ASX 200 to fall, Wall St higher as earnings season ramps up + RBA minutes in focus
ASX 200 futures are trading 20 points lower, down -0.28% as of 8:20 am AEST.

S&P 500 SESSION CHART

MARKETS
- S&P 500 higher, finished near best levels after a modest pullback on Friday
- Relatively quiet session – Main headlines include the better-than-expected US Empire manufacturing Index and softer-than-expected China Q2 GDP
- Disinflation momentum, rising soft-landing expectations and peak Fed still the major bullish focus points for markets
- US earnings activity will pick up later this week – Approximately 12% of the S&P 500’s market cap will report this week
- US Dollar Index down ~2% last week, which marks its biggest pullback since last November and broke the psychologically important 100 level
- Commodities pull back, most down for a second straight session including WTI crude, copper, gold and aluminium
- Hedge funds rush to unwind bearish stock positions (Reuters)
- Goldman Sachs says last week’s short covering in US Macro Projects was the largest since November 2020 and ranked in the 100th percentile vs. the past five years
- Trough in earnings revisions viewed as a positive for signal for stocks (Bloomberg)
STOCKS
- Richemont shares slum on signs of falling luxury demand in US, China (Bloomberg)
- Netflix eyes video games for its next growth chapter (Business Insider)
- Ford shares tumbled after the company said prices on its electric F-150 Lightning pickups would fall as much as $10,000 (CNBC)
- Tesla built its first Cybertruck over the weekend following multiple delays (CNBC)
- Lilly slows Alzheimer's by 60% for mildly impaired patients (Reuters)
EARNINGS
There’s a major focus on the upcoming batch of megacap tech earnings – aka the ‘Magnificent Seven’ – Apple, Microsoft, Alphabet, Amazon, Nvidia, Tesla and Meta Platforms
- These stocks drove 73% of S&P 500 gains in the first half
- The Group is expected to represent all US corporate earnings, with a 21% year-on-year increase vs. the 10% year-on-year loss for the rest of the S&P 500
- The Group is expected to grow earnings by an average of 19% over the next 12 months vs. the 8% increase expected for the rest of the S&P 500
ECONOMY
- China's economic growth faltering, fueling calls for more stimulus (FT)
- PBoC cuts back on one-year cash injection despite weak growth (Bloomberg)
- Goldman Sachs cut US recession odds again to 20% from 25% (Markets Insider)
- Inflation gap between US and UK set to hit highest level in decades (FT)
- UK economy seen falling behind further vs. the Eurozone next year (Bloomberg)
- UK inflation expected to drop but heat still on Bank of England (Guardian)
-
Australia expects unemployment rate to rise (Reuters)

DEEPER DIVE
Hans' Charts of the Week
I'm going to mix things up today and do my own version of Charts of the Week. Note that I'm the macro guy on the team and I don't do stock picks. But I do know a thing or two about the influence the big picture can have on corporate earnings. Today's collection of charts all come from the fine people at Societe Generale (aka SocGen).
First up, a chart I am sure you are all familiar with - the S&P 500 with then without the AI basket. But this one comes with a twist. The S&P 500 chart below is the gains over the past few months measured up against EPS forecast changes. It seems to suggest that momentum is playing a much larger role in these markets than normal. Further to that, it confirms the old theory that prices lead fundamentals (by how much and to what extent it can remain this way is very much up for debate.)

My second chart is all about dispersion (the range of possible returns for an investment). The immense outperformance of certain sectors compared to certain stocks suggests the world we live in is still very macro-driven. And if you believe the CFRA and BCA Research arguments of late, this will likely continue as fund managers who missed the boat try to make up for lost time and gains.

And finally, speaking of earnings and EPS forecasts, we are coming up to August reporting season here in Australia. But in the US, quarterly reports are already under way and in Europe, stocks recently recorded their worst weekly effort since March. But in a good sign for those who focus more on fundamentals than data, earnings downgrades appear to have stalled on both sides of the Atlantic. That or we've officially hit peak pessimism among analysts.

RBA Minutes - What to watch for
Just a quick final note on the RBA meeting minutes which are out at 11:30 am AEST. With the new Governor announced as Michele Bullock, all eyes are on whether there will be any more clues as to whether July's pause will last or if another backflip will be necessary to keep inflation under control.
Last week, ANZ changed its terminal rate call to an extended pause at 4.1%. This implies that July's pause is going to stick - and chief economist Richard Yetsenga points out, that pause will likely not lead to rate cuts until next year at least.
"On balance we therefore expect an extended pause at the current cash rate of 4.1%. We (again) acknowledge the near-term uncertainty and do not entirely rule out a move in August. Looking into 2024 our base case remains an extended pause before easing toward the very end of the year driven by both a higher unemployment rate and confidence inflation is returning to the band," he said.
KEY EVENTS
ASX corporate actions occurring today:
- Trading ex-div: Metcash (MTS) – $0.11
- Dividends paid: K2 Asset Management (KAM) – $0.01, US Masters Residential Property Fund (URF) – $0.01, Red Hill Minerals (RHI) – $0.10
- Listing: None
Economic calendar (AEST):
- 11:30 am: RBA Minutes
- 10:30 pm: Canada Inflation
- 10:30 pm: US Retail Sales
This Morning Wrap was first published for Market Index by Hans Lee and Kerry Sun.
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