Good morning,
Equities were sharply higher yesterday on the back of the latest optimistic signals that the Iran conflict is reaching an end. The S&P 500 and Russell 2000 rose 1.5%. Brent fell 8%, yields fell 5-8bp and gold rose. President Trump announced a pause in Project Freedom and reports of the two sides edging towards an MOA served as a primary catalyst for yesterday’s strength, with earnings and AI news flow providing another boost. On the Iran optimism, we’ll note we’ve already seen many false dawns.
Coming off of the Knicks Game 2 win last night, the geopolitical news feed today has been relatively quiet, with Iran’s response to the US’ latest proposal the primary anticipated event. Equity futures haven’t been doing much this morning, in line with the news flow. The S&P is around unchanged.
The latest round of earnings continued to come in strong overall though stock reactions are more nuanced. WHR is under pressure after missing estimates, slashing guidance, suspending the dividend and providing some rough commentary that the Iran war led to “recession-level industry decline in the U.S. as consumer confidence collapsed in late February and March.” Management also discussed double-digit price increases to support margins. PLNT and SHAK are also under pressure, BROS is down too while MCD, FUN, BOBS and WRBY are higher. CF posted solid consensus beats but is trading lower. The company noted that 50-60% of ammonia and urea capacity in the Middle East was hampered in some way while Russia and China nitrogen/fertilizer exports are limited. Software is seeing some divergent earnings responses. DDOG and FTNT are up sharply in the software space while APP is down modestly, SNAP is under a bit of pressure and FSLY is down sharply. On the equipment side of things, ARM and COHR are trading lower.
Jobless Claims this morning continued to remain at low levels. Non-farm productivity fell in Q1 and was below consensus, along with Unit Labor Costs. Treasury yields are continuing to move lower this morning down 5bp at the short end, with the Dollar following lower.
- US 2yr -5bps to 2Y%, 5yr -4bps to 5Y%, 10yr -3bps to 10Y%, 30yr -2bps to 30Y%
- USD index: -$0.17 to $97.71
Oil continues to come in, down another 5% this morning. Posts from Arabic news outlet Al Hadath about “intensive” talks to reopen Hormuz helped push prices down overnight. Precious metals continue their inverse correlation, moving higher. Ag is mostly lower and crypto is slightly lower as well.
European indexes are slightly lower, with the UK lagging as local elections today will test the strength of the Labour/Starmer government. Germany factory orders were stronger than expected and European retail sales fell from last month but were slightly better than expected. Energy and Utilities are mostly lower in the region while miners are higher. Poland’s central bank kept rates unchanged as expected while Norway’s Norges Bank hiked in a surprise move. Japan played catchup after reopening following the Golden Week holiday, jumping over 5%. The yen was around unchanged, with no signs of another round of another intervention after several the past few days. Speakcring of the yen, Secretary Bessent will visit Japan next week and meet with finance officials. Chinese markets were higher as attention drifts to the Trump-Xi meeting next week.
Earnings:
After-Market (Wed): ALB, APA, APP, ARM, ATO, AXON, BKD, BROS, CAPL, CF, CMP, CW, CXT, CODI, COHR, CPK, DASH, ES, FTNT, GNK, GT, HCI, HLI, HRB, HST, KTOS, MET, MUR, NVST, OBDC, PAYC, PRI, PTC. QGEN, RYN, O, TKO, TPL, WBD, WES, WHR, WTS, ZG
Pre-Market: ARW, BDX, CG, CRL, LNG, DDOG, EPAM, EVRG, FOUR, FUN, GWW, HAE, HTZ, HWM, KVUE, LEG, LNC, LOAR, MCD, MTD, PLNT, RXO, SHAK, SPB, SPH, SRE, TFX, TPR, TRGP, U, VST, WBD, ZTS
After-Market: ABNB, AFRM, AKAM, COIN, CRWV, DBX, DXC, DKNG, EXPE, FBIN, G, GILD, GMED, HUBS, MCHP, MCK, MP, MSI, NET, RGA, RKT, RMAX, RNG, RSG, STRZ, TOST, TTD, XYZ
Economic Data:
US:
- Challenger Job Cuts: 83.387k vs prior 60.26k
- Initial Jobless Claims: 200k vs 205k cons, prior 190k
- Continuing Claims: 1766k vs 1800k cons, prior 1776K
- Nonfarm Productivity (Q1) q.q: 0.8% vs 1.4% cons, prior 1.6%
- Unit Labor Costs: 2.3% vs 2.6% vs 4.6%
- Used Car Prices m.m: -1.6% vs prior 1.4%
- 10am Construction Spending
- 10:30am EIA Nat Gas Inventories
- 11am Consumer Inflation Expectations
- 2:05pm Fed Hammack, 3:30pm Williams
- 3:00pm Consumer Credit
- 4:30pm Fed Balance Sheet
Global:
- Australia Trade Balance: A$-1.841B vs A$4.25B cons, prior A$5.026B
- Germany Factory Orders m.m: 5.0% vs 1.0% cons, prior 1.4%
- Europe Retail Sales (March) m.m: -0.1% vs -0.3% cons, prior -0.3%
- Mexico Core CPI m.m: 0.31% vs 0.31% cons, prior 0.38%
- 3:00pm Mexico rate decision