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Morning Bid: Amazon calms the horses, payrolls due

By Thomson Reuters Nov 1, 2024 | 5:17 AM

A look at the day ahead in U.S. and global markets from Mike Dolan

With next week’s U.S. election now dominating thinking, the last two megacap earnings reports of the week appear to have calmed the stock market somewhat and a potentially noisy October payrolls report is up next.

Amazon and Apple got different market receptions to their updates overnight – the remaining two of five “Magnificent Seven” firms reporting this week.

Amazon stock jumped 6% on forecast-beating profit and sales, with the company indicating healthy results in the holiday quarter thanks to its faster shipping times and a move to stock lower-cost items.

It was a relief to markets that saw fresh doubts this week about the speed with which the hefty spend on artificial intelligence was translating into returns for Big Tech giants.

Apple underwhelmed with its beat and the stock is off about 1% before Friday’s bell. Its AI-enhanced iPhone made a strong start, pushing quarterly sales ahead of expectations. But a modest revenue forecast raised questions about the holiday season and a decline in China sales bothered some analysts.

Ailing chipmaker Intel perked up, however, with a 7% rally overnight on optimism about a turnaround in its PC and server businesses.

The market-wide upshot today is that index futures look set to regain some of Thursday’s heavy losses.

And more than 60% through the current earnings season, the blended annual profit growth estimate for the S&P500 has actually picked up pace to as much as 7.5% – well up on pre-season forecasts of just over 5%.

With sovereign bonds markets focusing more attention agitated by post-budget British gilts, U.S. Treasuries remained relatively calm as the October employment report is due later on Friday, the dead heat election race enters its final weekend, and a second Federal Reserve interest rate cut of the year is expected next week.

Although a month of storms may distort the numbers, a Reuters survey showed nonfarm payrolls probably increased by 113,000 jobs last month after rising by 254,000 in September and jobless rate is forecast to remain unchanged at 4.1%.

This week’s private sector payrolls update for October and weekly jobless data came in hotter than many had bet on, but inflation readings were calm enough to keep futures confident the Fed will deliver a quarter-point post-election rate cut next Thursday.

The personal consumption expenditures (PCE) price index rose 0.2% in September, driven mainly by services but with goods prices actually falling outright for a second consecutive month.

An annual 2.1% gain in the headline PCE price index was the smallest since February 2021 and close to the Fed’s target.

ISM and S&P Global release October U.S. manufacturing surveys later on Friday too.

In Europe, British gilts and the pound calmed down somewhat on Friday after a torrid week that saw 10-year yields hit their highest in a year following heavy tax and borrowing plans in the new Labour government’s first budget.

Worrying on Thursday was a slide in the pound even as yield premiums on gilts over other major government bonds increased and money markets removed at least one Bank of England rate cut from next year’s horizon.

Markets still see an 80% chance the BoE will deliver its second rate cut of the year next Thursday although its 5% policy rate is now expected to remain above 4% through 2025 – almost half a point higher than the expected Fed rate at the end of next year.

Helping calm the piece on Friday, credit ratings agency S&P said Britain’s public finances were “constrained” after the budget but added it had not revised its forecasts for borrowing.

“We have not changed our headline budget deficit forecasts as a result of the budget announcement, partly because our existing projections already contain wider deficits that reflect lingering public spending pressures,” it added.

Elsewhere, oil prices edged higher and world stocks were mixed – with European indexes advancing but Japan’s Nikkei underperforming with losses of more than 2% on a slightly stronger yen and the previous day’s Wall Street slide.

Big U.S. oil firms top the earnings diary later.

Market bets on a U.S. election win for Republican Donald Trump – Bitcoin, Trump Media and gold – were pared back.

The dollar index was firmer.

Key developments that should provide more direction to U.S. markets later on Friday:

* US October employment report, October manufacturing surveys from ISM and S&P Global

* US corporate earnings: Exxon, Chevron, PPL, Dominion Energy, T Rowe Price, Cboe Global Markets, Church & Dwight, Cardinal Health, Waters, LyondellBasell Industries, Charter Communications

(By Mike Dolan, Editing by Hugh Lawson; mike.dolan@thomsonreuters.com)