ASX 200 to fall, iron ore slumps to US$100, Microsoft and Alphabet jump on earnings

Get up to date on overnight market activity and the big events for the day.
The Morning Wrap

Livewire Markets

ASX 200 futures are trading 38 points lower, down -0.52% as of 8:30 am AEDT.

Major US benchmarks slumped on weak earnings and fears of an economic slowdown, Alphabet and Microsoft shares surge after hours on better-than-expected earnings, First Republic shares almost halve amid US$100bn worth of deposit outflows, iron ore prices fell for a sixth straight session to US$100 a tonne, lithium stocks continued to sell off after a bounce on Monday and how does the ASX 200 historically perform in the month of April?

Let's dive in.

Source: Market Index

S&P 500 SESSION CHART

S&P 500 was flat on Monday but sold off on Tuesday (Source: TradingView) 

MARKETS

Welcome back – Today's Wrap will mainly recap some of the key US earnings that have come through in the last 24 hours.

  • S&P 500 was unchanged on Monday but fell sharply on Tuesday, closing at worst levels
  • Benchmarks were weighed down by earnings from names including logistics (UPS), banks (First Republic) and packaging (Packaging Corp)
  • US 2-year yield falls sharply over the last two sessions, down 23 bps to 3.95%
  • US stocks face near-term risks of further Fed hikes and weakening earnings (Bloomberg)
  • US retail investors snap up new Treasury bills at a record pace (FT)
  • Hedge funds most short S&P 500 futures since October 2011 (Reuters)
  • Hedge funds placing biggest ever short on benchmark Treasuries (Bloomberg)
  • US debt ceiling seen as an increasing risk for markets with many GOP seemingly prepared to let US default without spending cuts or policy changes (Washington Post)

STOCKS

  • Apple wins appeals court ruling, affirms App Store isn't a monopoly (Bloomberg)
  • Disney begins a second round of layoffs (Reuters)
  • 3M to cut headcount by 6,000 (CNN)
  • Microsoft agrees to stop bundling Teams with Office in Europe (FT)

EARNINGS

Note: After hour prices subject to change

Pepsi (+2.3%): Beat both EPS and revenue expectations, net sales rose 10.2% but overall volumes were down 2% across all categories (offset by a 16% increase in prices).

  • “Organic revenue increased 14.3% and represents our sixth consecutive quarter of double-digit organic revenue growth. Our top-line performance was broad-based across geographies ..." – CEO Ramon Laguarta

Visa (-1.4%): Double beat, net revenues rose 12% amid “stable payment volumes and processed transactions growth” and returned US$bn to shareholders.

Alphabet (-2.0%, after hours +2.0%): Announced earnings after hours, double beat as advertising sales recover, plans to buy back up to US$70bn of Class A & C shares.

  • On ads: "In Google advertising search and other revenues grew 2% YoY reflecting an increase in the travel and retail verticals offset partially by a decline in finance as well as in media and entertainment.”
  • On Youtube ads: “We saw signs of stabilisation and performance while in network there wasn't incremental pull back in advertising spend.”
  • On cloud spend: "In Q1, we continued to see slower growth of consumption as customers optimised GCP costs, reflecting the macro backdrop, which remains uncertain"

Microsoft (-2.3%, after hours +8.6%): Also released earnings after hours, double beat, all three major segments (PC, software and Azure) beat expectations.

General Motors (-4.0%): Double beat, raised full year earnings expectations but lowered its guidance for net income attributable to shareholders due to US$875m in special charges related to a previously announced employee buyout program.

UPS (-10.0%): Net income fell 17.7%, revenue was down 6% – both of which missed earnings expectations.

  • On volumes: “In the first quarter, deceleration in U.S. retail sales resulted in lower volume than we anticipated, and we faced ongoing demand weakness in Asia.” – CEO Carol Tome
  • “Given current macro conditions, we expect volume to remain under pressure.”

First Republic (-49.4%): The regional bank lost more than US$100bn or 40% in deposits in the March quarter.

  • “With the closure of several banks in March, we experienced unprecedented deposit outflows. We moved swiftly and leveraged our high-quality loan and securities portfolios to secure additional liquidity. We are working to restructure our balance sheet and reduce our expenses and short-term borrowings." – CFO Neal Holland

EARNINGS RECAP

As of Monday, 88 S&P 500 companies had reported first quarter results. 68% beat EPS expectations, down from a record 90% last week but still above the historical post-Week 2 average of 63%.

Overnight, approximately 60 earnings results have come through, with 77% beating EPS and 73% beating sales expectations. 5 companies raised guidance while 2 lowered.

 ECONOMY

  • South Korea economy grows 0.3% in the first quarter, risks remain (Bloomberg)
  • US consumer confidence slips to 9-month low in April (Reuters)
  • German Ifo survey shows further improvement in business conditions (Bloomberg)
  • Sources say China pushes banks this month to cut deposit interest rates further (Reuters)

US-listed sector ETFs (Source: Market Index)

Deeper Dive

Sectors to Watch

Tech: The Nasdaq fell almost 2% overnight. But at the same time, heavyweights Microsoft and Alphabet are up 2-8% in after hours. So what will it be? Its also worth noting that Alphabet's positive commentary about the ads market. Can that help out a name like Appen?

Lithium: The Global X Lithium ETF fell 3.8% overnight after a bounce on Monday. Heavyweight names like Albemarle and SQM closed a respective 4% and 1.4% lower. This could see some more negative flow follow through for local names. That said, Chile's nationalisation plans has helped boost several Australia-based producers, notably Pilbara Minerals, which is up 8.7% in the last two sessions. Does the shift towards ex-Chile (and perhaps South America) continue?

Iron ore and copper: US-listed BHP shares fell 3.4% overnight. Singapore iron ore futures are down 14.8% in the last six sessions to US$100.35 a tonne. Likewise, copper prices are down 5.95% in the last five to US$3.85/lb. So a rather heavy session for materials can be expected.

Market ramblings: Technicals and seasonality

The S&P 500 fell 1.58% overnight, which represents its first decline of more than 1% in 22 days, the longest streak since November 2021 (37 days).

From a technical perspective, the S&P 500 has been sitting around the 4,100 area for the past few weeks. An inflection point is brewing and the key earnings over the next few days might be the catalyst to drive a directional move for markets.

S&P 500 weekly chart (Source: TradingView)

I've been working on a little data project that's looks at historical ASX 200 performance. The data averages daily performance between June 1992 and March 2023. The numbers running along the bottom refer to the day of the year (e.g. April 26 would be day 116).

Source: Market Index

April and December have historically been the strongest months of the year. Both average gains of 0.11%. But as we head into May and June, things tend to get a little bit choppy. Both months average declines of 0.02%.

Of course, these are just historical and seasonal performances. But something to be mindful of.

Key Events

ASX corporate actions occurring today:

  • Trading ex-div: None
  • Dividends paid: Australian Clinical Labs (ACL) – $0.07, Adacel Technologies (ADA) – $0.015
  • Listing: None

Economic calendar (AEST):

  • 11:30 am: Australia Inflation Rate
  • 4:00 pm: Germany Consumer Confidence
  • 10:30 pm: US Durable Goods Orders

This Morning Wrap was first published for Market Index by Kerry Sun.

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Livewire and Market Index's pre-opening bell news and analysis wrap. Available weekday mornings and written by Kerry Sun.

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