Tag Archives: Breaking News: Markets

Asia-Pacific stocks rise as Tokyo’s inflation nears 42-year high

Adani shares plunge further for second straight day of losses

Shares of Adani Group companies continued to see sharp losses for a second consecutive trading session in India after short seller firm Hindenburg announced its short position in the conglomerate’s firms earlier this week.

Adani refuted the claims in two separate statements, adding that the group is “evaluating the relevant provisions under US and Indian laws for remedial and punitive action against Hidenburg Research,” Adani Group’s head of legal Jatin Jalundhwala said in a statement.

Mumbai-listed shares of Adani Enterprises fell more than 5% in India’s trading session on Friday. Adani Transmission fell 16.8%, Adani Green Energy shed 14.9% and Adani Power lost 8.4%. Adani Port’s share price also dropped 8.4%.

Hindenberg doubled down on its initial stance, emphasizing that Adani has not answered any of the questions raised in their claims.

“We fully stand by our report and believe any legal action taken against us would be meritless,” it said,” it said.

— Jihye Lee

Tokyo’s inflation stays above Bank of Japan’s target

Consumer prices in Japan’s capital Tokyo rose by 4.3% in January, higher than expected by economists polled by Reuters.

The reading also maintained levels higher than the Bank of Japan’s target of 2% inflation for an eighth consecutive month after rising 2.1% in June 2022.

The Japanese yen strengthened 0.3% after the data release and last traded at 129.82 against the US dollar.

CNBC Pro: These 6 global ETFs are the only ones to have posted gains every year for the past five years

Only six global stock ETFs have consistently posted yearly gains over the past five years, according to new analysis by CNBC Pro.

They are the only funds among 7,000 equities ETFs trading worldwide to:

  • Not have a single year of negative returns between Jan. 1, 2018, and Dec. 31, 2022;
  • And be in positive territory this year so far.

CNBC Pro subscribers can find out which ETFs they are here.

— Ganesh Rao

Singapore home prices rose less in final quarter of 2022

Private residential property prices in Singapore rose by 0.4% in the final quarter of 2022, a release by the Urban Redevelopment Authority showed.

The reading showed home prices rose less than the previous period’s increase of 3.8% and the slowest growth since the second quarter of 2020.

Home prices rose 8.6% in the full year of 2022, the release said, also less than then 10.6% increase seen in the full year of 2021.

— Jihye Lee

Australia producer price index rises 5.8% from year ago

The producer price index in Australia rose 5.8% for the final quarter of 2022 on an annualized basis, data from the Australian Bureau of Statistics showed.

The reading was slightly lower than the previous quarter’s print of 6.4%, a signal inflation may be easing in the nation.

On a quarterly basis, the index rose 0.7%, also slower than the previous period’s reading of 1.9%.

The Australian dollar strengthened slightly during Asia’s morning session and last traded at 0.7123 against the U.S. dollar.

— Jihye Lee

GDP, other fourth-quarter data shows economic challenges are ‘beginning to clear,’ economist says

Thursday’s GDP data adds to a broadening picture of economic growth in the fourth quarter, according to Curt Long, chief economist at the National Association of Federally-Insured Credit Unions. And that signals to him the economic outlook is improving.

“The big picture view of economic growth in the fourth quarter is a positive one. Much of that growth was concentrated in inventory build, which is unlikely to grow at a similar pace in 2023,” Long said. “Nevertheless, with resilient consumer spending, low unemployment claims, and receding inflation, some of the clouds that were forming over the economy several months ago are beginning to clear.”

— Alex Harring

CNBC Pro: Buy the dip? Top Morningstar strategist names 3 stocks trading at a steep discount

U.S. stocks are around 15% undervalued, according to Dave Sekera, chief U.S. market strategist for Morningstar, who says the extent of this undervalued territory is rare.

Since the end of 2010, the market has traded at or below the current discount only 5% of the time, he said.

He picks three stocks that he says are trading at steep discounts.

CNBC Pro subscribers can read more here.

— Weizhen Tan

Tesla’s strong orders and weak margins have Wall Street analysts conflicted

Wall Street analysts are divided on Tesla after the electric car company’s latest quarterly results.

Tesla reported a beat on both earnings and revenue for the fourth quarter, and assuaged investor fears of weaker growth at the company after recently issuing a round of price cuts. While the move triggered a drop in used Tesla prices, they also supported demand for the vehicles.

“Thus far in January we’ve seen the strongest orders year to date than ever in our history. We’re currently seeing orders of almost twice the rate of production,” Musk said during a call with analysts.

For Goldman Sachs’ Mark Delaney, that was the “most important takeaway from the call.”

“Importantly, Tesla commented that since it lowered prices it has seen the strongest orders year-to-date in its history, with orders running about 2X production. While we believe this rate of orders may not be sustained in light of the weak macroeconomic environment, it would suggest the company is tracking well to our 1.8 mn delivery estimate,” Delaney wrote.

Other analysts were more negative on the stock outlook, however, saying that Tesla’s automotive gross margins, which was the lowest figure in the last five quarters, spelled trouble ahead.

AllianceBernstein’s Toni Sacconaghi reiterated an underperform rating on Tesla, saying the automaker’s latest results and earnings call had “something for bulls and bears,” adding he remains “torn” on the company. While the strong orders are promising, the analyst said the auto gross margins were too weak to overlook.

“Despite raising our energy storage forecast materially, our FY EPS declines from $3.80 to $3.54 amid lower margins. Moreover, while no one (including Tesla) knows what demand elasticity is, we believe it is uncertain whether surging demand will be sustained, particularly in China, where we believe more price cuts will likely be needed before year end,” Sacconaghi wrote.

CNBC Pro subscribers can read the full story here.

— Sarah Min

CNBC Pro: Morgan Stanley has a ‘simple’ tech playbook, names TSMC and others as stocks to buy right now

A recession may be coming, and the semiconductor sector — widely seen as cyclical and volatile — could be an unlikely safe refuge for investors.

Morgan Stanley says chip stocks have historically done well in past recessions. The bank named its top Asia chip stocks — giving one 40% upside.

Pro subscribers can read more here.

— Zavier Ong

U.S. GDP rose slightly more than expected in the fourth quarter

The U.S. economy expanded at an annualized pace of 2.9% in the fourth quarter, slightly outperforming a Dow Jones estimate of 2.8%. The Commerce Department’s report comes even as inflation persists and the Federal Reserve continues to raise rates.

Consumer spending rose 2.1% for the period, down slightly from 2.3% in the previous period but still positive.

— Jeff Cox

Bitcoin heading toward best month since 2020

Bitcoin’s remains in rally mode despite pulling back the past two days and the cryptocurrency is on pace for its best month since 2020. Some investors see crypto prices as a leading indicator of investors’ risk appetite.

So far this month and year, bitcoin has risen almost 40% and is poised to post its best monthly performance since December 2020, when it gained 49.47% for the month.

Meanwhile, the S&P 500 has risen about 5% this month.

— Tanaya Macheel

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Stock futures trade lower after the Dow posts a five-day win streak

A trader works on the trading floor at the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) in New York City, January 26, 2023.

Andrew Kelly | Reuters

Stock futures fell Friday morning as investors look ahead to earnings and economic reports due later in the day.

Futures tied to the Dow Industrial Average fell 42 points, or 0.12%. S&P 500 futures and Nasdaq 100 futures were down 0.36% and 0.7%, respectively. Shares of Intel slumped more than 9% in after-hours trading following a dismal earnings report that missed on the top and bottom lines.

Stocks rose during regular trading Thursday, cheering a better-than-expected fourth quarter gross domestic product report that stoked hopes that the U.S. economy can experience a soft landing as the Federal Reserve hikes rates to tame inflation.

The Dow Jones Industrial Average gained more than 205 points, or 0.61%, notching its fifth consecutive winning session, the first streak of that length since October. The S&P 500 rose 1.10% and the tech-heavy Nasdaq Composite jumped 1.76%.

All three indexes are positive for the week and month. The Dow and the S&P 500 have gained 1.7% and 2.2% this week, respectively. The Nasdaq is up 3.3% on the week and is set to notch its best monthly performance since July.

“This year’s stock market rally is impressive and shouldn’t be ignored,” Chris Zaccarelli, chief investment officer for the Independent Advisor Alliance said in a Thursday note. “Unfortunately, the Fed is likely to start talking down the market again, as early as next week, so prepare for volatility again this year; we may be in the eye of the hurricane and not completely out of the woods yet.”

On Friday, investors will be watching for economic reports that will give more information about the state of inflation. Personal income and spending and pending home sales for December are due in the morning. The personal consumption expenditures price index, a preferred inflation measurement for the Federal Reserve, is also due. Consumer sentiment for January will also be released.

It’s some of the last data that will be released ahead of the Fed’s next meeting, which starts at the end of January. Investors are currently expecting a 0.25 percentage point interest rate hike from the central bank.

Earnings season continues as well. American Express, Colgate-Palmolive and Chevron are among companies scheduled to report quarterly results Friday. Investors may be watching Chevron’s report closely after the company announced a $75 billion stock buyback and dividend boost on Wednesday.

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S&P 500 rises after strong GDP report, Nasdaq jumps nearly 1% on Tesla results

The Nasdaq Composite rose Thursday as fourth-quarter gross domestic product came in above expectations, and investors parsed through the latest batch of corporate earnings.

The tech-heavy index jumped 1.2%, while the Dow Jones Industrial Average traded 104 points, or 0.3%, higher. The S&P 500 rose 0.6%.

GDP data released Thursday showed the economy expand at an annualized rate of 2.9% during the fourth quarter, the Commerce Department said. That’s above the 2.8% Dow Jones estimate, but represents a slight cooldown from the third-quarter reading.

“With today’s better-than-expected GDP number, I think investors are thinking, maybe we can get away with a pretty soft, mild recession that is not likely to throw us into an even deeper bear market when all is said and done,” said Sam Stovall, CFRA Research’s chief investment strategist.

Meanwhile, earnings season trudged on, with strong results from Tesla giving the Nasdaq and electric vehicle stocks a boost. Tesla jumped 9% after posting record revenue and solid earnings. Beaten-up technology giants Microsoft, Apple, Amazon and Alphabet added more than 1% each.

Airline earnings also rolled out, with Southwest falling on a larger-than-expected loss fueled by its holiday meltdown. American Airlines rose on a fourth-quarter beat.

Elsewhere, Chevron added 3% after announcing a $75 billion share repurchasing program.

Wall Street is coming off a mixed session, but all the major averages are headed for weekly, and monthly, gains. The Dow and S&P are up 1.5% and 1.9% so far this week, respectively. The Nasdaq has gained 3.1% this week and is on pace for its best month since July.

Focus now shifts to next week’s Federal Reserve policy, where the central bank is widely expected to announce a 25 basis point hike as it battles high inflation. Investors will be on the lookout for clue into how much further the Fed intends to hike before it cuts rates.

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Southwest, Tesla, Las Vegas Sands

A Southwest Airlines Co. Boeing 737 passenger jet pushes back from a gate at Midway International Airport (MDW) in Chicago, Illinois.

Luke Sharrett | Bloomberg | Getty Images

Check out the companies making the biggest moves premarket:

Southwest — The airline dropped 2.1% after reporting a $220 million loss for the fourth quarter after the holiday meltdown cost the company millions in expenses and drove up expenses.

Comcast — The media company reported fourth-quarter earnings that beat Wall Street’s expectations, with earnings per share coming in at 82 cents, adjusted, versus the 77 cents expected from analysts surveyed by Refinitiv. Revenue was $30.55 billion compared to the $30.32 expected. Shares, however, were down less than 1% in the premarket.

Tesla — The electric-vehicle maker soared 7% after reporting record revenue and an earnings beat. CEO Elon Musk said Tesla might be able to produce 2 million cars this year.

Las Vegas Sands — Shares of the hotel and casino operator rose about 4% despite the company posting weaker-than-expected financial results for the most recent quarter. Wall Street analysts cited upbeat comments about its reopening in Macao on the company earnings call for their positive outlook on the stock.

Levi Strauss — Shares of the denim maker popped 6% premarket on a better-than-expected quarterly report. Levi Strauss topped analysts’ revenue estimates and beat earnings projections by 5 cents a share.

Blackstone — Blackstone shares dipped less than 1% after the asset manager reported mixed earnings results. Total segment revenues fell short of expectations, while distributable earnings beat estimates by 12 cents a share.

Chevron — The energy giant jumped more than 3% in premarket after the company announced a $75 billion stock buyback program and a dividend hike to $1.51 from $1.42 per share. The buyback program will become effective on April 1.

Dow — The chemicals giant posted fourth-quarter earnings, revenue and adjusted EBITDA that missed analyst expectations before the bell Thursday, sending the stock down more than 3% in premarket trading.

IBM — Shares of IBM shed 2.7% after the company reported quarterly results Wednesday that generally exceeded Wall Street’s expectations but included an announcement that the firm will cut 3,900 jobs. IBM reported adjusted earnings per share of $3.60 per share on $16.69 billion in revenue where analysts expected $3.60 per share and $16.4 billion in revenue, per Refinitiv.

American Airlines — The airline gained 1.5% after its fourth-quarter profits beat Wall Street’s expectations, thanks to strong holiday demand and high fares.

Seagate Technology — The data storage company jumped more than 8% in premarket trading after reporting earnings and revenue for the last quarter that beat expectations.

Pfizer — The pharma giant was downgraded by UBS on Thursday, which said Pfizer’s Covid franchise estimates need to come down and its pipeline is too premature. Pfizer was up less than 1% in the premarket.

— CNBC’s Carmen Reinicke, Yun Li, Samantha Subin, Tanaya Macheel and Michael Bloom contributed reporting.

Disclosure: Comcast owns NBCUniversal, the parent company of CNBC.

Read original article here

Chevron announces $75 billion stock buyback, dividend boost

Chevron last month reported its second-highest quarterly profit ever.

Justin Sullivan | Getty Images News | Getty Images

Energy giant Chevron announced a $75 billion stock buyback program and a dividend hike on Wednesday evening.

Shares of Chevron were up more than 2% in extended trading.

The buyback program will become effective on April 1, with no set expiration date, the company said in a press release. The dividend hike increases Chevron’s per share payout to $1.51 from $1.42, and that will be distributed on March 10.

Chevron’s market cap was roughly $350 billion as of Wednesday’s market close, meaning that the buyback would represent more than 20% of the company’s stock at current prices.

This buyback plan follows a $25 billion plan enacted in 2019. The old plan will be terminated at the end of March. For the third quarter of 2022 — the most recent quarter that Chevron has reported — the company repurchased $3.75 billion of shares.

The new buyback plan comes after a massive year for energy stocks, as a reopened U.S. economy and Russia’s invasion of Ukraine combined to drive oil and gas prices hire in 2022. Chevron reported more than $12 billion of free cash flow and $11 billion of net income in the third quarter alone.

Shares of Chevron rose more than 50% in 2022 even as the broader stock market declined.

Chevron was a hot stock in 2022.

The financial success of energy companies has led to criticism from politicians, including U.S. President Joe Biden, who threatened higher taxes on energy companies last year for their “war profiteering.”

Chevron CEO Mike Wirth told CNBC in December that the company was “in contact” with the Biden administration on a variety of issues.

“Our goal of stable markets and prices that are affordable for the economy is something we share. How we get there, sometimes we have different ideas,” Wirth said on “Squawk Box.”

Read original article here

Dow futures drop 200 points, Microsoft falls after earnings

Traders on the floor of the NYSE, Aug. 4, 2022.

Source: NYSE

Stock futures fell in early trading on Wednesday as traders pored through the latest batch of corporate earnings.

Futures on the Dow Jones Industrial Average futures declined by 222 points, or 0.66%. Nasdaq-100 futures shed 1.3%, and S&P 500 futures fell 0.8%.

Shares of Microsoft dropped 2%. Initially shares rose after the tech giant posted fiscal second quarter per-share earnings that exceeded analysts’ estimates. However, shares declined after the company offered lackluster guidance on its earnings call.

Investors are bracing for more high-profile corporate earnings amid fears of a recession. So far, more than 70 S&P 500 companies have reported fourth-quarter earnings, and 65% of them posted stronger-than-expected results, according to Refinitiv.

“With the bulk of earnings still in front of the market, the question as to whether the shift towards growth being signaled by recent rallies is warranted could be answered by upside earnings surprises and solid guidance,” said Quincy Krosby, chief global strategist at LPL Financial.

Tesla, Boeing, IBM and AT&T are among the companies slated to post numbers on Wednesday.

The moves followed a three-day winning streak for the blue-chip Dow. All three major averages are up at least 1% week to date.

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NYSE says trading issue that led to dozens of stocks being halted has been resolved

Trading in dozens of stocks on the New York Stock Exchange was briefly halted shortly after the market opened Tuesday due to an apparent technical issue.

The major stocks impacted included Morgan Stanley, Verizon, AT&T, Nike and McDonald’s, according to the NYSE’s website. Many stocks were shown to have abnormally large moves when the market opened, which may have triggered volatility halts.

CNBC’s Bob Pisani said on “Squawk on the Street” that the issue appears to be a technical one and not something that happened on the trading floor.

Many of the companies impacted resumed trading before 9:45 a.m. ET. The NYSE said at roughly 9:50 a.m. that all of its systems were operational. CNBC has reached out to the NYSE for more details about the issue.

The exchange said in a statement at 10:21 a.m. ET that it is still investigating the issue with the opening auction.

The NYSE, like some other exchanges, has automatic halts in place for stocks that move dramatically in one direction or another. On a normal trading day, few if any stocks are halted for volatility on the NYSE.

The other major U.S. stock exchange, the Nasdaq, did not appear to be impacted by the technical issue.

Correction: The NYSE technical issue took place Tuesday. A previous version misstated the day of the week.

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Bed Bath & Beyond, Verizon, Lululemon and more

A pedestrian walks by a Bed Bath and Beyond store in San Francisco, California.

Justin Sullivan | Getty Images

Check out the companies making headlines before the bell.

Verizon — Verizon shares slipped 1.51% after the company posted mixed results for the 2022 fourth quarter. While earnings met analyst predictions, forward earnings fell short of a Refinitiv consensus estimate. .

related investing news

Bed Bath & Beyond — The meme stock gained 5.78%, building on its dramatic start to the year, even as the retailer warns of a potential bankruptcy. Year to date, Bed Bath & Beyond shares are up 17.1%.

Lyft — The ride-sharing stock gained 3.4% following an upgrade from KeyBanc, which Lyft should feel positive impacts from cost-saving measures including layoffs and a stabilization in demand.

Johnson & Johnson — Shares of the drug maker ticked higher by less than 1% premarket after the company reported mixed quarterly financial results. Johnson & Johnson beat profit estimates by 10 cents per share, excluding items, according to Refinitiv. It also missed revenue estimates. Its full-year outlook for earnings was slightly higher than estimates while its revenue forecast was about in line with estimates.

Blackstone — Shares rose 1.3% after JPMorgan upgraded Blackstone to overweight from neutral, saying the investment management firm is a “best in class” business that’s set for a soft landing.

Lululemon — The athleisure retailer fell 2.07% after Bernstein downgraded the stock, warning that a reset is coming for the apparel stock and noting the company is facing an inflection point in its growth.

Lockheed Martin — Lockheed Martin shares gained 1.52% after the company posted latest quarterly results. The defense company’s revenue came in at $18.99 billion, topping a Refinitiv forecast of $18.27 billion. Lockheed’s earnings per share also topped expectations.

AMD — The chip stock fell more than 2% in premarket after Bernstein downgraded the chipmaker to market perform from outperform. The Wall Street firm said the downgrade is due to the sliding computer and new parts demand in the inflationary environment.

— CNBC’s Alex Harring, Yun Li, Tanaya Macheel and Sarah Min contributed reporting

Read original article here

Australia PMI, Japan Jibun Flash PMI, Lunar New Year holidays

New Zealand’s Auckland airport passenger volumes hit 74% of pre-pandemic levels in November

New Zealand’s Auckland Airport saw its total passenger volumes for November reach 74% of levels seen in the financial year to June 2019, or the last full-year not impacted by the pandemic, according to the airport’s monthly traffic update.

International passengers were at 67% of pre-pandemic levels, the release said, adding that a majority of the recovered overseas travel was short-haul flights from Australia and the Pacific Islands.

The demand for routes between New Zealand and North American regions has recovered to 86% of pre-pandemic levels, including two added destinations in Texas (Dallas/Fort Worth) and New York.

— Jihye Lee

CNBC Pro: These 6 low-debt global stocks are set to outperform, Bernstein says

Rising interest rates have major implications for companies with large amounts of debt, as they will likely experience higher costs from increased borrowing.

As interest rates continue to rise, analysts at Bernstein think that stocks with low debt exposure and a higher quality of debt should outperform.

The investment bank named a handful of global low-debt stocks with an investment-grade credit rating there likely to outperform.

CNBC Pro subscribers can read more here.

— Ganesh Rao

Shares of Zip reverses after initial rally

Australian “buy now, pay later” company Zip fell by more than 10% after a short-lived rally following its quarterly results.

Zip traded 15% lower, a sharp turnaround from its earlier gains of more than 10% after posting 12% revenue growth.

The company said underlying “monthly cash burn has continued to decrease and expected to further improve.” It said currently available cash and liquidity position is “sufficient to see the company through to generating positive cash flow” and expects to deliver positive cash EBITDA by the first half of fiscal 2024.

Week ahead: PMIs, Australia and Singapore inflation reports, South Korea GDP

Here are some of the major economic events in the Asia-Pacific that investors will be closely watching this week.

Stock markets in mainland China and Taiwan will remain closed until they resume trade on Jan. 30.

On Tuesday, regional purchasing managers’ index readings for Japan and Australia will be in focus while most markets remain closed to observe the Lunar New Year with the exception of Australia, Japan and Indonesia.

Inflation reports will be in focus on Wednesday as Australia and New Zealand release their consumer price index readings for the final quarter of 2022. Singapore will publish its inflation print for December.

Hong Kong’s market is scheduled to resume trade on Thursday.

Fourth-quarter gross domestic product for South Korea and Philippines will be published Thursday, while the Bank of Japan will release its summary of opinions from its latest monetary policy meeting in January. Japan also reports its services producer price index on Thursday.

Japan’s core CPI readings for capital Tokyo will be a barometer for where monetary policy is headed.

Australia’s producer price index and trade data will also be closely monitored indicators ahead of the Reserve Bank of Australia’s meeting in the first week of February.

— Jihye Lee

Australia’s business conditions worsened last month: NAB survey

National Australia Bank’s monthly business survey showed worsened business conditions for December with a reading of 12 points, a decline from November’s print of 20 points.

The survey reflects deteriorated trading conditions, profitability, and employment, NAB said.

“The main message from the December monthly survey is that the growth momentum has slowed significantly in late 2022 while price and purchase cost pressures have probably peaked,” NAB chief economist Alan Oster said.

Meanwhile, business confidence in December rose by 3 points to -1, an improved reading from -4 points seen in November.

— Jihye Lee

Japan’s headline factory data shows second month of contraction

The au Jibun Bank Flash Japan manufacturing purchasing managers’ index in January was unchanged for a second-straight month at 48.9, below the 50-mark that separates contraction and growth from the previous month.

The reading “signaled the joint-strongest deterioration in the health [of] the Japanese manufacturing sector since October 2020,” S&P Global said.

The au Jibun Bank flash composite output index rose to 50.8 in January, slightly higher than the reading of 49.7 seen in December.

Flash services business activity rose further with a print of 52.4, higher than December’s reading of 51.1.

— Jihye Lee

CNBC Pro: Wall Street is excited about Chinese tech — and loves one mega-cap stock

After more than 2 years of regulatory crackdowns and a pandemic-induced slump, Chinese tech names are back on Wall Street’s radar, with one stock in particular standing out as a top pick for many.

Pro subscribers can read more here.

— Zavier Ong

Fed likely to discuss next week when to halt hikes, Journal report says

Federal Reserve officials next week are almost certain to approve another deceleration in interest rate hikes while also discussing when to stop the increases altogether, according to a Wall Street Journal report.

The rate-setting Federal Open Market Committee is set to convene Jan. 31-Feb. 1, with markets pricing in almost a 100% chance of a quarter-point increase in the central bank’s benchmark rate. Most prominently, Fed Governor Christopher Waller said Friday he sees a 0.25 percentage point increase as the preferred move for the upcoming meeting.

However, Waller said he doesn’t think the Fed is done tightening yet, and several other central bankers in recent days have backed up that notion.

The Journal report, citing public statements from policymakers, said slowing the pace of hikes could provide the chance to assess what impact the increases so far are having on the economy. A series of rate hikes begun in March 2022 has resulted in increases of 4.25 percentage points.

Market pricing is currently indicating quarter-point hikes at the next two meetings, a period of no action, and then up to a half-point reduction by the end of 2023, according to CME Group data.

However, several officials, including Governor Lael Brainard and New York Fed President John Williams, have used the expression “stay the course” to describe the future policy path.

— Jeff Cox

Nasdaq on pace for back-to-back gains as tech shares rise

The Nasdaq Composite rallied more than 2.2% during midday trading Monday, lifted by shares of beaten-up technology stocks.

The move put the tech-heavy index on pace for a consecutive day of gains exceeding 2%. The index finished 2.66% higher on Friday.

Rising semiconductor stocks helped pushed the index higher. Tesla and Apple, meanwhile, surged 7.7% and 3.2%, respectively, as China reopening lifted hopes of a boost to their businesses. Western Digital and Advanced Micro Devices rose about 8% each, while Qualcomm and Nvidia jumped about 7%.

Information technology was the best-performing S&P 500 sector, gaining 2.7%. That was in part due to gains within chip sector. Communication services added 1.9%, boosted by the likes of Netflix, Meta Platforms, Alphabet and Match Group.

— Samantha Subin

El-Erian says Fed should hike by 50 basis points, calls smaller increase a ‘mistake’

Surging inflation may appear largely in the past, but a shift to a 25 basis point hike at the next Federal Reserve policy meeting is a “mistake,” according to Allianz Chief Economic Adviser Mohamed El-Erian.

“‘I’m in a very, very small camp who thinks that they should not downshift to 25 basis points, they should do 50,” he told CNBC’s “Squawk Box” on Monday. “They should take advantage of this growth window we’re in, they should take advantage of where the market is, and they should try to tighten financial conditions because I do think that we still have an inflation issue.”

Inflation, he said, has shifted from the goods to the services sector, but could very well resurge if energy prices rise as China reopens.

El-Erian expects inflation to plateau around 4%. This, he said, will put the Fed in a difficult position as to whether they should continue crushing the economy to reach 2%, or promise that level in the future and hope investors can tolerate a steady 3% to 4% nearer term.

“That’s probably the best outcome,” he said of the latter.

— Samantha Subin

An earnings recession is imminent, according to Morgan Stanley

An earnings recession is imminent this year, according to Morgan Stanley equity strategist Michael Wilson. 

“Our view has not changed as we expect the path of earnings in the US to disappoint both consensus expectations and current valuations,” he said in a note to clients Sunday.

Some positive developments have unfolded recent weeks — such as China’s ongoing reopening and falling natural gas prices in Europe — and contributed to some investors viewing market prospects more optimistically. 

However, Wilson advises investors to remain bearish on equities, citing price action as the main influence for this year’s rally. 

“The rally this year has been led by low-quality and heavily shorted stocks,” he said. “It’s also witnessed a strong move in cyclical stocks relative to defensives.”

Wilson has based his forecasts on margin disappointment, and he believes the case for this is growing. Many industries are already facing revenue slowdowns, as well as inventory bloating, less productive headcount. 

“It’s simply a matter of timing and magnitude,” said Wilson. “We advise investors to stay focused on fundamentals and ignore the false signals and misleading reflections in this bear market hall of mirrors.”

— Hakyung Kim

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Stock futures are little changed as Wall Street looks to build on back-to-back gains

Zions shares fall after earnings

Shares of Zions Bancorp fell more than 2% despite the regional bank beating earnings estimates for the fourth quarter. Zions reported $1.84 in earnings per share, above the $1.65 expected by analysts, according to StreetAccount. Net interest income also beat estimates.

Noninterest income was lower than expected, however, and deposits fell 13% year over year to $71.7 billion.

Shares of Zion gained 2.27% in regular trading on Monday before its earnings were released.

—Jesse Pound

Stocks need to notch this key level to potentially be considered rallying, Dawson says

Stocks rose on Monday, but aren’t quite high enough to be considered a true market rally, according to Cameron Dawson of NewEdge Wealth.

“We have to get through the most critical level of 4,100,” Dawson said on CNBC’s “Closing Bell: Overtime” on Monday. That’s because 4,100 is the S&P 500’s 65-day high.

The S&P 500 never hit the key moving level in 2022 because it was in a downtrend, Dawson said. If stocks break through this level, it may indicate that the rally has potential to move into a new bull market cycle.

Technicals and positioning can only get stocks so far, she added, before a fundamental shift is needed to really give stocks forward momentum.

“We’d need to see a change in fundamentals to really think this rally will continue,” she said.

She cautioned that stocks upside will likely stay capped until the Federal Reserve fully pivots and stimulates the U.S. economy again.

“It’s unlikely we can go back to pre-pandemic multiples without help from the Fed,” she said.

If stocks are able to rally and break the 65-day high, it would also likely lower the probability of the S&P 500 retesting its October lows, Dawson said.

—Carmen Reinicke

Stock futures open little changed

Futures opened little changed on Monday evening after solid gains for stocks during regular trading hours. There were no large cap earnings reports after the bell to spark major moves in the futures market.

— Jesse Pound

Nasdaq, chip stocks led the way on Monday

Stocks enjoyed a broad rally on Monday. Here’s a look at some of the key numbers from the trading session.

  • The Dow gained 254 points, or 0.76%, to close at 33,629.56.
  • The S&P 500 gained 47 points, or 1.19%, to close at 4,019.81.
  • The Nasdaq Composite gained 224 points, or 2.01%, to close at 11,364.41.
  • Nvidia had the largest impact on the Nasdaq, adding 36 points.
  • The VanEck Semiconductor ETF (SMH) rose 4.72% for its best day since Nov. 30.

— Jesse Pound, Christopher Hayes

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