Good morning and Happy April Fools,
Yesterday a few rays of light broke through the Iran war clouds, exciting a market that’s been searching for signs military operations would cease. That, and end-of-quarter flows triggered a sharp rally across markets. The S&P 500 gained 2%, Russell 2000 over 3%. Gold rose as well while Brent (with the front-month rolling) fell 3% and yields dropped ~5bp as treasuries were bid. The Iran news centered on President Trump’s willingness to exit from the conflict without re-opening Hormuz and comments from Iranian leadership. Trump is scheduled to address the nation tonight.
Equity futures are following-through on yesterday’s gains but are sliding from this morning’s highs as we approach the open. According to the WSJ, the UAE is preparing to help open Hormuz by force, lobbying the UN for a resolution to authorize the action. That would be a significant strategic shift in the Iran action and the global order. One other thing to keep an eye on is the re-emergence of President Trump’s frustration with NATO and its response to US calls for assistance during the Iran war, calling the organization a “paper tiger” and saying he is strongly considering pulling the US out of the alliance in an interview with the UK Telegraph, and doubling down with comments this morning. Shifting to economic data, this morning’s ADP and Retail Sales releases were solid, further supporting equities. A couple of retail/consumer-facing names are under pressure following earnings. Nike and Restoration Hardware are down >10% in the pre-market. Apparel maker PVH reported strong earnings and is modestly higher. Egg supplier Cal-Maine is trading modestly higher after solidly beating estimates this morning, while noting conventional egg sales fell 72% for the quarter due mainly due to a 70% decline in selling prices as egg-flation collapsed. Yesterday was also active on the capital markets front. McCormick officially announced plans to combine with Unilever’s food business, at an EV value ~$45B. In biopharma, Lilly and Biogen announced deals for Centessa (up to $8B) and Apellis (up to $6B), respectively. OpenAI completed its latest funding round, raising $122B at a valuation of $852B.
62k private jobs were added in March according to ADP’s employment report today, in line with last month and above consensus of 40k additions. The smallest companies (<20 employees) showed the strongest gains, adding 112k jobs, while companies with 20-249 employees shed 53k. Natural resources, mining and construction industries added 41k jobs, education and health services 58k (its been a consistent driver of gains) while manufacturing shed 11k and trade, transportation and utilities -58k. The monthly jobs report will be released on Friday, when markets are closed, which could set up an interesting decision on how much risk investors are willing to hold at the Close tomorrow. Retail Sales for February rose from January and beat consensus, both Headline and Control-group. It’s a solid report but comes before any impact from the Iran war. Motor vehicle/parts (+1.2%), Health/personal care (+2.3%), clothing/accessories (+2.0%), Department stores (+3.0%) and other store retailers (+1.1%) all showed solid gains. Furniture/furnishings and grocery stores (-1.0%) were the only categories with declines. Treasury yields were trading lower but rose following the ADP and Retail Sales numbers.
- US 2yr +1bps to 3.81%, 5yr +1bps to 3.96%, 10yr +1bps to 4.33%, 30yr +0bps to 4.92%
- USD index: -$0.50 to $99.26
Major European indexes are up over 2% and at/near session highs. Banks are leading (Barclays, BNP, Santander +5%). Sovereign yields continue to pull back. The 10y gilt is 10bp lower this morning. Japan’s Nikkei ripped 5% overnight while China gained ~2% across its markets. China’s private Manufacturing PMI came in below estimates and down from last month but remained marginally in expansion. According to reports, officials will extend the oil export ban into April, with some exceptions. South Korea ripped 8%, with Samsung jumping over 10%.
Brent crude is down modestly and trading just above $100, with the June contract now the front-month. Nat gas is also lower. Precious metals are little-changed outside of gold, which is up 2%. Both silver and gold regained their 100d ma. Crypto is modestly higher. Bitcoin remains below its 50d ma ($68.6k vs $71.9k) while Ether broke above it earlier this week.
Earnings:
- After-Market (Tues): NKE, PLAY, PVH, RH
- Pre-Market: CAG, CALM, LW, MSM, UNF
- After-Market: FC, PENG
Economic Data:
US:
- Mortgage apps: -2.6% vs prior -5.4%
- Refis: -17.3% vs prior -14.6%
- 30yr rate: 6.57% vs prior 6.43%
- ADP employment change: 62k vs 40k cons, prior 63k
- Retail Sales m.m: 0.6% vs 0.5% cons, prior -0.1%
- Control Group: 0.5% vs 0.3% cons, prior 0.3%
- Fed Speakers: Musalem, Barr (9am)
- 9:45am Final Manufacturing PMI
- 10:00am ISM Manufacturing
- 10:00am Inventories
- 10:3am EIA Crude inventories
Global:
- China RatingDog Manufacturing PMI: 50.8 vs 51.6 cons, prior 52.1
- Non Manufacturing: 50.1 vs 49.9 cons, prior 49.5
- Japan Tankan Manufacturing Index: 17 vs 16 cons, prior 15
- South Korea Exports (March) y.y: 48.3% vs 44.9% cons, prior 28.7%
- Europe Unemployment: 6.2% vs 6.1% cons, prior 6.1%