US Market Open: European stocks recovery; DXY holds above 102.50
27 Apr 2022, 11:33 by Newsquawk Desk
- European bourses recovered from the losses seen at the cash open, with the region currently posting board-based gains
- US equity futures see slightly more pronounced gains vs Europe following yesterday’s hefty losses
- Greenback continues to grind higher in its guise of global reserve and prime safe haven with DXY inching closer to 103.000
- Russia's Gazprom has halted gas supplies to Bulgaria and Poland due to lack of payment in roubles
- EU Commission President von der Leyen said the EU is mapping out a coordinated response
- Looking ahead Weekly EIA Inventories, New Zealand Trade Balance, Speeches from ECB’s Lagarde, SNB’s Zurbruegg, BoC’s Macklem, Supply from the US
- Earnings from Meta, Boeing, Ford, PayPal, Qualcomm & T-Mobile
27th April 2022
SNAPSHOT
LOOKING AHEAD
- Weekly EIA Inventories, New Zealand Trade Balance, Speeches from ECB’s Lagarde, SNB’ s Zurbruegg, BoC’s Macklem, Supply from the US.
- Earnings from Meta, Boeing, Ford, PayPal, Qualcomm & T-Mobile.
- Click here for the Week Ahead preview
GEOPOLITICS
RUSSIA-UKRAINE
DEFENCE/MILITARY
- The Interior Ministry of Moldova's Transdniestria says that shots have been fired towards the village of Cobasna from Ukraine territory
ENERGY/ECONOMIC SANCTIONS & UPDATES
- Russia's Gazprom has halted gas supplies to Bulgaria and Poland due to lack of payment in roubles; says supplies will be halted until RUB payments are made. It was also reported that Russian gas supplies to Poland resumes, according to operator data cited by Reuters.
- Gazprom says it continues shipping gas to Europe via Ukraine, in line with customer requests, according to Reuters.
- Four European gas buyers already paid for gas supplies in RUB; Ten buyers opened accounts with Gazprom Bank, according to Bloomberg.
- German energy Co. Uniper (UN01 GY) CCO sees no sign that German government is ready to abruptly stop Russian gas imports; focusing on securing supplies, according to Reuters.
- Hungary said gas shipments are coming according to contract from Serbian direct; will transfer EUR to pay for Russian gas and this will be converted to RUB at Gazprom Bank
- Polish Climate Minister says Poland is ready to help Germany import non-Russian oil, via Reuters.
- EU Commission President von der Leyen said the EU is mapping out a coordinated response to the latest announcement by Gazprom to "blackmail us with gas", via Twitter.
- Austria will continue to pay for Russian gas in Euros, according to the Austrian Chancellor, via Reuters.
OTHER
- China military says US Navy sailing through Taiwan Strait deliberately harm peace and stability.
- Japanese Chief Cabinet Secretary Matsuno says Japan conveyed concerns through diplomatic route regarding a Chinese navy vessel entering Japanese waters, according to Reuters.
EUROPEAN TRADE
EQUITIES
- European bourses recovered from the losses seen at the cash open, with the region currently posting board-based gains.
- Sector performance in Europe is mostly firmer but with no clear theme; Basic Resources is the clear outperformer.
- Stateside, US equity futures see slightly more pronounced gains vs Europe following yesterday’s hefty losses.
- Alphabet Inc (GOOG) - Q1 2022 (USD): EPS 24.62 (exp. 25.96), Revenue 68bln (exp. 68.1bln); authorised to buyback additional 70bln. (Newswires) Shares fell 3.0% after market
- Microsoft (MSFT) - Adj. EPS 2.22 (exp. 2.19), Revenue 49.4bln (exp. 49.05bln). Co. guides Q4 intelligent cloud rev. USD 21.1bln-21.35bln, productivity and business process rev. USD 16.65bln-16.9bln. (PR Newswire) Shares rose 5.4% after market
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FX
- Greenback continues to grind higher in its guise of global reserve and prime safe haven with DXY inching closer to 103.000, at 102.780 vs 2020 peak of 102.990.
- Aussie inflated as sizzling CPI metrics up the RBA rate hike ante amidst calls for liftoff next week.
- Yen hits resistance and importer offers after probing 127.00 vs Dollar.
- Euro hits new sub-1.0600 multi year low as Russia threatens to suspend gas supplies from more unfriendly nations and Pound flounders mostly under 1.2600 with little help from dire CBI Survey.
- Yuan loses RRR cut momentum as spread of Covid continues in China - Usd/Cny closes at highest in a year around 6.5500+, Usd/Cnh eyeing 6.6000 again.
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Notable FX Expiries, NY Cut:
- EUR/USD: 1.0600 (1.4BN), 1.0640-50 (975M), 1.0700 (1.04BN),
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FIXED INCOME
- Choppy midweek session for bonds, so far, as recovery momentum fades amidst a raft of issuance
- Bunds fade after topping Tuesday's peak at 155.77 in wake of a lukewarm reception for new 2038 benchmark
- Gilts top out at 119.72 before much worse than feared UK CPI sales survey
- Treasuries edgy ahead of 5 year supply with T-note probing 120-00 vs 120-18+ overnight high
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COMMODITIES
- WTI and Brent June futures have been moving horizontally since yesterday's settlement,
- US Private Energy Inventory Data (bbls): Crude +4.8mln (exp. +2.2mln), Gasoline -3.9mln (exp. +0.5mln), Distillates +0.4mln (exp. -0.6mln), Cushing +1.1mln
- Russian Economy Ministry expects Russian oil exports to fall this year to 228.3mln tonnes (vs 231mln in 2021) in its baseline scenario and to 213.3mln tonnes in its conservative scenario.
- Spot gold saw some selling pressure in which the yellow metal fell below the 25th April low (USD 1,891.20/oz) and tripped stops below USD 1,890/oz.
- Base metals markets are relatively mixed, with nothing interesting standing out.
- Indian power minister has asked states to step up imports of coal for three years, according to Reuters sources.
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NOTABLE EUROPEAN HEADLINES
- ECB's Mueller says the chance of a EZ recession is low
- ECB Chief Economist Lane says accounting for housing in the overall price index, as well as climate issues, are major challenges for the official statistics community
DATA RECAP
- German GfK Consumer Sentiment (May) -26.5 vs. Exp. -16.0 (Prev. -15.5, Rev. -15.7)
NOTABLE US HEADLINES
- Speaker Nancy Pelosi and Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer met Tuesday to discuss putting together a package to try to get gas prices under control, according Punchbowl sources.
CRYPTO
- Bitcoin attempts to recovery from yesterday's slide and meanders around 39k.
APAC TRADE
EQUITIES
- APAC stocks were mostly negative after the losses in the US where participants braced for the large-cap tech results including Alphabet which disappointed, while the region also navigated through a deluge of earnings.
- ASX 200 was dragged lower by underperformance in tech and the consumer-related stocks, while mostly firmer than expected CPI data added to the pressure for the RBA to hike as early as next week.
- Nikkei 225 retreated with the worst-performing stocks in the index pressured by earnings updates.
- Hang Seng and Shanghai Comp were choppy as Beijing lockdown fears were stoked after Chaoyang district was classified as high-risk and the Tongzhou district halted schools, although participants also digested firmer Industrial Profits and President Xi’s recent announcement to step up infrastructure construction.
NOTABLE APAC HEADLINES
- PBoC injected CNY 10bln via 7-day reverse repos with the rate at 2.10% for a net neutral daily position.
- PBoC set USD/CNY mid-point at 6.5598 vs exp. 6.5614 (prev. 6.5590)
- Beijing's Tongzhou district halted schools due to coronavirus, according to China News.
- Japan's Defence Ministry said a Chinese navy vessel was spotted in its territorial waters near islands in the southwestern prefecture of Kagoshima which was the first confirmed intrusion by a Chinese vessel since last November, according to Kyodo. It was later reported that Japanese Chief Cabinet Secretary Matsuno said Japan conveyed concerns through diplomatic route regarding a Chinese navy vessel entering Japanese waters.
- Chinese policymakers reportedly disagree regarding a crackdown on China's property industry, according to FT.
DATA RECAP
- Australian CPI QQ (Q1) 2.1% vs. Exp. 1.7% (Prev. 1.3%)
- Australian CPI YY (Q1) 5.1% vs. Exp. 4.6% (Prev. 3.5%)
- Australian RBA Trimmed Mean CPI QQ (Q1) 1.4% vs. Exp. 1.2% (Prev. 1.0%)
- Australian RBA Trimmed Mean CPI YY (Q1) 3.7% vs. Exp. 3.4% (Prev. 2.6%)
- Chinese Industrial Profits YY (Mar) 12.2% (Prev. 4.2%)
- Chinese Industrial Production YTD YY (Mar) 8.5% (Prev. 5.0%)