “the lack of broader market action might end up just being the calm before the storm”; Look for that second-quarter consumer strength to boost earnings at the likes V, CMG, AAL, and AMZN when they report this coming week—the contrast between the economy’s consumer and industrial segments remains stark; Fintech companies continue to outpace traditional banks, which have underperformed the broad market over the past year, but the shares may be overpriced, and the best way to play the sector remains V, MA, and PYPL. 

Profile: Michael Cirami and Eric Stein, co-directors of Eaton Vance, believe that staying out of troubled assets is critical to boosting returns and reducing volatility (top 10 countries for debt holdings in the Eaton Vance Emerging Markets Debt Opportunities fund: Egypt, Nigeria, Ukraine, Serbia, Peru, Bahrain, Sri Lanka, Argentina, Indonesia, Thailand). 

Interview: Ziad Bakri—who manages $16.3B across T. Rowe Price’s health-sciences strategy, including the $13.2B Health Sciences fund—talks about picking biotech stocks and the Medicare for All debate (picks: SAGE, BDX, TMO, Roche Holding, UNH, ANTM, CI, NVCR).

Follow-Up: In a cover story last September, Barron’s argued that gold looked appealing, as did depressed gold stocks; the metal tends to do well when inflation-adjusted interest rates are low, which is the case now. European 

Trader: Germany, an export-oriented economy, has been hit hard by turmoil in global trade, and if a current slump continues, the government of chancellor Angela Merkel may have to temper its longstanding aversion to deficits and debt. 

Emerging Markets: Mexico’s economic outlook is going from bad to worse eight months into President Obrador’s administration, with the resignation of respected finance minister Carlos Urzua and major problems at state oil company Pemex—though the country’s assets are priced for risk. 

Commodities: “Natural gas finally has broken out of the tight trading range it’s been stuck in for the past six months, though it’s done it the hard way, by falling to a more than three-year low. However, there could be good news in the bad news.”

Streetwise: Online ordering, delivery, and a new loyalty program have given CMG more ways to serve and learn about its customers, but those are effectively table stakes in today’s restaurant business, and the company hopes to rollout more key initiatives as part of its comeback.

Friday, July 19, 2019

Fed teases rate cuts; Iran tensions mount

TradeTheNews.com Weekly Market Update: Fed teases rate cuts; Iran tensions mount 
Fri, 19 Jul 2019 16:07 PM EST

Stock markets weakened in the middle part of the week as focus shifted from rate cut expectations toward corporate earnings reports. Markets pulled back further amid reports that US/China trade talks may be stalling, and as President Trump taunted China over its slowing GDP data and suggested he could still impose more tariffs at any moment. Trump also had some more choice words for the Federal Reserve, continuing to pressure the Fed to cut rates as more foreign central banks cut their own rates this week. Interestingly, the lingering trade tensions appear to be a major motivating factor for Fed officials who appear increasingly motivated to cut rates, to the extent that this dovish thinking completely overshadowed the economic data, which for the second straight week came in substantially stronger than consensus estimates. By Thursday, futures markets were pricing in better than a 50% chance the Fed would cut by 50 bps at the end July, but the Fed tried to walk back these more aggressive expectations on Friday. Early in the week, the Greenback retraced higher prodded by robust US manufacturing and retail sales figures. Gold prices popped back to the highs of the year helped by declining interest rate forecasts and a continued escalation of Iran tensions, while crude oil futures tumbled more than 6% this week despite reports of Iran waylaying at least two oil tankers in the Strait of Hormuz. For the week, the S&P lost 1.2%, the DJIA dipped 0.6%, and the Nasdaq fell 1.2%.

In corporate news this week, as earnings season kicked off, Microsoft profits powered higher, led by strong Azure growth again, while gross margins improved and LinkedIn engagement continued to rise. Netflix shares tanked after reporting a domestic subs decline q/q and a big miss on global subs estimates. As big bank earnings rolled in, JP Morgan, Citi, and Goldman registered top and bottom line beats, and Bank of America and Comerica cut their net interest income outlook amid falling rates. eBay shares rallied after an earnings beat and reports that the company was preparing to move ‘aggressively’ forward with the sale of its StubHub division. Boeing announced it would take a nearly $5B charge as a result of the 737 MAX groundings and said it assumed planes would fly in Q4, giving investors some potential clarity to the extent of the damage from the crisis.


SUNDAY 7/14
*(CN) CHINA JUN INDUSTRIAL PRODUCTION Y/Y: 6.3% V 5.2%E
*(CN) CHINA JUN RETAIL SALES Y/Y: 9.8% V 8.5%E; YTD Y/Y: 8.4% V 8.2%E
*(CN) CHINA Q2 GDP Q/Q: 1.6% V 1.5%E; Y/Y: 6.2% V 6.2%E (slowest annual growth since 1992)

MONDAY 7/15
C Reports Q2 $1.83 adj v $1.78e, Rev $18.8B v $18.3Be
*(US) JULY EMPIRE MANUFACTURING: 4.3 V 2.0E
RIO.AU Reports Q2 Pilbara iron ore shipments 85.4Mt v 83.4Mte v 88.5Mt y/y; Pilbara iron ore production: 79.7Mt v 81.5Mte v 85.5Mt y/y

TUESDAY 7/16
(GR) Greece Debt Agency (PDMA) opens book to sell 7-year bond via syndicate; yield guidance seen 2.10%
*(UK) MAY AVERAGE WEEKLY EARNINGS 3M/Y: 3.4% V 3.1%E; WEEKLY EARNINGS (EX-BONUS) 3M/Y: 3.6% V 3.5%E
*(UK) JUN JOBLESS CLAIMS CHANGE: +38.0K V +24.5K PRIOR; CLAIMANT COUNT RATE: 3.2% V 3.1% PRIOR
*(DE) GERMANY JULY ZEW S CURRENT SITUATION SURVEY: -1.1 V 5.0E; EXPECTATIONS SURVEY: -24.5 V -22.0E
JPM Reports Q2 $2.59 adj* v $2.50e, Managed Rev $29.6B v $28.4Be
GS Reports Q2 $5.81 v $4.82e, Rev $9.46B v $8.66Be; Confirms raised Quarterly dividend 47.1% to $1.25 from $0.85 (indicated yield 2.36%)
*(US) JUN ADVANCE RETAIL SALES M/M: 0.4% V 0.2%E; RETAIL SALES (EX-AUTO) M/M: 0.4% V 0.1%E
CP Reports Q2 C$4.30 adj v C$4.13e, Rev C$1.98B v C$1.96Be
*(US) JUN INDUSTRIAL PRODUCTION M/M: 0.0% V 0.1%E; CAPACITY UTILIZATION: 77.9% V 78.1%E
(US) Sec of State Pompeo: Iran has said it's prepared to negotiate about its missile program

WEDNESDAY 7/17
BAC Reports Q2 $0.74 v $0.70e, Rev $23.1B v $23.0Be
*(US) JUN HOUSING STARTS: 1.253M V 1.260ME; BUILDING PERMITS: 1.220M V 1.300ME
EBAY Reportedly moving 'aggressively' forward with potential sale of StubHub - CNBC's Faber
(US) FEDERAL RESERVE BEIGE BOOK: ECONOMIC ACTIVITY EXPANDED AT MODEST PACE FROM MID-MAY TO EARLY JULY
AA Reports Q2 -$0.01 v -$0.34e, Rev $2.71B v $2.79Be
IBM Reports Q2 $3.17 v $3.06e, Rev $19.2B v $19.1Be
*(KR) BANK OF KOREA (BOK) CUTS 7-DAY REPO RATE BY 25BPS TO 1.50%; NOT EXPECTED; To maintain accommodative policy stance
(AU) AUSTRALIA JUN EMPLOYMENT CHANGE: +0.5K V +9.0KE (9th straight month of job gorwth); UNEMPLOYMENT RATE: 5.2% V 5.2%E

THURSDAY 7/18
SAP.DE Reports Q2 Non-IFRS EPS €1.09 v €1.20e, Op €1.82B v €1.84Be, Rev €6.66B v €6.71Be
TSM Reports Q2 (NT$) Net 66.8B v 65.9Be; Op 73.3B v 77.4Be; Rev 241.0B v 233.3B y/y
(UK) EU Brexit negotiator Barnier: No easy solution to the Irish border issue; ready to work on alternative arrangements
*(UK) JUN RETAIL SALES (EX-AUTO/FUEL) M/M: +0.9% V -0.2%E; Y/Y: 3.6% V 2.6%E
(EU) ECB staff said to study a revamping of inflation target; The current view of ‘below, but close to, 2%’ definition of mandate being questioned - financial press
(UK) UK Parliament votes 315-274 to accept Benn amendment, which seeks to prevent suspension of Parliament and impede a 'no-deal' Brexit
MSFT Reports Q4 $1.37 v $1.21e, Rev $33.7B v $32.7Be
BA To recognize $4.9B charge ($8.74/shr) and increased costs in Q2 due to 737 MAX grounding; to result in a $5.6B reduction of revenue and pre-tax earnings in the quarter
*(CL) CHILE CENTRAL BANK (BCCH) LEAVES OVERNIGHT RATE TARGET UNCHANGED AT 2.50%; AS EXPECTED
(JP) Japan Investors Net Buying of Foreign Bonds: ¥950.0B v ¥297.0B prior week; Foreign Net Buying of Japan Stocks: -¥93.1B v ¥192.2B prior week

FRIDAY 7/19
STT Reports Q2 $1.42 v $1.40e, Rev $2.87B v $2.85Be
*(US) JULY PRELIMINARY UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN CONFIDENCE: 98.4 V 98.8E
(IR) Iran Revolutionary Guard says they have seized a UK-flagged oil tanker in the Strait of Hormuz; stopped the tanker for failure to follow international regulations - Iranian press
(IR) US official: A second tanker, MV Mesdar, was also seized by Iran today - CNN (IR) Iranian
(IR) Foreign Min Zarif reportedly met Thurs with Sen Paul (R-KY) to discuss prospects for potential Iran-US talks - Al-Monitor


Monday, July 15, 2019

July-August 2019 Outlook: Summer Run Down

July-August 2019 Outlook: Summer Run Down
Tue, 09 Jul 2019 15:49 PM EST

As we progress through the back half of the year many uncertainties continue to hang over the markets. In the months ahead, uncertainty will ebb and flow around hopes for trade deals with China and other partners, as well as other unplanned events such as a possible direct confrontation with Iran.
The key issue for the next couple of months will be the give-and-take between the performance of the economy, domestically and internationally, and the Fed’s decisions on monetary policy. Market expectations are still set on at least 50 basis points of Fed easing through year end, with some minor disagreement about the timing. But if the data on employment remains favorable and inflation picks up just a bit the Fed could extend its pause indefinitely rather than waste its limited resources for easing that could be better used during a future economic downturn.
Without further ado, here’s a list of some significant dates and events to watch for this summer:

July 10: Fed Chair Powell testifies before Congress
The Fed has been under pressure from market participants and President Trump to start cutting rates amid continued weak inflation and uncertainties over trade issues and growth. Trump went as far as to call the Fed “our most difficult problem.” Under this level of scrutiny, Chair Powell will have to tread cautiously as he explains the Fed’s dovish turn despite a strong stock market and a solid rebound in the June employment report. Powell may decide to stress global concerns during his testimony, which would signal the Fed is on track for a July rate cut. Should he push back against the notion of a July rate cut, it could lead to an equity sell off.

July 11: US CPI data
The White House and many on Wall Street have argued that the Fed should focus on price indicators rather than employment. CPI data has remained persistently below the 2% Fed target, despite a healthy jobs market and the central bank’s willingness to tolerate “symmetric” above-target inflation. This month’s inflation data is expected to remain tame, but an upside surprise could curtail hopes for Fed rate cuts this year.

July 16: Earnings season begins
Tuesday, July 16 is the unofficial kick off of the Q2 earnings season, as the first big Wall Street banks report their results along with blue chip names like JNJ. The bank stocks have struggled amid a decade of low rates and now face the prospects of interest rates contracting again, an environment that doesn’t give much hope for financial stocks to take a leadership role. Notably, the embattled Deutsche Bank will report its results on July 24 as it continues to attempt restructuring its way back to health. The US consumer still appears to be healthy but there are some signs of a slowdown in committing capital at the corporate level as executives contend with a high level of uncertainty related to geopolitics and trade issues, so there is some expectation that corporate earnings won’t show much growth.

July 17: Robert Mueller testifies before Congress
Mueller has said he will not provide any testimony that goes beyond the bounds of his report, but for much of the general public this may be the first time they hear the former special counsel describe the potential incidents of obstruction of justice that were enumerated in his report. The testimony will also include questions about the supporting materials that the report is based on, which could lead to some more embarrassing details that could distract President Trump from other matters (Trump has a campaign rally scheduled the same day as Mueller’s testimony). If nothing really new comes to light, however, this could be the last gasp for the impeachment movement among left-wing Democrats as the 2020 election becomes the central focus of US politics.

July 22: UK Conservatives announce result of leadership vote
The election of Boris Johnson appears to be a foregone conclusion, as he is polling well ahead of his rival, Jeremy Hunt, despite an embarrassing domestic incident at Johnson’s flat last month that raised some character questions. The new PM will have his work cut out for him as he plans to somehow wrangle new concessions out of the EU before the Brexit extension expires in October. EU leaders have repeatedly said they won’t budge on the agreement made with PM May, though there may still be some wiggle room in the implementation phase and as new trade arrangements are established with the independent UK. The greater threat is that PM Johnson, faced with no new concessions from Europe, will opt for a ‘no deal’ Brexit, certainly the most disruptive outcome for global markets.

July 26: US Q2 Advance GDP
The first reading on US Q2 GDP will be another key data point in calibrating Fed policy. The Atlanta Fed’s Q2 GDPNow forecast has dwindled to just 1.3% after recent disappointing readings on personal income and international trade. In Q1, the Advance GDP number surprised to the upside – at 3.2% it was five-tenths higher than the final GDPNow – adding some doubt to the predictive value of the Atlanta Fed forecast.

July 31: FOMC rate decision
Fed funds futures are now overwhelmingly pricing in a 25 basis point cut at the end of July. Fed rhetoric to this point has priced out the notion of a one-time 50 basis point ‘insurance’ cut to preempt a recessionary turn in the economy. Even Bullard, the dissenter at the May meeting, has downplayed the notion of moving more than a quarter point at a time given the generally strong economy. The Fed is also loath to prematurely use up the ammunition it has built up over the last two years, so the focus will move to whether the Fed has an appetite to provide more cuts in September and December as the futures markets are predicting. During his post-decision press conference, Chair Powell will likely be cautious about promising more rate cuts until he sees the incoming data and developments to the outlook.

August 2: US employment report
Apart from a US/China trade deal, more strong jobs data is the event that could likely ease pressure on the Fed to cut rates this autumn. The solid non-farm payrolls rebound in the June data took some of the wind out of the sails from pundits who were banking on a series of rate cuts this year. If the next few payrolls reports confirm continued labor market strength, the Fed will be at liberty to dial back its dovishness, especially if there are some signs of wage inflation accompanying the jobs data. In the alternate case, should payroll growth start to ebb – as many economists predict when the labor market is at ‘full employment’ – the Fed could have more justification for additional rate cuts.

August 3: Congressional recess begins
The US Congress is out of session for all of August and the first week of September, which means legislators have only a few weeks left to pass bills this summer. The most pressing issues are related to spending, particularly raising the debt ceiling. Technically the debt ceiling was already blown through several months ago and the government is now relying on the Treasury Department’s special measures to avoid default. A recent estimate from the Bipartisan Policy Center said that the Treasury could breach the borrowing limit in early September because the government has brought in less tax revenue this year than was projected. The implication is that this divided Congress needs to pass a debt ceiling bill before the summer break or find itself with only a matter of days in September to act, a situation that could send a chill through economic markets.

August 9: UK Q2 GDP
More signs of weakness in the UK economy because of Brexit uncertainty could put pressure on the new PM to avoid a messy separation and perhaps ask the EU for another extension, despite his campaign pledge that the separation must occur by October 31 without further delay. Meanwhile unions are pushing the Labour Party to seek a second referendum on approving the PM’s strategy of either a new deal or no deal, and for Labour to openly campaign for scrapping Brexit altogether.

August 21: FOMC Minutes; Fed Jackson Hole Symposium
The Fed will have another chance to massage market expectations for policy late in August as it releases the minutes from the July meeting and as many senior global central bank figures meet at Jackson Hole. If the data and sentiment have deteriorated by late August, Fed speakers could start signaling a willingness to provide more accommodation in the months ahead.

Early September: Iran threatens to further reduce nuclear compliance
After announcing it would increase enrichment of uranium past the 3.7% cap required under the JCPOA nuclear accord it was reported that Iran plans to incrementally scale back commitments to the 2015 nuclear deal every two months to keep up pressure on European leaders. The enrichment level is still well below the 20% threshold needed for a nuclear bomb, but makes it clear Tehran is willing to chip away at the JCPOA as it faces continued economic pressure from American sanctions. With tensions already mounting from tanker attacks reportedly carried out by Iranian proxies and the downing of a US surveillance drone, it seems like it may only be a matter of time before Iran crosses a red line that provokes a military response from the US.

Later 2019: US/China Trade Deal?
US/China trade discussions may go into a quiet period with no significant pressure to reach any conclusions perhaps until Trump and Xi are expected to see each other again at the mid-November APEC leaders’ summit in Chile. Both leaders still want to forge a trade agreement of some kind, and the sides were reportedly agreed on 90% of the details before talks fell apart earlier this year. That would seem to indicate that a breakthrough could come at any time, as long as the leaders are willing. Mr. Trump’s resolve to get an optimal deal is stiffened by the strength of the stock market, his primary metric for his own Presidency, but he would probably like to get a resolution to the China trade dispute to bolster his credentials for re-election as the businessman President. Mr. Xi is feeling some economic and political pressure back at home but remains firmly in control and could still conceivably try to ‘run out the clock’ on the Trump Administration and take his chances with a potential Democratic White House in 2021. Beijing may be seen as backsliding if it escalates restrictions on US companies with manufacturing operations in China or steps up rhetoric related to Taiwan and the South China Sea. Any signs that the two sides are actually getting close to sealing a deal will boost the animal spirits of the markets, though it should be noted that President Trump seems eager to open up new fronts in the trade war with India, Vietnam and the EU (he has described the latter two as “even worse” than China on trade).

CALENDAR
JULY
8:
9: Fed Chair Powell and Fed dissenter Bullard speak; China CPI
10: UK May GDP; UK Manufacturing Production; Fed Chair Powell Congressional testimony; FOMC Minutes
11: BOE Financial Stability Report; ECB minutes; US CPI; China Trade Balance
12: US PPI

14: China Industrial Production
15:
16: UK Unemployment Rate; German ZEW Economic Sentiment; US Retail Sales; China Q2 GDP
17: UK CPI; US Housing Starts & Building Permits; Robert Mueller testifies before Congress
18: UK Retail Sales; Philadelphia Fed Manufacturing Index
19: Preliminary University of Michigan Consumer Sentiment

22: EU Flash Manufacturing & Services PMIs; German Ifo Business Climate; UK Conservatives announce result of leadership election
23:
24:
25: ECB Monetary Policy Decision; US Durable Goods Orders
26: US Q2 Advance GDP

29: BOJ Monetary Policy Decision
30: German Preliminary CPI; US Personal Income & PCE Price Index; US Consumer Confidence; China Manufacturing &Non-manufacturing Indices
31: EU CPI Flash Estimate; Chicago PMI; FOMC Monetary Policy Decision; China Caixin Manufacturing PMI
AUGUST
1: UK Manufacturing PMI; BOE Inflation Report; BOE Monetary Policy Decision; US ISM Manufacturing PMI
2: US Payrolls & Unemployment
3: Congressional recess begins

5: UK Services PMI; US ISM Manufacturing PMI
6:
7:
8: China CPI
9: UK June & Q2 GDP; UK Manufacturing Production; US PPI

12: China Trade Balance
13: UK Unemployment Rate; US CPI; China Industrial Production
14: German Preliminary Q2 GDP; UK CPI
15: US Retail Sales; Philadelphia Fed Manufacturing Index
16: US Housing Starts & Building Permits; Preliminary University of Michigan Consumer Sentiment

19:
20: German ZEW Economic Sentiment
21: FOMC Minutes; Fed Jackson Hole Symposium (21-23)
22: ECB Minutes
23: EU Flash Manufacturing & Services PMIs; German Ifo Business Climate; US Manufacturing PMI

26: US Durable Goods Orders
27: US Consumer Confidence
28:
29: German Preliminary CPI; US Preliminary Q2 GDP
30: EU CPI Flash Estimate; US Personal Spending & PCE Price Index; Chicago PMI; China Manufacturing & Non-manufacturing PMIs


Friday, July 5, 2019

June Jobs Report Tempers Case for July Rate Cut

TradeTheNews.com Weekly Market Update: June Jobs Report Tempers Case for July Rate Cut
Fri, 05 Jul 2019 16:04 PM EST

It was a tale of two tapes this July 4th shortened trading week. Ahead of the break, stock markets continued to chug higher, and in many cases notching fresh all time highs, helped predominantly by lower interest rates. Global economic data remained largely soft, fanning expectations for supportive central bank policies. Those expectations likely got a boost from the news IMF’s Lagarde was being put forward to replace Draghi to head up the ECB, rather than the Bundesbank's Weidmann. The President and his advisors continued to call on the Fed to cut rates while confirming that the US and China trade talks were continuing. Government bond yields plumbed to fresh cycle lows and the S&P futures were knocking on the door of 3K by the time trading was closed early on Wednesday. Gold moved back towards the highs of the year and the dollar stayed soft.

Friday’s employment report probably didn’t take a July rate hike off the table, but certainly seems to make it more questionable. Payrolls snapped back from the poor May reading in a big way, easily surpassing expectations. The unemployment rate ticked higher along with the participation rate, suggesting the US labor market is continuing to absorb some slack. Some market participants noted that if there are additional positive surprises in either the inflation data next week or the regional factory surveys over the remainder of the month, a quarter-point cut could be in doubt. Rates moved up quite aggressively following the report, stocks sold off while gold prices dropped more than 2% and the dollar appreciated globally. The VIX jumped 14% and stocks sold off broadly as rate cut expectations were dented. For the week, the Dow rose 1.2%, S&P added 1.7% and the NASDAQ finished up 1.9%.

In corporate news, Tesla shares rose after reporting record Q2 production and delivery numbers, placating some investors who have seen the stock fall 30% year to date. Broadcom was said to be in advanced deal discussions to acquire Symantec for over $15B, a strategy shift after its failed attempt to acquire Qualcomm last year. Delta boosted its guidance, citing strong passenger demand, raising Q2 expectations for the overall airline sector. Genesee & Wyoming announced it would be acquired by Brookfield at $112/shr in a ~$8.4B go-private deal.

SUNDAY 6/30
(JP) JAPAN Q2 TANKAN LARGE MANUFACTURING INDEX: 7 V 9E (near 3-year low) ; OUTLOOK SURVEY: 7 V 6E; LARGE ALL INDUSTRY CAPEX: 7.4% V 8.1%E

MONDAY 7/1
*(ES) SPAIN JUN MANUFACTURING PMI: 47.9 V 49.5E (confirms move back into contraction and lowest reading since Apr 2013)
(DE) GERMANY JUN UNEMPLOYMENT CHANGE: -1.0K V 0.0KE; UNEMPLOYMENT CLAIMS RATE: 5.0% V 5.0%E
(IR) Iran said to suspend its nuclear commitments from July 7th - financial press
(UK) JUN PMI MANUFACTURING: 48.0 V 49.5E (2nd straight contraction and lowest since Feb 2013)
(US) JUN ISM MANUFACTURING: 51.7 V 51.0E; PRICES PAID: 47.9 V 53.0E (lowest manufacturing since Sept 2016)
*(US) MAY CONSTRUCTION SPENDING M/M: -0.8% V 0.0%E

TUESDAY 7/2
*(AU) RESERVE BANK OF AUSTRALIA (RBA) CUTS CASH RATE TARGET BY 25BPS TO 1.00%; AS EXPECTED (2nd consecutive cut)
(EU) ECB policy makers said not to be in any rush into a July rate cut and preferring instead to wait for more data on the economy - press
GM Reports Q2 deliveries 746.7K, -1.5% y/y
EU reaches deal on new leaders: Christine Lagarde nominated for ECB presidency; Belgium's Charles Michel proposed as EU Council president; Germany's Ursula Von Der Leyen proposed as EU Commission head
TSLA Reports Q2 total deliveries 95.2K v 84Ke (guided 90-100K)
(US) President Trump: To nominate current Executive Vice President of Saint Loius Fed Christopher Waller to be member of Fed; Also intends to nominate economic advisor Judy Shelton to serve on Fed board
(JP) Japan said to consider additional export restrictions on South Korea - Japanese Press

WEDNESDAY 7/3
*(SE) SWEDEN CENTRAL BANK (RIKSBANK) LEAVES REPO RATE UNCHANGED AT -0.25%; AS EXPECTED; maintains rate path outlook and forward guidance
*(DE) GERMANY JUN FINAL SERVICES PMI: 55.8 V 55.6E (confirms 72nd month of expansion)
*(EU) EURO ZONE JUN FINAL SERVICES PMI: 53.6 V 53.4E (confirms 72nd month of expansion)
*(UK) JUN SERVICES PMI: 50.2 V 51.0E (3rd straight expansion)
*(US) JUN ADP EMPLOYMENT CHANGE: +102K V +140KE
(IT) European Commission: Decided not to open disciplinary action against Italy (as speculated); to explain conclusion to Euro Group ministers next week on Italy
*(US) JUN ISM NON-MANUFACTURING INDEX: 55.1 V 56.0E (lowest since July 2017)
(US) Association of American Railroads weekly rail traffic report for week ending June 29th: 533.2K, -5.5% y/y (has fallen for 20 consecutive weeks)

THURSDAY 7/4
3382.JP Reports Q1 Net ¥52.1B v ¥42.9B y/y; Op ¥90.3B v ¥86.4B y/y; Rev ¥1.6T v ¥1.6T y/y
(US) Magnitude 6.5 earthquake reported earlier today in central/southern California (said to be the largest quake in over 20 years), followed by several smaller ones
005930.KR Reports Prelim Q2 (KRW) Op 6.5T v 6.0Te (-56.3% y/y), Rev 56.0T v 54.5Te (-4.2% y/y)
(CN) China wants clarity on Huawei situation before making agricultural purchases from US - SCMP

FRIDAY 7/5
066570.KR Reports prelim Q2 (KRW) Op 652.2B v 774.4Be, Rev 15.6T v 15.7Te
(CN) Reportedly China and the U.S. could reach a preliminary trade agreement as soon as this September - pres
*(US) JUN CHANGE IN NONFARM PAYROLLS: +224K V +160KE


Saturday, June 29, 2019

Barron’s weekend summary

Barron’s weekend summary: positive feature on CCL; cautious on ABBV 
Cover story: Today’s IPO market in no way resembles the dot-com boom of the 1990s, which saw companies such as Pets.com crash; “The resurgence of IPOs is no flash in the pan, no signal of a bubble reinflated—instead, it reflects a shift in the way that investors and entrepreneurs approach company creation, the rich supply of mature companies that have yet to come public, and investors’ insatiable hunger for growth stories,” even if some recent IPOs aren’t profitable yet. 

Features: 1) Cautious on ABBV: With AbbVie’s acquisition of AGN at a 45% premium over the latter’s share price, it gets a company whose problems resemble its own, and if shareholders had been given a chance to vote on the deal they should have rejected it; 2) Positive on CCL: Shares plummeted following reduced 2019 financial guidance, but they now appear to be a bargain—they carry a 4.4% dividend and the cruise-line operator has the best balance sheet among the industry’s three big players; 3) IPOs can encourage risk-taking, which tends to drive up valuation multiples across the board—even for older stocks, thus benefiting investors who aren’t interested in taking risks with new issues such as BYND, ZM, or WORK, whose high valuations make the rest of the software sector look like a bargain; 4) Price targets may not always be useful for forecasts—many professional money managers say targets aren’t anything more than a marketing tool for the brokerage industry to generate interest in a stock, and for investors the assumptions behind them may not be obvious; 5) Proposed legislation would make it easier for employers to offer annuities in 401(k) retirement plans that provide retirees fixed payments for as long as they live, but such a move won’t necessarily solve the retirement crisis. 

Tech Trader: JPM and Bernstein recently asked hundreds of corporate executives for their 2019 purchasing plans, hinting at likely winners and losers in technology; Among the winners in both surveys are MSFT and AMZN, with the former topping the list of companies deemed indispensable, while the growing cloud business is likely to take mind share away from IBM and ORCL. 

Trader: Donald Trump and Xi Jinping may reach a trade deal, and the Fed may deliver what the market wants at its June meeting, but the economy continues to slow, and the yield curve remains inverted, a reliable indicator of a recession; Cautious on ROKU: A recent share-price drop could stem from concern about AMZN’s ability to use pricing power to take on Roku’s smart TV platform share, but investors could also simply be worried about the stock’s rapid gain; Positive on WMT, PG, PEP, COST, KO: The so-called WPPCK consumer staple stocks may become more appealing as economic conditions get tougher and the market outlook becomes clouded by trade wars and other crises that could ding the FAANGs. 

Profile: David King of the Columbia Flexible Capital Income fund developed a flexible income strategy that doesn’t employ a high-level allocation strategy like most, but drills down to the security level to find better opportunities (top 10 holdings: JNJ, LMT, GIS, PFE, JPM, AVTRA, MRK, AEP-B, BP, BDX-A). 

Interview: Barry Bannister, head of institutional equity strategy at Stifel, believes the decade-long bull market has left investors too accustomed to unsustainable high returns, and he predicts smaller gains in the coming years, as well as move favorable conditions for active investing. 

European Trader: The UK is deeply divided over consequences of leaving the European Union—Remainers believe a no-deal Brexit will leave the country in ruins, while Leavers say Brexit will eventually fuel growth and produce a thriving U.K.

Emerging Markets: “U.S. markets jumped to near-record highs when the Federal Reserve reiterated its loosening bias in mid-June. Central banks around the world are positioned to follow the Fed’s lead, spelling opportunity particularly in bonds that thrive on falling interest rates.”

Commodities: Commodities have done well in the first half of 2019, with iron ore leading the majors, along with reformulated gasoline, U.S. benchmark crude, and gold, while steel and natural gas have taken hits.

Streetwise: Columnist Jack Hough discusses the “Fed put,” noting that “Futures markets are now pricing in a near certainty of a July rate cut. If investors don’t get one, they are likely to huff and sell stocks. If they do get one, it is unlikely to help and might even hurt, setting off a tantrum just the same.”