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Tag: NQ00

  • What a rescue for SVB depositors means for the stock market and interest rates

    What a rescue for SVB depositors means for the stock market and interest rates

    U.S. regulators came to the rescue of Silicon Valley Bank depositors late Sunday, triggering a modest relief rally in stock-index futures.

    But investors were left to weigh the outlook for Federal Reserve rate increases after the central bank’s aggressive tightening was flagged by economists and analysts for setting the stage for the second-largest bank failure in U.S. history.

    Federal regulators said depositors at Silicon Valley Bank, or SVB, would have access to all deposits on Monday morning. That includes uninsured deposits — those exceeding the FDIC’s $250,000 cap — in a move that analysts said would help avert runs similar to the event that capsized SVB from occurring elsewhere. SVB
    SIVB,
    -60.41%

    stock and bondholders, however, will be wiped out.

    Regulators said New York’s Signature Bank was also closed on Sunday and that its depositors would also be made whole.

    The Fed also announced a new emergency loan program that it said would help assure banks have the ability to meet the needs of all their depositors.

    “The American people and American businesses can have confidence that their bank deposits will be there when they need them,” President Joe Biden said in a statement Sunday night. “I am firmly committed to holding those responsible for this mess fully accountable and to continuing our efforts to strengthen oversight and regulation of larger banks so that we are not in this position again,” he said, adding that he will deliver additional comments Monday.

    A deal that spared depositors would be expected to let stocks “rally strongly,” said Barry Knapp, managing partner and director of research at Ironsides Macroeconomics, in a phone interview ahead of the announcement Sunday afternoon. Conversely, measures that would have forced depositors to take a hit would have had the potential to spark an ugly reaction, he said.

    Futures on the Dow Jones Industrial Average
    YM00,
    +1.24%

    rose 240 points, or 0.8% following the announcement, while S&P 500 futures
    ES00,
    +1.71%

    were up 1% and Nasdaq-100 futures
    NQ00,
    +1.72%

    gained 1.3%.

    Investors will also be assessing the fallout to see if it complicates the Federal Reserve’s plans to hike interest rates further and potentially faster than previously expected in its bid to tamp down inflation.

    SVB was closed by California regulators on Friday and taken over by the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. Regulators raced over the weekend to come to a resolution for depositors after uncertainty around SVB triggered a sharp market selloff late last week.

    “In what is an already jittery market, the emotional response to a failed bank reawakens our collective muscle memory of the GFC,” Art Hogan, chief market strategist at B. Riley Financial Wealth, told MarketWatch in an email, referring to the 2007-2009 financial crisis. “When the dust settles, we will likely find that SVB is not a ‘systematic’ issue.”

    In a statement Sunday, Securities and Exchange Commission Chair Gary Gensler warned that regulators are on the lookout for misconduct: “In times of increased volatility and uncertainty, we at the SEC are particularly focused on monitoring for market stability and identifying and prosecuting any form of misconduct that might threaten investors, capital formation, or the markets more broadly. Without speaking to any individual entity or person, we will investigate and bring enforcement actions if we find violations of the federal securities laws.”

    Weekend Snapshot: What’s next for stocks after Silicon Valley Bank collapse as investors await crucial inflation reading

    Knapp said a deal that leaves depositors whole would lift the overall market and allow bank stocks, which got hammered last week, to “rip” higher “because they are cheap” and the banking system “as a whole…is in really good shape.”

    Banking stocks dropped sharply Thursday, led by shares of regional institutions, and extended their losses Friday. The selloff in bank stocks pulled down the broader market, leaving the S&P 500
    SPX,
    -1.45%

    down 4.6%, nearly wiping out the large-cap benchmark’s early 2023 gains. The Dow
    DJIA,
    -1.07%

    saw a 4.6% weekly fall, while the Nasdaq Composite
    COMP,
    -1.76%

    declined 4.7%.

    Investors sold stocks but piled into safe-haven U.S. Treasurys, prompting a sharp retreat in yields, which move opposite to prices.

    SVB’s failure is being blamed on a mismatch between assets and liabilities. The bank catered to tech startups and venture-capital firms. Deposits grew rapidly and were placed in long-dated bonds, particularly government-backed mortgage securities. As the Federal Reserve began aggressively raising interest rates roughly a year ago, funding sources for tech startups dried up, putting pressure on deposits. At the same time, Fed rate hikes triggered a historic bond-market selloff, putting a big dent in the value of SVB’s securities holdings.

    SVB was forced to sell a large chunk of those holdings at a loss to meet withdrawals, leading it to plan a dilutive share offering that stoked a further run on deposits and ultimately led to its collapse.

    See: Silicon Valley Bank is a reminder that ‘things tend to break’ when Fed hikes rates

    Meanwhile, the Fed’s newly announced Bank Term Lending Program will make loans of up to 12 months to banks and other depository institutions. In a crucial twist, it will allow the assets used as collateral for those loans to be valued at par, or face value, rather than marked to market. The Fed will also accept collateral at its discount window on the same conditions.

    “These are strong moves,” said Paul Ashworth, chief North America economist at Capital Economics, in a note.

    By accepting collateral at par rather than marking to market means that banks that have accumulated more than $600 billion in unreazlied losses on held-to-maturity Treasury and mortgage-backed securities portfolios and had failed to hedge interest-rate risk should be able to survive, he said.

    “Rationally, this should be enough to stop any contagion from spreading and taking down more banks, which can happen in the blink of an eye in the digital age,” Ashworth wrote. “But contagion has always been more about irrational fear, so we would stress that there is no guarantee this will work.”

    Analysts and economists had largely dismissed the notion that SVB’s woes marked a systemic problem in the banking system. Instead, SVB appeared to be a “a rather special case of poor balance-sheet management, holding massive amounts of long-duration bonds funded by short-term liabilities,” said Erik F. Nielsen, group chief economics adviser at UniCredit Bank, in a Sunday note.

    Mismanagement aside, the Fed’s rate hikes created an environment that set the stage for problems, analysts said. A deeply inverted yield curve, in which short-dated Treasury yields run sharply above longer-dated Treasurys, amplifies liability and asset mismatches.

    The yield on the 2-year note early last week traded more than 100 basis points, or a full percentage point, above the 10-year for the first time since the early 1980s.

    “Inverting the yield curve as deeply as they did…there’s going to be more accidents if they continue down that path,” Knapp said. “Push that thing to 150 basis points and see what happens. You’re going to have more blowups.”

    Fed-funds futures traders last week moved to price in a more-than-70% chance of an outsize 50-basis-point, or half a percentage point, rise in the benchmark interest rate at the Fed’s March meeting after Chair Jerome Powell told lawmakers that rates would need to move higher than previously anticipated. Expectations swung back to a 25-basis-point, or quarter-point move, as the SVB collapse unfolded, with traders also scaling back expectations for when rates will likely peak.

    Meanwhile, a flight to safety saw the yield on the 2-year Treasury note, which had earlier in the week topped 5% for the first time since 2007, end the week down 27.3 basis points at 4.586%.

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  • What a rescue for SVB depositors means for the stock market and interest rates

    What a rescue for SVB depositors means for the stock market and interest rates

    U.S. regulators came to the rescue of Silicon Valley Bank depositors late Sunday, triggering a modest relief rally in stock-index futures.

    But investors were left to weigh the outlook for Federal Reserve rate increases after the central bank’s aggressive tightening was flagged by economists and analysts for setting the stage for the second-largest bank failure in U.S. history.

    Federal regulators said depositors at Silicon Valley Bank, or SVB, would have access to all deposits on Monday morning. That includes uninsured deposits — those exceeding the FDIC’s $250,000 cap — in a move that analysts said would help avert runs similar to the event that capsized SVB from occurring elsewhere. SVB
    SIVB,
    -60.41%

    stock and bondholders, however, will be wiped out.

    Regulators said New York’s Signature Bank was also closed on Sunday and that its depositors would also be made whole.

    The Fed also announced a new emergency loan program that it said would help assure banks have the ability to meet the needs of all their depositors.

    A deal that spared depositors would be expected to let stocks “rally strongly,” said Barry Knapp, managing partner and director of research at Ironsides Macroeconomics, in a phone interview ahead of the announcement Sunday afternoon. Conversely, measures that would have forced depositors to take a hit would have had the potential to spark an ugly reaction, he said.

    Futures on the Dow Jones Industrial Average
    YM00,
    +0.93%

    rose 240 points, or 0.8% following the announcement, while S&P 500 futures
    ES00,
    +1.28%

    were up 1% and Nasdaq-100 futures
    NQ00,
    +1.18%

    gained 1.3%.

    Investors will also be assessing the fallout to see if it complicates the Federal Reserve’s plans to hike interest rates further and potentially faster than previously expected in its bid to tamp down inflation.

    SVB was closed by California regulators on Friday and taken over by the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. Regulators raced over the weekend to come to a resolution for depositors after uncertainty around SVB triggered a sharp market selloff late last week.

    “In what is an already jittery market, the emotional response to a failed bank reawakens our collective muscle memory of the GFC,” Art Hogan, chief market strategist at B. Riley Financial Wealth, told MarketWatch in an email, referring to the 2007-2009 financial crisis. “When the dust settles, we will likely find that SVB is not a ‘systematic’ issue.”

    In a statement Sunday, Securities and Exchange Commission Chair Gary Gensler warned that regulators are on the lookout for misconduct: “In times of increased volatility and uncertainty, we at the SEC are particularly focused on monitoring for market stability and identifying and prosecuting any form of misconduct that might threaten investors, capital formation, or the markets more broadly. Without speaking to any individual entity or person, we will investigate and bring enforcement actions if we find violations of the federal securities laws.”

    Weekend Snapshot: What’s next for stocks after Silicon Valley Bank collapse as investors await crucial inflation reading

    Knapp said a deal that leaves depositors whole would lift the overall market and allow bank stocks, which got hammered last week, to “rip” higher “because they are cheap” and the banking system “as a whole…is in really good shape.”

    Banking stocks dropped sharply Thursday, led by shares of regional institutions, and extended their losses Friday. The selloff in bank stocks pulled down the broader market, leaving the S&P 500
    SPX,
    -1.45%

    down 4.6%, nearly wiping out the large-cap benchmark’s early 2023 gains. The Dow
    DJIA,
    -1.07%

    saw a 4.6% weekly fall, while the Nasdaq Composite
    COMP,
    -1.76%

    declined 4.7%.

    Investors sold stocks but piled into safe-haven U.S. Treasurys, prompting a sharp retreat in yields, which move opposite to prices.

    SVB’s failure is being blamed on a mismatch between assets and liabilities. The bank catered to tech startups and venture-capital firms. Deposits grew rapidly and were placed in long-dated bonds, particularly government-backed mortgage securities. As the Federal Reserve began aggressively raising interest rates roughly a year ago, funding sources for tech startups dried up, putting pressure on deposits. At the same time, Fed rate hikes triggered a historic bond-market selloff, putting a big dent in the value of SVB’s securities holdings.

    SVB was forced to sell a large chunk of those holdings at a loss to meet withdrawals, leading it to plan a dilutive share offering that stoked a further run on deposits and ultimately led to its collapse.

    See: Silicon Valley Bank is a reminder that ‘things tend to break’ when Fed hikes rates

    Meanwhile, the Fed’s newly announced Bank Term Lending Program will make loans of up to 12 months to banks and other depository institutions. In a crucial twist, it will allow the assets used as collateral for those loans to be valued at par, or face value, rather than marked to market. The Fed will also accept collateral at its discount window on the same conditions.

    “These are strong moves,” said Paul Ashworth, chief North America economist at Capital Economics, in a note.

    By accepting collateral at par rather than marking to market means that banks that have accumulated more than $600 billion in unreazlied losses on held-to-maturity Treasury and mortgage-backed securities portfolios and had failed to hedge interest-rate risk should be able to survive, he said.

    “Rationally, this should be enough to stop any contagion from spreading and taking down more banks, which can happen in the blink of an eye in the digital age,” Ashworth wrote. “But contagion has always been more about irrational fear, so we would stress that there is no guarantee this will work.”

    Analysts and economists had largely dismissed the notion that SVB’s woes marked a systemic problem in the banking system. Instead, SVB appeared to be a “a rather special case of poor balance-sheet management, holding massive amounts of long-duration bonds funded by short-term liabilities,” said Erik F. Nielsen, group chief economics adviser at UniCredit Bank, in a Sunday note.

    Mismanagement aside, the Fed’s rate hikes created an environment that set the stage for problems, analysts said. A deeply inverted yield curve, in which short-dated Treasury yields run sharply above longer-dated Treasurys, amplifies liability and asset mismatches.

    The yield on the 2-year note early last week traded more than 100 basis points, or a full percentage point, above the 10-year for the first time since the early 1980s.

    “Inverting the yield curve as deeply as they did…there’s going to be more accidents if they continue down that path,” Knapp said. “Push that thing to 150 basis points and see what happens. You’re going to have more blowups.”

    Fed-funds futures traders last week moved to price in a more-than-70% chance of an outsize 50-basis-point, or half a percentage point, rise in the benchmark interest rate at the Fed’s March meeting after Chair Jerome Powell told lawmakers that rates would need to move higher than previously anticipated. Expectations swung back to a 25-basis-point, or quarter-point move, as the SVB collapse unfolded, with traders also scaling back expectations for when rates will likely peak.

    Meanwhile, a flight to safety saw the yield on the 2-year Treasury note, which had earlier in the week topped 5% for the first time since 2007, end the week down 27.3 basis points at 4.586%.

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  • Tesla is a ‘soft landing’ stock, says Goldman Sachs. Here are its picks for a gentle economic landing and stocks for a recession.

    Tesla is a ‘soft landing’ stock, says Goldman Sachs. Here are its picks for a gentle economic landing and stocks for a recession.

    Pour one out for the beleaguered economists, who for once got an important indicator, the consumer price index, right on the nose, after CPI fell 0.1% in December, while core prices rose 0.3%.

    “The 2021 surge in durable goods demand normalized, and the resulting collapse in durable goods price inflation was stunningly fast,” says Paul Donovan, chief economist of UBS Global Wealth Management.

    “The commodity wave of inflation is fading, and that leaves the profit margin expansion in focus,” he adds. What a good time for earnings season to be upon us, and what do you know, it is, kicking off with the banking sector on Friday before broadening out next week.

    Strategists at Goldman Sachs have a new note out, saying that the market is pricing in a soft landing even though the trend of earnings revisions points to a hard landing.

    They’re not that optimistic — even in the soft-landing scenario, the team led by David Kostin say the S&P 500
    SPX,
    +0.40%

    will end the year right around current levels, at 4,000. But they identify 46 stocks that could benefit — profitable, cyclical companies that are trading at price-to-earnings valuations below their 10-year median, among other factors.

    One name jumps out: Tesla
    TSLA,
    -0.94%
    ,
    which trades at 22 times forward earnings versus the 10-year median of 117 times. But the other 45 names are less flashy, ranging from Capital One
    COF,
    +1.81%

    and Carlyle Group
    CG,
    +0.54%
    ,
    to a host of industrials including 3M
    MMM,
    +0.12%
    ,
    Parker-Hannifan
    PH,
    +0.73%

    and Otis Worldwide
    OTIS,
    +0.42%
    .
    As a whole, these typically $10 billion companies are trading at 12 times earnings, versus 17 times usually.

    In the hard landing scenario, S&P 500 profit margins would shrink by 125 basis points, to 10.9% — about in line with the median peak-to-trough decline during the eight recessions since 1970, which has been 132 basis points. Consensus expectations are for a 26 basis-point margin decline.

    The Goldman team also have a 36 stock screen for a hard landing — profitable companies in defensive industries with a positive dividend yield. They’re typically food, beverage and tobacco companies as well as software and services companies — including Costco Wholesale
    COST,
    +0.58%
    ,
    Kroger
    KR,
    -0.99%
    ,
    Altria
    MO,
    +0.48%
    ,
    Tyson Foods
    TSN,
    +0.23%
    ,
    Microsoft
    MSFT,
    +0.30%
    ,
    MasterCard
    MA,
    -1.13%

    and Visa
    V,
    -0.25%
    .
    As a whole, these $37 billion companies are trading at 22 times earnings vs. a historical 24 times.

    The market

    After a 2.3% advance for the S&P 500
    SPX,
    +0.40%

    over the last three sessions, U.S. stock futures
    ES00,
    +0.39%

    NQ00,
    +0.58%

    declined on Friday.

    The yield on the Japanese 10-year bond
    TMBMKJP-10Y,
    0.511%

    exceeded 0.5%, the Bank of Japan’s yield cap, ahead of next week’s rate decision , prompting a second day of aggressive bond purchases from the central bank.

    For more market updates plus actionable trade ideas for stocks, options and crypto, subscribe to MarketDiem by Investor’s Business Daily.

    The buzz

    Fourth-quarter earnings were rolling out from Bank of America
    BAC,
    +2.20%
    ,
    JPMorgan Chase
    JPM,
    +2.52%
    ,
    Citigroup
    C,
    +1.69%

    and Wells Fargo
    WFC,
    +3.25%
    ,
    and outside of banks, Delta Air Lines
    DAL,
    -3.54%
    ,
    BlackRock
    BLK,
    +0.00%

    and UnitedHealth
    UNH,
    -1.23%
    .

    JPMorgan shares slumped after forecast-beating earnings, though investment bank revenue came in light of estimates. Delta shares also declined after topping earnings estimates.

    Tesla
    TSLA,
    -0.94%

    cut prices of Model 3 and Model Y vehicles in the U.S. and elsewhere by up to 20%. The electric vehicle maker stock dropped 6%.

    Virgin Galactic
    SPCE,
    +12.34%

    surged after saying it’s on track to launch space-tourism flights in the second quarter.

    Apple
    AAPL,
    +1.01%

    says CEO Tim Cook requested, and received, a pay cut after investor criticism.

    The University of Michigan’s consumer-sentiment index is due at 10 a.m. Eastern, and Minneapolis Fed President Neel Kashkari and Philadelphia Fed President Patrick Harker are due to speak.

    Tyler Winklevoss said charges by the Securities and Exchange Commission brought about Gemini Trust for allegedly offering unregistered securities were “super lame” as it seeks to unfreeze $900 million in investor assets.

    Best of the web

    There’s a bull market in swearing on corporate earnings calls.

    The West is now preparing to send tanks to Ukraine in what could be another escalation of its conflict with Russia, which on Friday claimed victory in the eastern town of Soledar.

    A look back at photos of Lisa Marie Presley, who died at age 54.

    Top tickers

    Here were the most active stock-market tickers as of 6 a.m. Eastern.

    Ticker

    Security name

    BBBY,
    -30.15%
    Bed Bath & Beyond

    TSLA,
    -0.94%
    Tesla

    GME,
    -0.68%
    GameStop

    AMC,
    +0.80%
    AMC Entertainment

    MULN,
    -8.59%
    Mullen Automotive

    NIO,
    -0.08%
    Nio

    APE,
    -2.56%
    AMC Entertainment preferreds

    AAPL,
    +1.01%
    Apple

    SPCE,
    +12.34%
    Virgin Galactic

    AMZN,
    +2.99%
    Amazon.com

    Random reads

    Like a scene out of “Stranger Things” — there’s uproar after new restrictions on the Hasbro
    HAS,
    +0.21%

    game Dungeons & Dragons.

    Starting next month, Starbucks
    SBUX,
    +1.30%

    rewards will be less generous for most items, though iced coffee will be easier to get.

    Need to Know starts early and is updated until the opening bell, but sign up here to get it delivered once to your email box. The emailed version will be sent out at about 7:30 a.m. Eastern.

    Listen to the Best New Ideas in Money podcast with MarketWatch reporter Charles Passy and economist Stephanie Kelton.

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  • After a rough 2022, U.S. stock futures muted ahead of first trading week of 2023

    After a rough 2022, U.S. stock futures muted ahead of first trading week of 2023

    U.S. stock-market futures were muted late Monday, ahead of the first trading day of 2023.

    Dow Jones Industrial Average futures
    YM00,
    +0.14%

    jumped more than 200 points out of the gate, but initial enthusiasm quickly waned. By midnight Eastern, they had given up those gains and were about flat; S&P 500 futures
    ES00,
    +0.17%

    and Nasdaq-100 futures
    NQ00,
    +0.18%

    were treading water, slightly in positive territory, after similarly shedding early gains.

    On Friday, the Dow Jones Industrial Average
    DJIA,
    -0.22%

     dipped 73.55 points, or 0.2%, to 33,147.25. The S&P 500 
    SPX,
    -0.25%

     lost 9.78 points, or 0.3%, to 3,839.50, while the Nasdaq Composite
    COMP,
    -0.11%

     retreated 11.61 points, or 0.1%, to 10,466.48. All three major benchmarks suffered their worst year since 2008 based on percentage declines. The Dow dropped 8.8% in 2022, while the S&P 500 tumbled 19.4% and the tech-heavy Nasdaq plunged 33.1%.

    See more: An interest-rate shock wrecked stocks in 2022. What pros say will drive the market in 2023.

    U.S. markets were closed Monday in observance of the New Year’s holiday.

    Investors are in for a busy shortened week, with a slew of economic data due, including S&P Global manufacturing PMI and construction spending expected Tuesday, the Job Openings and Labor Turnover Survey on Wednesday and the December jobs report due Friday. On Wednesday, the Fed will also release minutes from its latest meeting.

    Source link

  • After a rough 2022, U.S. stock futures inch higher ahead of first trading week of 2023

    After a rough 2022, U.S. stock futures inch higher ahead of first trading week of 2023

    U.S. stock-market futures inched higher Monday, suggesting slight gains ahead of the first trading day of 2023.

    Dow Jones Industrial Average futures
    YM00,
    +0.19%

    jumped more than 200 points out of the gate, but initial enthusiasm quickly waned. But 7 p.m. Eastern, they were up about 75 points, or 0.2%; S&P 500 futures
    ES00,
    +0.13%

    and Nasdaq-100 futures
    NQ00,
    +0.05%

    each rose about 0.2% as well

    On Friday, the Dow Jones Industrial Average
    DJIA,
    -0.22%

     dipped 73.55 points, or 0.2%, to 33,147.25. The S&P 500 
    SPX,
    -0.25%

     lost 9.78 points, or 0.3%, to 3,839.50, while the Nasdaq Composite
    COMP,
    -0.11%

     retreated 11.61 points, or 0.1%, to 10,466.48. All three major benchmarks suffered their worst year since 2008 based on percentage declines. The Dow dropped 8.8% in 2022, while the S&P 500 tumbled 19.4% and the tech-heavy Nasdaq plunged 33.1%.

    See more: An interest-rate shock wrecked stocks in 2022. What pros say will drive the market in 2023.

    Markets were closed Monday in observance of the New Year’s holiday.

    Investors are in for a busy shortened week, with a slew of economic data due, including S&P Global manufacturing PMI and construction spending expected Tuesday, the Job Openings and Labor Turnover Survey on Wednesday and the December jobs report due Friday. On Wednesday, the Fed will also release minutes from its latest meeting.

    Source link

  • U.S. stock futures rise ahead of last trading week of 2022

    U.S. stock futures rise ahead of last trading week of 2022

    U.S. stock futures rose Monday night, ahead of the final trading week of 2022.

    Dow Jones Industrial Average futures
    YM00,
    +0.46%

    gained more than 150 points, or 0.5%, as of 11 p.m. Eastern. S&P 500 futures
    ES00,
    +0.59%

    and Nasdaq-100 futures
    NQ00,
    +0.69%

    were also logging solid gains, indicating positive market moves when regular trading resumes Tuesday from the three-day Christmas holiday.

    Oil prices rose
    CL.1,
    +0.64%
    ,
    as the U.S. Dollar Index
    DXY,
    -0.37%

    slipped.

    Last week, the Dow gained nearly 1%, while the S&P 500 and Nasdaq fell for a third straight week.

    See more: What to expect for the stock market in 2023 after the biggest decline since the financial crisis

    On Friday, the Dow Jones Industrial Average 
    DJIA,
    +0.53%

    rose 176.44 points, or 0.5%, to close at 33,203.93. The S&P 500 
    SPX,
    +0.59%

     gained 22.43 points, or 0.6%, finishing at 3,844.82, for a weekly decline of 0.2%. The Nasdaq Composite 
    COMP,
    +0.21%

     closed at 10,497.86, up 6.85 points, or 0.4%. For the week, the Nasdaq fell 1.9%.

    Friday marked the start of the so-called Santa Claus rally period — the final five trading days of the calendar year and the first two trading days of the new year. That stretch has, on average, produced gains for stocks, but failure to do so is often read as a negative indicator.

    Read more: How a Santa Claus rally, or lack thereof, sets the stage for the stock market in first quarter

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  • U.S. stock futures rise ahead of last trading week of 2022

    U.S. stock futures rise ahead of last trading week of 2022

    U.S. stock futures rose Monday night, ahead of the final trading week of 2022.

    Dow Jones Industrial Average futures
    YM00,
    +0.49%

    gained more than 150 points, or 0.5%, as of 11 p.m. Eastern. S&P 500 futures
    ES00,
    +0.64%

    and Nasdaq-100 futures
    NQ00,
    +0.79%

    were also logging solid gains, indicating positive market moves when regular trading resumes Tuesday from the three-day Christmas holiday.

    Oil prices rose
    CL.1,
    +0.64%
    ,
    as the U.S. Dollar Index
    DXY,
    -0.23%

    slipped.

    Last week, the Dow gained nearly 1%, while the S&P 500 and Nasdaq fell for a third straight week.

    See more: What to expect for the stock market in 2023 after the biggest decline since the financial crisis

    On Friday, the Dow Jones Industrial Average 
    DJIA,
    +0.53%

    rose 176.44 points, or 0.5%, to close at 33,203.93. The S&P 500 
    SPX,
    +0.59%

     gained 22.43 points, or 0.6%, finishing at 3,844.82, for a weekly decline of 0.2%. The Nasdaq Composite 
    COMP,
    +0.21%

     closed at 10,497.86, up 6.85 points, or 0.4%. For the week, the Nasdaq fell 1.9%.

    Friday marked the start of the so-called Santa Claus rally period — the final five trading days of the calendar year and the first two trading days of the new year. That stretch has, on average, produced gains for stocks, but failure to do so is often read as a negative indicator.

    Read more: How a Santa Claus rally, or lack thereof, sets the stage for the stock market in first quarter

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  • Many investors are betting on an inflation peak. Here’s why a former hedge-fund manager says they’re wrong.

    Many investors are betting on an inflation peak. Here’s why a former hedge-fund manager says they’re wrong.

    Investors are waking up to big trouble in big China. Stock futures and oil prices are falling after angry anti-COVID zero protests swept the country.

    “This is a sudden powerful new distraction for markets when this week was supposed to be about incoming U.S. data,” sum up strategists at Saxo Bank. They say watch companies exposed to China, “given forward earnings are likely to be downgraded following further China lockdowns and protests.” 

    Before China grabbed the spotlight, holiday weekend sales, jobs and inflation data that due this week, as well as remarks by Fed Chairman Jerome Powell were the big focus.

    Other questions are now swirling. Will China-related falls in oil prices lend to the peak inflation theory? And what about China’s post-COVID economic rebirth?

    Onto our call of the day, which says it’s time to short long bonds because of sticky food inflation — thanks to China. It comes from Russell Clark, a former hedge-fund manager who has spent the last 20 years focusing on that market, macro and short selling. 

    He notes investors have been scooping up the the iShares 20 years+ Treasury Bond ETF
    TLT,
    -0.34%
    ,
    a liquid exchange-traded fund that buys long-dated bonds, even as with U.S. inflation hovering at 1970 highs.

    “The reason that people are getting bullish bonds I believe is that the yield curve has inverted. And every time that has happened, you have a recession and you want to get out of equities and into bonds,” says Clark. A yield curve inversion occurs when long-term interest rates drop below short term rates. The inversion of 2 and 10-year Treasury yields is at its steepest since the 1980s.

    Clues may lie in Japan’s poorly performing bond market. “Not only has it been prescient in leading the U.S. bond yields lower from 1999 onward, in 2020 the JGB market was also prescient in signaling the future U.S. treasury sell off,” he says.


    Russell Clark

    And what Japan is likely seeing that U.S. investors aren’t right now is China-driven food inflation. That’s something the Fed will find it tough to ignore, he said.

    Since the since the 1980s, food commodity prices have followed raw commodity prices higher, If the Fed wants to work that down, it will raise interest rates. For example, falling natural-gas prices
    NG00,
    -3.37%

    would help ease fertilizer costs for farmers.


    Russell Clark

    Clark points out that China is the world’s biggest food importer, with much higher prices than the U.S.

    “Pork, which is the most consumed meat in China, is now 3 times more expensive than the U.S. market, and has recently doubled in price. As Japan is also a large importer of pork, perhaps this was the reason the JGB market sold off before the U.S.,” he said.

    Beef is also a major import for China, and yes, prices are much higher than that of the U.S.

    “In essence, I am saying that China is exporting food inflation to the rest of the world, and I don’t see that ending at the moment. JGBs seem to agree – and when I look at the index value of US Food CPI on a log basis, I keep thinking that is says interest rates are going higher not lower,” said Clark.

    He sees food inflation looking secular, rather than cyclical, due to the demands of an increasingly urbanized China. “Secular food inflation implies POLITICAL pressure to have higher interest rates. US treasuries look a short to me, just as everyone has gotten long,” he said.

    The markets

    Stock futures
    ES00,
    -0.73%

    YM00,
    -0.54%

    NQ00,
    -0.72%

    are falling, and Treasury yields
    TMUBMUSD10Y,
    3.684%

    TMUBMUSD02Y,
    4.467%

    and oil
    CL.1,
    -3.12%

    also are falling. The Japanese yen
    USDJPY,
    -0.61%

    is seeing some safe-haven bids. The Hong Kong Hang Seng Index
    HSI,
    -1.57%

    closed down 1.5%.

    For more market updates plus actionable trade ideas for stocks, options and crypto, subscribe to MarketDiem by Investor’s Business Daily.

    The buzz

    An apartment-building fire in a locked-down city that killed 10 appeared to spark protests across China, calling for the President Xi Jinping to step down and zero-COVID policies to stop. A BBC reporter was arrested and beaten. Meanwhile, lockdowns mean China farmers are destroying crops they can’t sell.

    And similar unrest at China’s Zhengzhou Foxconn
    2317,
    -0.50%

    factory is expected to cause a shortfall of 6 million Apple
    AAPL,
    -1.96%

    iPhone Pros this year.

    Pinduoduo shares
    PDD,
    -1.44%

    are soaring after the China-based mobile marketplace reported profit and revenue beats.

    MGM Resorts 
    MGM,
    -0.42%
    ,
    Las Vegas Sands 
    LVS,
    +0.26%

    and Wynn Resorts 
    WYNN,
    -0.57%

    higher in premarket after Macao tentatively renewed their casino licenses.

    Retailers are in focus after Black Friday online sales topped a record $9 billion. That’s as some wonder if Cyber Monday is still a thing.

    St. Louis Fed President James Bullard will sit down for an interview with MarketWatch on Monday, at 12 noon Eastern. New York Fed President John Williams address the Economic Club of New York at the same time. Fed’s Powell will speak on Wednesday, along with several other Fed officials this week.

    A busy data week starts Tuesday with home-price indexes and consumer confidence data. GDP, the PCE price index for October — a favored gauge of the Federal Reserve and November employment data are also on tap this week.

    Best of the web

    ‘I believe the economy is the biggest bubble in world history,’ warns ‘Rich Dad, Poor Dad’s Robert Kiyosaki.

    Iran was calling for the U.S. to be expelled from the Qatar World Cup.

    Lab study shows next COVID strain will be more deadly.

    The tickers

    These were the top-searched tickers on MarketWatch as of 6 a.m. Eastern:

    Ticker

    Security name

    TSLA,
    -0.19%
    Tesla

    GME,
    -1.99%
    GameStop

    AMC,
    -1.70%
    AMC Entertainment

    AAPL,
    -1.96%
    Apple

    COSM,
    +34.06%
    Cosmos Holdings

    AMZN,
    -0.76%
    Amazon.com

    BBBY,
    -2.70%
    Bed Bath & Beyond

    MULN,
    -2.39%
    Mullen Automotive

    APE,
    +0.83%
    AMC Entertainment Holdings preferred shares

    DWAC,
    +6.44%
    Digital World Acquisition Corp.

    Random reads

    Chinese woman on a mission to visit everyone else’s lonely elderly relatives.

    ‘Gaslighting’ is Merriam Webster’s word of the year. No, really.

    Need to Know starts early and is updated until the opening bell, but sign up here to get it delivered once to your email box. The emailed version will be sent out at about 7:30 a.m. Eastern.

    Listen to the Best New Ideas in Money podcast with MarketWatch reporter Charles Passy and economist Stephanie Kelton

    Source link

  • U.S. stock futures fall as Chinese protests rattle markets, oil hits 2022 low

    U.S. stock futures fall as Chinese protests rattle markets, oil hits 2022 low

    U.S. stock-index futures sank Sunday night, as Asian markets fell following widespread public demonstrations in China and as oil prices hit a 2022 low.

    Dow Jones Industrial Average futures
    YM00,
    -0.47%

    fell more than 150 points, or 0.5%, as of 10 p.m. Eastern, while S&P 500 futures
    ES00,
    -0.64%

    and Nasdaq-100 futures
    NQ00,
    -0.80%

    dropped even more sharply.

    Wall Street finished mixed on Friday with the Dow notching its highest close since April 21. The S&P 500 
    SPX,
    -0.03%

     finished down 1.1 points, or less than 0.1%, at 4,026.12; the Dow Jones Industrial Average 
    DJIA,
    +0.45%

     closed 152.97 points, or 0.5%, higher at 34,347.03; and the Nasdaq Composite
    COMP,
    +1.42%

     shed 58.96 points, or 0.5%, to 11,226.36.

    Stocks in Asia declined Monday, led by a 2% fall by Hong Kong’s Hang Seng Index
    HSI,
    -2.05%
    .
    The Shanghai Composite
    SHCOMP,
    -1.03%

    slid as well, as thousands of protesters in major Chinese cities, including Shanghai, called for President Xi Jinping to resign. The unprecedented protests were spurred by frustration with China’s strict lockdowns as part of its “zero-COVID” policy.

    “Sentiment has turned sour as unrest across China grows,” Stephen Innes, managing partner at SPI Asset Management, said in a note Sunday night. “The risk of the situation escalating from here and short-term volatility remains high.”

    Oil prices fell sharply Sunday as well, as investors worried about slipping demand in China. West Texas Intermediate crude futures
    CL.1,
    -2.71%

    were last down more than 2%, at $74.27 a barrel, its lowest price year to date. Prices for Brent crude
    BRNF23,
    -2.70%
    ,
    the international standard, sank as well.

    Source link

  • Republicans clinch slim majority in House, likely signaling gridlock ahead

    Republicans clinch slim majority in House, likely signaling gridlock ahead

    Republicans will take over the U.S. House of Representatives two years into President Joe Biden’s term, though their narrow majority looks set to cause headaches for GOP leaders.

    Republican hopes for a strong red wave have been dashed, but the Associated Press said Wednesday that the party won enough House seats — 218 — to control that chamber of Congress, as results from the midterm elections continue to be tabulated.

    The battle for the U.S. Senate went to the Democrats late Saturday. Democrats will retain their hold on the Senate after winning a key race in Nevada, giving Biden’s party control of at least one chamber of Congress for the next two years.

    “Republicans have officially flipped the People’s House!” Rep. Kevin McCarthy, R-Calif., the front-runner to become House Speaker, tweeted late Wednesday. “Americans are ready for a new direction, and House Republicans are ready to deliver.”

    While Republicans will control just one chamber of Congress, they now are expected to deliver a check on Biden’s policy priorities, such as by potentially using a debt-ceiling showdown to force spending cuts. 

    In a statement late Wednesday, President Joe Biden called for bipartisanship: “The American people want us to get things done for them. They want us to focus on the issues that matter to them and on making their lives better. And I will work with anyone — Republican or Democrat — willing to work with me to deliver results.”

    Related: Democrats weigh end run around Republicans to raise debt limit

    And see: Republican lawmakers likely to target ‘woke capitalism’ after the midterm elections, analysts say

    The Republican House majority has yet to be finalized but could be the narrowest of the 21st century, even less than in 2001, when the GOP had a nine-seat majority with two independents.

    Washington is likely to face new periods of gridlock, with Democrats also keeping their hold on the White House since Biden still has two years to serve before the 2024 presidential election. That’s after Democrats in the past two years used party-line votes to push through measures such as March 2021’s stimulus law and this past summer’s package targeting healthcare, climate change and taxes.

    The House switching to red from blue fits the historical pattern in which a first-term president’s party tends to lose congressional ground in the midterms. The GOP highlighted raging inflation in its effort to win over American voters.

    The House seats to flip to the GOP included one held by Democratic Rep. Elaine Luria of Virginia, who lost to Republican challenger Jen Kiggans, as well as two seats in Florida. But Democrats also flipped House seats and won re-elections in bellwether races, with Virginia Rep. Abigail Spanberger and Indiana Rep. Frank Mrvan notching victories.

    Read more: Here are the congressional seats that have flipped in the midterm elections

    Democrats have had a grip on the House since the 2018 midterms. They’ve run the Senate for two years, controlling the 50-50 chamber only because Vice President Kamala Harris can cast tiebreaking votes.

    Among the competitive Senate races, Democrats kept their hold on seats in Arizona, Colorado and New Hampshire, while scoring a pick-up in Pennsylvania. Republicans maintained their control of seats in North Carolina, Ohio and Wisconsin.

    Georgia’s Senate contest is headed to a Dec. 6 runoff, but its outcome has become less significant.

    Related: Ohio’s J.D. Vance tells MarketWatch he wants to end tax loopholes for tech companies and ban congressional stock trading

    Betting markets since late on Election Day have been seeing Democrats staying in charge of the Senate and Republicans winning the House. Ahead of last Tuesday’s voting, betting markets had signaled confidence in GOP prospects for taking over both the Senate and House.

    Analysts had said voters last month appeared increasingly focused on Republican issues such as high prices for gasoline
    RB00,
    -0.35%

    and other essentials, at the expense of Democrats’ agenda items such as climate change and abortion rights.

    But exit polls suggested that Republicans performed worse than expected because many Democrats and independents voted partly to show their disapproval of former President Donald Trump — and those voters were energized by the Supreme Court’s Dobbs decision that overturned Roe.

    See: Anti-Trump vote and Dobbs abortion ruling boost Democrats in 2022 election

    The former president announced his 2024 White House run late Tuesday. Earlier Tuesday, House Republicans chose Rep. Kevin McCarthy of California, the current minority leader, as their candidate for speaker. Thirty-one Republicans voted against McCarthy, signaling that he must shore up his support before the vote on the speakership takes place in January.  It’s an early sign of how Republicans’ narrow majority is creating turbulence for the House GOP leadership. 

    Now read: What a Republican-controlled House might mean for tech: Plenty of hand-wringing over Section 230 liability shield

    And see: DeSantis viewed as frontrunner for Republican 2024 presidential nomination after Trump’s candidates flop in midterm elections

    Plus: Senate Republicans pick Mitch McConnell as their leader, as Rick Scott’s challenge flops

    Source link

  • Dow futures jump 700 points, 10-year Treasury yield drops below 4% on softer-than-expected CPI

    Dow futures jump 700 points, 10-year Treasury yield drops below 4% on softer-than-expected CPI

    U.S. stock futures surged to the upside on Thursday after softer-than-expected consumer price data. Up just 83 points ahead of the data, Dow Jones Industrial Average futures
    YM00,
    +2.70%

    were up 900 points, or 2.7%, to 33,434. S&P 500 futures
    ES00,
    +3.65%

    surged 118 points, or 3.1%, to 3,873.25, with those futures up just 11 points ahead of the data. Nasdaq-100 futures
    NQ00,
    +4.70%

    surged 390.50 points, or 3.6%, to 11,215. Bond yields were tumbling, with that of the 10-year note
    TMUBMUSD10Y,
    3.907%

    plunging 21 basis points to 3.939% and that of the two-year
    TMUBMUSD02Y,
    4.365%

    off 23 basis points to 4,399%. The ICE Dollar Index
    DXY,
    -1.44%

    slid 0.8%, while gold
    GC00,
    +1.84%

    surged $21 to $1,735.90 an ounce. The CPI report showed headline October inflation cooling more than expected to 7.7%, which has encouraged investors hoping the Federal Reserve can begin easing up on interest rate hikes sooner than later.

    Source link

  • Dow hits 2-month high as blue-chip gauge heads for longest winning streak since May

    Dow hits 2-month high as blue-chip gauge heads for longest winning streak since May

    The Dow Jones Industrial Average rose nearly 600 points on Friday to its highest level in two months as the blue-chip gauge remained on track for a sixth straight session in the green in what would be its longest winning streak since May 27, according to Dow Jones Market Data.

    All three major indexes were trading higher as expectations that the Federal Reserve will shift toward smaller interest-rate hikes after its November meeting have offset weak earnings this week from some of the market’s biggest megacap technology names.

    How are stocks trading?
    • The S&P 500
      SPX,
      +1.67%

      gained 59 points, or 1.6%, to 3,866.

    • The Dow Jones Industrial Average
      DJIA,
      +1.98%

      rose 589 points, or 1.8%, to 32,623.

    • The Nasdaq Composite
      COMP,
      +1.80%

      advanced 181 points, or 1.7%, to 10,974.

    Both the S&P 500 and Nasdaq were on track to cement their second weekly gain in a row on Friday, although the tech-heavy Nasdaq has substantially lagged after Thursday’s performance, where it was the only one of the major indexes to finish in the red following abysmal earnings from Meta Platforms Inc.

    Barring an intraday turnaround, the Dow is on track to log its fourth straight weekly advance. It remains down just 10.2% so far this year.

    The blue-chip gauge has risen 5% so far this week, while the S&P 500 is up 3.1% and the Nasdaq has risen 1.1%.

    What’s driving markets?

    All eyes were on the Dow Friday as the blue-chip gauge was the only major index to reach new notable highs late this week as its advance during the month of October has somewhat ameliorated its losses for the year so far.

    The Dow has risen 13.5% since the start of the month, leaving it on track for its best October performance since it was created in the late 19th century.

    Perhaps the biggest reason for the Dow’s rise this month is tied to its composition. The average is generally light on technology stocks, while including more of the energy and industrial stocks that have outperformed this year.

    “The Dow just has more of the winners embedded in it and that has been the secret to its success,” said Art Hogan, chief market strategist at B.Reily Wealth.

    Despite some volatility in the premarket session, all three major indexes turned higher after the open as investors remained fixated on expectations for the Fed to down shift to smaller interest rate hikes after next week’s policy meeting — an expectation that endured after the latest reports on inflation and wage growth released Friday.

    See:Market expectations start to shift in direction of slower pace of rate hikes by Fed

    Brad Conger, deputy chief investment officer at Hirtle, Callaghan & Co., said Friday’s data didn’t interfere with mounting expectations that the Fed might soon pause its campaign of aggressive rate hikes.

    “Basically, the market is starting to price in a pause, not a pivot, but maybe a pause. The end is in sight,” Conger said.

    The September core personal consumption expenditures price index — the Fed’s preferred gauge of inflation pressures — came in roughly in line with economists expectations, while a more modest 1.2% gain in private wages and salaries in the third quarter was interpreted as a sign that wage growth may have finally peaked, according to Andrew Hunter, senior U.S. economist at Capital Economics.

    “The Federal Reserve has not yet broken the persistent trend in core inflation and so will likely stay aggressive at next week’s meeting. However, some areas of the economy show significant weakness and could build the case that the Fed downshifts to smaller rate hikes in 2023,” Jeffrey Roach, Chief Economist for LPL Financial in Charlotte, NC, said.

    The final reading of the University of Michigan consumer sentiment index for October added 1.3 index points from 58.6 in September, and was up slightly from an initial reading of 59.8 earlier in the month.

    See: GDP looked great for the U.S. economy, but it really wasn’t

    Since the start of the week, investors have digested a batch of disappointing numbers from some of America’s largest tech companies, which helped to sully the overall quality of S&P 500 earnings this quarter.

    On Thursday night, Amazon.com
    AMZN,
    -9.29%

    joined Microsoft Corp.
    MSFT,
    +2.75%
    ,
    Alphabet Inc.
    GOOGL,
    +2.76%

    and Meta
    META,
    +0.34%

    by publishing disappointing earnings for the quarter that ended Sept. 30.

    But despite the disappointing results reported this week, in aggregate, S&P 500 firms are beating earnings expectations by 3.8%, according to Refinitiv data. That’s compared to a long-term average of 4.1% since 1994. However, if energy firms are excluded, the picture darkens substantially.

    Opinion: The cloud boom has hit its stormiest moment yet, and it is costing investors billions

    Shares of Amazon were off 10% after the e-commerce giant, which dominates the consumer-discretionary sector, predicted slower holiday sales and profit while also reporting slower-than-expected growth in its key cloud-computing business.

    Peter Garnry, head of equity strategy at Saxo Bank, said investors were unnerved by Amazon’s guidance cut.

    “The outlook for Q4 was what terrified investors with the retailer guidance operating income in the range $0-4 billion vs est. $4.7 billion and revenue of $140-148 billion vs est. $155.5 billion,” he said in a note.

    One notable exception to the downbeat earnings news this week was Apple Inc.
    AAPL,
    +7.21%
    ,
    which proved a bright spot after the iPhone maker’s revenue and earnings topped forecasts, helped by record back-to-school sales of Macs. Shares were up nearly 0.9% in premarket trading.

    Companies in focus
    • Oil giants Chevron Corp. CVX and Exxon Mobil Corp. XOM were climbing on Friday after reporting strong results. Chevron is a Dow component.

    • Pinterest Inc. PINS also saw strong sales and profit in the third quarter, beating Wall Street expectations. Its shares were up more than 14%.

    • Intel Corp. INTC shares advanced more than 8% after reporting an earnings beat. The chip maker said it would cut costs by $3 billion next year, and lay off employees, as it trimmed its outlook again.

    See also: Live Markets coverage:

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  • U.S. stock futures give up early gains after Wall Street’s best week since June

    U.S. stock futures give up early gains after Wall Street’s best week since June

    U.S. stock futures gave up strong early-session gains overnight after Wall Street notched its best week since June.

    After initially surging about 300 points, or 1% on Sunday evening, Dow Jones Industrial Average futures
    YM00,
    -0.02%

    were last about flat at midnight Eastern, while S&P 500 futures
    ES00,
    +0.05%

    and Nasdaq-100 futures
    NQ00,
    +0.16%

    similarly gave up sharp early gains.

    The U.S. Dollar Index
    DXY,
    +0.19%

    nudged higher, while the British pound
    GBPUSD,
    +0.12%

    surrendered much of an afternoon rally fueled by the possibility that Rishi Sunak will be Britain’s next prime minister, after Boris Johnson bowed out of the running. Crude prices
    CL.1,
    -0.55%

    ticked slightly higher Sunday.

    On Friday, the Dow Jones Industrial Average
    DJIA,
    +2.47%

     gained 748.97 points, or 2.5%, to close at 31,082.56. The S&P 500
    SPX,
    +2.37%

     climbed 86.97 points, or 2.4%, to finish at 3,752.75, and the Nasdaq Composite
    COMP,
    -0.81%

     rose 244.87 points, or 2.3%, to end at 10,859.72.

    The three major indexes scored their biggest weekly percentage gains since June last week. For the week, the Dow rose 4.9%, the S&P 500 gained 4.7% and the Nasdaq advanced 5.2%.  Yields on 10-year Treasury notes
    TMUBMUSD10Y,
    4.156%

    ended Friday at 4.228%.

    Investors were heartened by reports that the Fed may back off slightly from its aggressive rate-hiking policy later this year.

    The upcoming week is the busiest of the third-quarter earnings season, with 165 S&P 500 companies, including 12 Dow components reporting. That includes earnings from Big Tech companies Alphabet
    GOOGL,
    +1.16%
    ,
    Amazon
    AMZN,
    +3.53%
    ,
    Apple
    AAPL,
    +2.71%
    ,
    Meta
    META,
    -1.16%

    and Microsoft
    MSFT,
    +2.53%
    .

    Source link

  • This industry could be worth $180 billion by 2040. Citigroup offers four stock names to play it, and a few more to think about.

    This industry could be worth $180 billion by 2040. Citigroup offers four stock names to play it, and a few more to think about.

    Investors are bracing for some choppiness on Wall Street, with oil prices falling as growth worries rattle around the globe. That’s as the clock ticks down to CPI and the start of a earnings season later this week, and in the backdrop a war is intensifying in Europe.

    Tough times don’t last, but tough investors do right? Maybe, hopefully. In any case, focusing on the distant future might offer some comfort right now.

    And that’s where we’re headed with our call of the day from Citigroup, whose strategists have stock ideas to play what they expect will be one of the ten fastest-growing markets through 2040.

    They are talking about the global fuel cell industry, a direct play on the green energy debate, and “reaching the part that batteries cannot.”

    “Fuel cells enable both de-carbonization and energy resilience, and we see them as crucial in harder-to-abate sectors like commercial vehicles and marine,” a Citi team led by research analyst Martin Wilkie told clients in a note on Tuesday.

    Their base case sees this market reaching 50 gigawatts (GW) and $40 billion by 2030, offering a compound average growth rate of more than 35% in dollar terms, with further acceleration to 500GW/$180 billion by 2040.

    They admit they’re on the bullish side with these projections, and note fuel cell stocks are on average down around 70% since their January 2021 peaks . 

    “The fuel cell equity story has had false starts before, but we see the impetus from emissions policy as well as announced hydrogen plans as creating attractive opportunities,” said the Citi analysts, highlighting policies such as the U.S. Inflation Reduction Act, which aims at beefing up renewable energy and a recent EU move to offer more green-energy research and development subsidies.

    While passenger cars were a big source of demand for the growing fuel cell market in 2021, they don’t think it can be a big competitor to battery electric. However, stationary power, such as distributed and backup power generation and heavy-duty transport, think commercial vehicles, off-road and later marine are set to become key fuel-cell markets.

    U.K.-based Ceres Power
    CWR,
    -1.69%
    ,
    Plug Power
    PLUG,
    -0.25%
    ,
    Belgium’s Umicore
    UMI,
    -1.69%
    ,
    and Japan’s Toyota
    7203,
    -0.96%

    TM,
    -0.73%

    are Citi’s buy-rated stocks with high exposure to the fuel-cell theme.

    Other names they mention, include Daimler Truck
    DTG,
    +1.32%

    and Volvo
    VOLV.B,
    +0.21%

    VOLV.A,
    +0.12%
    ,
    which are working with Germany’s Traton
    8TRA,
    -2.09%

    on a joint venture called Cellcentric that aims to develop that technology for trucks, with a production goal of 2025. Others are outsourcing fuel-cell tech, such as Italy’s Iveco Group
    IVG,
    +0.10%
    ,
    which has teamed up with South Korea’s Hyundai
    005380,
    -4.27%
    ,
    and U.S.-based Paccar
    PCAR,
    +0.23%

    with Toyota
    TM,
    -0.73%
    .

    The markets

    Stock futures
    ES00,
    -0.38%

    YM00,
    -0.22%

    NQ00,
    -0.46%

    have pared some losses, while bond yields
    TMUBMUSD10Y,
    3.927%

    TMUBMUSD02Y,
    4.307%

    are mixed, and the dollar
    DXY,
    -0.14%

    has turned lower. Oil prices
    CL.1,
    -1.42%

    are also pressure.

    The buzz

    Shares of the world’s biggest chip maker, TSMC
    2330,
    -8.33%
    ,
    fell 8% in Taiwan
    Y9999,
    -4.35%
    ,
    where stocks dropped more than 4% following new limits by the U.S. imposed on exports of semiconductors and chip-making equipment to China.

    The Bank of England made the second move this week to calm jittery markets, saying Tuesday it will expand its bond purchases to index-linked U.K. bond. But the program still ends Friday, something the pensions fund industry wants to see extended. Those yields
    TMBMKGB-10Y,
    4.448%

    TMBMKGB-30Y,
    4.718%
    ,
    meanwhile, continue to creep higher.

    The National Federation of Independent Business small-business index showed confidence rising in September, but inflation a nagging problem. At noon Eastern we’ll hear from Cleveland Fed President Loretta Mester.

    Subscription-based private aviation company Flexjet plans to go public through a merger with SPAC Horizon Acquisition
    HZON,

    valuing it at $3.1 billion.

    The U.S.’s third-biggest railroad union will be back at the negotiating table with employers on Tuesday, after rejecting a deal and raising the possibility of crippling strikes.

    The Kremlin’s war hawks were thrilled at the devastating strikes across Ukraine on Monday. Now they want more. G-7 leaders are holding an emergency meeting to discuss the ramping up of the war.

    Amazon’s
    AMZN,
    -0.78%

    second Prime-Day like event kicks off Tuesday.

    Best of the web

    U.K. spy chief says Russians are starting to realize the cost of Putin’s war in Ukraine

    India’s biodegradable bags are in demand, and reviving its industry

    We are not at peace. The world needs to get ready for more sabotage

    One of the greatest transfers of intergenerational wealth is coming, says head of TIAA

    The chart

    This graphic by Visual Capitalist’s Truman Du, shows Disney’s
    DIS,
    -2.06%

    streaming empire — Disney+, Hulu, ESPN+ — is “giving Netflix
    NFLX,
    +2.33%

    a run for its money.”


    Visual Capitalist, Disney, Netflix quarterly reports

    The tickers

    These were the top searched tickers on MarketWatch as of 6 a.m. Eastern Time:

    Ticker

    Security name

    TSLA,
    -0.05%
    Tesla

    GME,
    -1.38%
    GameStop

    AMC,
    -2.76%
    AMC Entertainment Holdings

    AAPL,
    +0.24%
    Apple

    NIO,
    -3.49%
    NIO

    BBBY,
    -2.21%
    Bed Bath & Beyond

    APE,
    -6.53%
    AMC Entertainment Holdings preferred shares

    NVDA,
    -3.36%
    Nvidia

    TWTR,
    +2.40%
    Twitter

    AMD,
    -1.08%
    Advanced Micro Devices

    Random reads

    Everyone hail to this 2,560-pound pumpkin.

    “Where’s Tony gone?” Supply-chain woes hit (shudder) Frosted Flakes.

    Need to Know starts early and is updated until the opening bell, but sign up here to get it delivered once to your email box. The emailed version will be sent out at about 7:30 a.m. Eastern.

    Listen to the Best New Ideas in Money podcast with MarketWatch reporter Charles Passy and economist Stephanie Kelton.

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  • Dow books 630-point drop after strong jobs data rattles investors, but stocks cement weekly gains

    Dow books 630-point drop after strong jobs data rattles investors, but stocks cement weekly gains

    U.S. stocks finished sharply lower Friday, but still booked their best weekly gains in a month, after September jobs data showed an unexpected fall in the unemployment rate that’s anticipated to reinforce the Federal Reserve’s resolve to keep tightening monetary policy.

    Investors also weighed a profit warning at a leading microchip maker ahead of next week’s increase in quarterly earnings results.

    What happened
    • The Dow Jones Industrial Average
      DJIA,
      -2.11%

      fell 630.15 points, or 2.1%, ending at 29,296.79, but off the session low of 29,142.66.

    • The S&P 500
      SPX,
      -2.80%

      dropped 104.86 points, or 2.8%, closing at 3,639.66.

    • The Nasdaq Composite
      COMP,
      -3.80%

      shed 420.91 points, or 3.8%, to finish at 10,652.40.

    Stocks posted back-to-back losses, trimming weekly gains, but recorded their best weekly gains since Sept. 9, according to Dow Jones Market Data.

    Read: Will the stock market be open on Columbus Day?

    What drove markets

    Stocks recorded sharp losses Friday after the Labor Department said the U.S. economy added 263,000 jobs in September, while the unemployment rate declined to 3.5% from an August reading of 3.7%. Average hourly earnings rose 0.3%.

    Still, a powerful rally earlier in the week boosted all three major stock indexes to weekly gains, a departure from three straight weekly losses, according to Dow Jones Market Data.

    “It’s manic. We are all on edge,” said Kent Engelke, chief economic strategist at Capitol Securities Management, of the sharp market swings.

    “Any piece of good news is a cause for an explosive rally,” Engelke said by phone. On the flip side, he pegged technology-based trading “in an illiquid and emotional market” as exacerbating Friday’s selloff.

    “It’s a reflection that people have re-entered the mind-set that the Fed is going to be raising rates at a rapid clip, probably for longer than what they might have suspected at the start of the week,” said Robert Pavlik, a senior portfolio manager at Dakota Wealth Management, by phone.

    Pavlik expects the Fed to keep tightening financial conditions to try to head off inflation. “But once we turn the corner, and the economy slows down, the Fed probably will be more aggressive in cutting rates on the way down.”

    In addition, the Fed has been “draining liquidity from the system at a remarkable pace,” wrote Rick Rieder, BlackRock’s chief investment officer of global fixed income, in a Friday client note, while pointing to an astounding $1.3 trillion decline in the central bank’s balance sheet since the December 2021 peak.

    Pavlik at Dakota Wealth said he anticipates the Fed will start slowing interest rate hikes by mid-next year, which likely means continued pressure for the stock market, particularly with a backdrop of big oil-price
    CL00,
    +5.37%

    gains this week after global crude producers voted to cut monthly production and with the U.S. dollar’s
    DXY,
    +0.44%

    surge this year against a basket of rival currencies.

    U.S. crude oil prices climbed for a fifth day in a row on Friday to settle at $92.64 a barrel, while booking at 16.5% weekly gain.

    New York Fed President John Williams said Friday that benchmark interest rates likely need to hit 4.5% over time. The Fed’s policy rate now sits in a 3%-3.25% range, up from a zero-0.25% range a year ago.

    The benchmark 10-year Treasury rate
    TMUBMUSD10Y,
    3.889%

    climbed to 3.883% Friday, as the key metric used to gauge the affordability of credit for businesses, household and the economy posted 10 straight weeks of gains, according to Dow Jones Market Data.

    Read: Bond markets facing historic losses grow anxious of Fed that ‘isn’t blinking yet’

    Investors continued to hope for relief on the inflation front and will be monitoring next week’s release of the September consumer-price index, as well as corporate earnings season as it picks up.

    Companies in focus
    • Twitter Inc.
      TWTR,
      -0.43%

      shares fell 0.4% Friday after a judge delayed a looming trial between the company and Elon Musk to allow the Tesla Inc.
      TSLA,
      -6.32%

      CEO more time to close his $44 billion acquisition of the social media platform.

    • Besides the jobs report, investors weighed a profit warning from microchip maker Advanced Micro Devices Inc. AMD, which said the PC market weakened significantly during the quarter. AMD shares fell 13.9%, and rivals including Nvidia Corp. NVDA and Intel Corp. INTC also closed lower.

    • U.S. cannabis stocks were choppy Friday, with the AdvisorShares Pure US Cannabis ETF
      MSOS,
      -2.80%

      ending lower, following steep gains earlier in the week after President Joe Biden said the U.S. would consider de-scheduling cannabis from its current position as a Schedule 1 narcotic under federal law.

    —Steven Goldstein contributed reporting to this article

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  • Dow falls 500 points Friday as stocks book third straight quarterly loss, set new 2022 lows

    Dow falls 500 points Friday as stocks book third straight quarterly loss, set new 2022 lows

    U.S. stocks dropped sharply Friday, with major indexes posting their lowest finishes since 2020 and logging a third straight quarterly decline as investors grew more fearful that aggressive interest rate hikes by the Federal Reserve will drive the economy into a downturn in an attempt to quell inflation.

    What’s happening
    • The Dow Jones Industrial Average
      DJIA,
      -1.71%

      dropped 500.10 points, or 1.7%, to close at 28,725.51.

    • The S&P 500
      SPX,
      -1.51%

      dropped 54.85 points, or 1.5%, to end at 3,585.61.

    • The Nasdaq Composite
      COMP,
      -0.43%

      shed 161.88 points, of 1.5%, finishing at 10,575.61.

    The drop left the Dow and S&P 500 at their lowest since November 2020, while the Nasdaq posted its lowest close since July 29, 2020. The Dow dropped 8.8% in September, while the S&P 500 tumbled 9.3% and the Nasdaq lost 10.5%.

    For the quarter, the Dow dropped 6.7%, the S&P 500 declined 5.3% and the Nasdaq gave up 4.1%.

    What’s driving the market

    In keeping with the historical pattern, U.S. stocks suffered during the month of September as an assertive Federal Reserve helped push Treasury yields and the dollar higher, which in turn undermined equity valuations.

    See: It’s the worst September for stocks since 2008. What that means for October.

    Investors on Friday digested a reading from the personal consumption expenditure inflation index for August, which showed that core consumer prices climbed by 0.6% last month, more than Wall Street’s forecast of 0.5%. The core inflation measure excludes volatile food and energy prices.

    See: Cheaper gas holds down inflation, PCE shows, but the cost of everything else is still going up fast

    “That means the Fed will remain hell-bent on killing inflation. And the best way to do that is to increase rates, kill the housing market, and get rental costs down. The PCE doesn’t have housing and rents as a big component as the CPI does, so the fact that it is rising is a warning sign,” said Louis Navellier, founder of Navellier & Associates, in emailed comments.

    Read: Will October be another stock-market ‘bear killer’? Why investors need to tread carefully around seasonal trends.

    The reading largely confirmed similar data from the consumer-price index, another closely watched inflation barometer, which sent stocks lower earlier this month. Since that report was released just over two weeks ago, the S&P 500 has fallen more than 10%.

    Helping to underscore this point, data out of the eurozone showed inflation accelerated at a record pace last month.

    See: Eurozone Inflation posts new record high of 10% in September

    In other news, investors also heard from Fed Vice Chair Lael Brainard, who reiterated that the central bank would keep interest rates elevated to combat inflation, even if it harms the economy.

    See: Fed won’t pull back from rate hikes prematurely, Brainard says

    Since it will take time for high interest rates to bring inflation down, Brainard said the Fed is “committed to avoiding pulling back prematurely.”

    Investors were also keeping an eye on megacap tech stocks. Apple Inc. AAPL fell 3% on Friday after leading markets lower a day earlier following a downgrade by Bank of America.

    Need to know: Here’s why investors should start betting on Apple and the stock market now

    A final reading on the University of Michigan consumer-sentiment index for September showed consumers’ view of the economy improved somewhat during the month due to falling gas prices, even as their outlook remained broadly pessimistic.

    Investors are now facing “what may be one of the most important earning seasons in a very long time, with a major rally in the cards if earnings don’t disappoint, and if the bears are right, lead to a further leg down if earnings disappoint and 4th quarter estimates are cut,” Navellier said.

    See: U.S. consumers remain pessimistic about economy even as inflation fears wane

    Stocks in focus

    — Steve Goldstein and Barbara Kollmeyer contributed to this article

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