Good morning,
Ahead of this weekend’s negotiations the S&P 500 broke its 8-day winning streak ending the session slightly lower. However, like Rory at The Masters, the index pulled off back-to-back >3% weekly gains, for the first time since October of 2022. Rory’s Green jacket is more impressive as he is only the fourth person in history to achieve this feat. Last week, tech re-asserted its strength with the NYSE 100 index up >5% driven by an >10% gain in the semi-sector amidst more partnership announcements and capex spending commitments. This more than offset another drubbing in software (IGV ~-7%) after the unveiling of Anthropic’s newest model, Mythos, which is not being released to the public, adding to the AI-anxiety.
The Iran negotiations broke down after 21 hours with the key unresolved issues reportedly centering around the opening of the Strait and the end of the enrichment program. In response, President Trump said the US Navy would blockade the Strait which was later clarified by CENTCOM saying that it will target ships entering/exiting Iranian ports beginning at 10:00am ET. Oil prices have moved sharply higher with ICE Brent up ~7.5% trading back over $100 and reversing most of the post ceasefire gap. Equity futures moved lower but are off the worst levels. S&P futures are down ~0.5% near session highs after giving back ~1.5% at the lows shortly after futures re-opened (losses were even steeper on Saturday in crypto native markets). Within the context of the recent bounce the pullback is pretty contained. Thus far the ceasefire has held and there is some hope that negotiations will continue with Axios reporting the “The door is not closed” according to regional sources.
Outside of the Iran headlines it was a very quiet weekend. However, Q1 earnings season is “officially” underway today. GS is first out of the gate for the mega Financials. The stock is trading lower despite top and bottom line beats. FICC revenue of $4b looks to be one reason, missing estimates of ~$5b. Intermediation (market making) was significantly lower for interest rates and mortgages (despite bond volatility), partially offset by significant activity in commodities and currencies. M&A volumes and convertible activity drove 48% y/y growth in Investment Banking, though fees backlog declined slightly since last quarter. Equities revenues were a record, up 27% from last year and 24% from last quarter. Credit loss provisions seem benign, rising ~$30m y/y due to loan growth as well as wholesale loan impairments. Investors will listen into the call for some additional color.
The only economic data on the calendar is existing home sales out after the open. Treasury yields were higher overnight but are now down ~1bps across the curve. The USD index is modestly higher but has also backed off from the overnight extremes.
Government Yields
- US 2yr -1bps to 3.80%, 5yr -1bps to 3.94%, 10yr -1bps to 4.33%, 30yr +0bps to 4.92%
- USD index: +$0.27 to $98.71
Global markets were lower overnight, but the declines were contained with most major indices across Asia and Europe down ~1%. The China Shanghai Composite was the standout closing a touch higher.
The directly impacted commodities are moving higher with global oil and natural gas prices up >5%. Ag commodities are also moving modestly higher. Metals are giving back some of the recent gains. Gold is down ~1% hugging its 100d ma while copper is outperforming. Amidst the overarching weakness crypto is also pulling back.
Economic Data:
US:
- 10:00 Existing Home Sales
Global:
- China Loan Growth: 5.7% vs. 5.9% cons., prior 6%
- India Inflation: 3.4% y/y vs. 3.5% cons., prior 3.2%