Dow Jones rose 400 points as short-term yields fall as Fed likely to slow rate hike

Stocks try to break the poor performance pattern on Friday

If stocks can end their rally on Friday, it will be a nice change of pace from the past two months.

“If rainy days and Mondays frustrate you…what about those Fridays? As the week started, eight out of nine Fridays had a low close,” Wellington Shields analyst Frank Gretz said in a note.

“Constant weakness on Friday is one thing, and the most striking is the extent of the weakness. From August 18 through last Friday, the Dow lost nearly 4,400 points. Of that, about 3,500 points, or nearly 80%, came in on Fridays. So a lot for TGIF”.

Investors’ nervousness ahead of the weekend in a macro-driven market may be the reason for this pattern, but Gretz said Monday’s performance wasn’t too bad.

– Jesse Pound

Meta Platforms and Alphabet Fall Ahead of Earnings Reports Next Week

shares the alphabet And the meta pads They fell on Friday ahead of their earnings reports due next week.

Shares of Facebook’s parent company fell 3.5% and were on track to end the week slightly lower. Alphabet stock fell 1.4% but maintained a 2% gain for the week.

The overdraft in both stocks came amid disappointing quarterly results from Explode, Explode This has heightened fears of a slowdown in the advertising space.

Apple’s privacy updates implemented last year have prevented advertisers like Snap from being able to track users online. Fears of a possible recession and rising capital costs also weighed on the group and company’s advertising budgets, which Snap echoed in its report.

Shares of Alphabet and Meta Platforms are down about 32% and 62% since the start of 2022.

Bank stocks outperform

Bank stocks rose Friday morning, with shares of Huntington Banks’ S&P 500 advancing 7.2%. The stock rose after the company beat earnings and sales expectations for the fourth quarter, according to consensus estimates on FactSet.

Other bank stocks such as Goldman Sachs and JPMorgan Chase rose, adding 2.2% and 2.1%, respectively. From the week to date, Goldman Sachs stock is up 6.1%.

The KBW Bank Index ETF is up 0.8% during morning trading.

– Sarah Min

Volatile trading to start options expiration day

Stocks were volatile in early trading, with the Dow rising more than 300 points at one point after opening lower.

Friday is a key day for options expiration, which may contribute to volatility.

“In key expirations, options traders keep track of situations where a large amount of open interest is set to expiration. In cases where a large amount of open interest expiration is in the money strikes (strike prices are at or very close to the current stock price ), delta hedging activity could affect the trading of the underlying shares that day, Vishal Vivek of Goldman Sachs said in a note to clients on Friday.

– Jesse Pound and Michael Bloom

Stocks open slightly lower

Traders raise chances of a lower Fed rate hike in December

Traders have revised their expectations for the Fed’s next actions The Wall Street Journal report Friday indicates that the central bank will talk about the future pace of raising interest rates.

While a 75 basis point rate hike is still highly anticipated at the November Federal Reserve meeting, traders have increased the chances that the December meeting will see a move of only 50 basis points. A base point is one hundredth of a percentage point.

The probability of a move of 0.75 percentage points in December fell to 57.4% after the Journal story, down from 75.4% at the same time Thursday, according to CME Group data. Traders raised the chances of a move 0.5 percentage point to 39.6% from 24.2%.

– Jeff Cox

Futures bounced after Wall Street Journal report

Futures rebounded from their lowest levels yet The Wall Street Journal You mentioned that some Fed officials were uncomfortable with the current pace of interest rate increases and began to worry about the risks of over-tapping.

S&P 500 and Dow futures are now trading almost flat. Nasdaq 100 futures are down 0.4%.

– Jesse Pound

Dan Ives says Elon Musk deal on Twitter is a tough one for Tesla investors

Tesla Investors are in a difficult situation as Elon Musk could sell more of his company’s shares to fund it Twitter A bargain, according to Dan Ives, technical analyst at Wedbush.

“It’s very simple, the more investors save this deal, the more money Musk needs to contribute and thus sell more Tesla shares,” Ives said in a note on Friday.

Musk is expected to sell part of his large shares in Tesla to help fund the closing of $44 billion in a private deal. Ives said that Musk may need to sell an additional $5-10 billion of Tesla stock.

“This remains a tough situation for Tesla investors to shoulder the burden,” Ives said. “As we discussed Twitter’s $44 billion price tag, it’s just a train wreck for an asset that we associate fair value in the $30 billion best-case range in the midst of daunting growth challenges like Mount Everest.”

– Yun Lee

SVB Moderna Upgrades Citing Long Period of Poor Performance

After slipping around 54% so far, Moderna is well placed for investors to take notes and watch for a convincing entry point, according to SVB Securities.

The company upgraded the pharmaceutical company to market underperformance and raised its target price to $101 from $74.

The boosted rating comes after an “extended period of underperformance” in stark contrast to other similar companies the company covers, including Ionis Pharmaceuticals, which is up 47% so far, and Alnylam Pharmaceuticals, up 14% this year.

In addition, analyst Manny Frohar wrote in a note Friday that the comment from Pfizer “suggested significantly higher-than-expected pricing for the COVID-19 vaccine as the market shifts from large contract to largely commercial.” “Assuming that mRNA prices as a reasonable monopoly, this significantly improves the company’s ability to meet the 2023 revenue guidance.”

See also  Nasdaq jumps 2%, Dow closes 250 points higher as investors weigh Fed rate path

And according to Foroohar, there’s also a lack of obvious driving stimulus for the bears without the steering cut.

“Bulls will report PCV data in the fourth quarter of 2022, following external validation by partner MRK (OP, Graybosch), while raising doubts about the commercial viability of the influenza program, for which interim data will not be available until late 2023,” they said. .

The company has also updated its model to reflect appropriate Covid pricing.

“Since this is an insufficient downside from the current level of MRNA (~$118) near the 52-week low to justify the underperformance rating, we are turning to the sidelines and waiting for a more attractive entry point on the long or short side,” said Foruhr. . .

Moderna’s shares are up more than 3% in pre-market trading.

– Carmen Renick

Stocks may not have bottomed yet, says UBS’ Hefel

The stock market is likely to drop to new lows until investors deal with the upcoming economic slowdown and its impact on earnings, according to Mark Heffel of UBS Global Wealth Management.

“History tells us that markets don’t find a bottom until investors see Fed rate cuts or lower economic activity on the horizon, or when valuations are so low that they are pricing in a ‘downside’ scenario. Today, none of those conditions are in place.” , Hefele wrote in a note to clients.

He added that it was unclear when the Fed would start cutting interest rates, even if the central bank halts its increases in early 2023. Fed officials said they may keep rates at a constrained level until inflation drops near the 2% target. . .

– Jesse Pound

Stocks are heading for a winning week

Stocks may be looking forward to a third day of losses, but the major averages are still up for the week thanks to strong performances on Monday and Tuesday.

Here are the weekly stats through Thursday’s close:

  • Dow is 2.36%
  • The S&P 500 rose 2.31%.
  • The Nasdaq Composite Index is up 2.84%.

For all three major averages, this will be their best stretch since the average ended on September 9th.

— Jesse Pound

Snap plunge after earnings

Snap shares fell more than 25% in the primary market after the company announced its latest quarterly numbers.

Parent company Snapchat generated $1.13 billion in revenueLittle expectations. Average revenue per user, a key metric for the company, fell 11% to $3.11.

“Our revenue growth continued to slow in the third quarter and continues to be affected by a number of factors that we’ve observed throughout the past year, including changes in platform policy, macroeconomic headwinds, and increased competition,” Snap said in its report. A letter to investors.

The results led Bernstein analysts to downgrade the stock, noting that it is unclear where Arrow goes from here.

– Fred Ambert

CNBC Pro: Goldman Sachs Says These Stocks Could Increasingly Survive a Possible Recession

US Treasury yields are at their highest level in a decade

United State 10 years treasury Yield rose to 4.272% after exceeding 4.2% For the first time since 2008.

sensitive politics 2 year treasury The yield also rose to 4.639%, at its highest level in 15 years.

return on 30 years of treasury It reached a new 11-year peak of 4.266%.

Yields and prices move in opposite directions and one basis point equals 0.01%.

Ji Lee

European markets: here are the opening calls

United kingdom FTSE 100 It is set to open 36 pips low at 6905, according to data from IG.

Germany Dax An opening of about 119 points was seen low at 12636, France kak It is set to fall by 51 points to 6026 and Italy MIB The index is expected to drop by about 205 points at 21,398 points.

– Hannah Ward Glinton

CNBC Pro: Here’s what to invest in as returns soar again, say BlackRock and others

Yields are rising again, and it looks like the rate hike path will continue.

For investors, that means they must seize the opportunity now to put their money into bonds or Treasuries — especially those with shorter durations, analysts said this week.

Wells Fargo said investors should seize the rather short-lived nature of this opportunity now.

Read more here.

– Wizen Tan

Earnings drive the engine after an hour

Companies that reported earnings after the bell on Thursday were among the biggest movers in after-hours trading.

tech giant Explode, Explode It decreased by 25% after Its revenue came in less than expected, although the number of daily active users globally was higher than expected. competitors dead And the the alphabet also slipped.

Snap told investors that revenue growth will likely continue to slow in the fourth quarter as platform policy changes, shifting economic conditions and increased competition weigh on the company. It did not provide guidance for the fourth quarter.

Robert Half International It fell 7.7% after the employment agency missed expectations regarding the highest and lowest profit. The company reported earnings per share of $1.53 on revenue of $1.83 billion.

CSXOn the other hand, it added 4.3% after beating higher and lower earnings expectations. The carrier posted 52 cents in adjusted earnings per share on revenue of $3.90 billion, beating analysts’ expectations for earnings per share of 49 cents on revenue of $3.74 billion.

See the full list of moving stocks here.

– Alex Haring

The Dow is up while the Nasdaq 100 is down at the open

Stock futures opened mixed in early trading an hour later.

The Dow added 51 points, or 0.2%. S&P 500 futures traded near stability.

But Nasdaq 100 futures were down 0.3%.

– Alex Haring

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