The US economy is flexing its muscles with impressive job growth and steady GDP expansion. Yet, the stock market is playing it cool, caught between mixed corporate earnings and economic signals. Today promises a deluge of company results and a flurry of statistics.
In October 2024, the US private sector surprised everyone by adding 233,000 jobs, more than doubling the expected 113,000. This is the most robust job creation since July 2023, according to the ADP/Stanford Lab report. September’s figures were also revised upwards to 159,000. This strong job growth is good news for the economy, but not for investors, since it lowers the chance of further rate cuts this year. Analysts expect the unemployment rate to hold steady at 4.1%, with official employment data due on Friday.
Another report released today shows the US economy grew by 2.8% in Q3 2024, a tad below the 3% growth in Q2 and the 2.9% forecast. Personal consumption expenditures rose by 3.7%, beating expectations. Residential investment, private inventories, and net exports dragged.
Wall Street opened with a frown after the data. The S&P 500 dipped 0.1%, Dow Jones stayed flat, and Nasdaq 100 slipped 0.3%. Earnings season is in full swing. Eli Lilly‘s stock took a 12% nosedive after disappointing Q3 sales and profit, along with a cut in 2024 earnings guidance. Other companies like Mondelez, Visa, AMD, Caterpillar, Biogen, AbbVie, and Kraft Heinz also released earnings. In Europe, corporate results failed to whet investors’ appetites, especially in Switzerland, where Novartis, Clariant, Straumann, and SIG Group soured the mood. Each European market has its own underperformer: Lufthansa in Germany, BP Plc in the UK, and Wärtsilä in Finland.
This gloom contrasts with the US tech stocks’ performance, which propelled the Nasdaq 100 to uncharted territory yesterday, hitting a record high of 20,551 points. The index, a darling in recent years, enjoyed a buying spree ahead of major results. Alphabet passed its post-close test with flying colors, its stock climbing 6% after hours. Meanwhile, AMD, a minor player in artificial intelligence, was deemed too cautious in its forecasts, sending its stock down 7%. We also witnessed the usual rollercoaster from tech market wild cards, with Reddit surging 25% and Snap jumping 10% after reporting smaller-than-expected losses. Snap has yet to turn a profit since its inception, while analysts predict Reddit will break even by 2026, market gods permitting.
Across the pond, European companies with limited global exposure are struggling to hit targets. Those reliant on China are feeling the pinch even more. Moncler in luxury goods, Davide Campari in spirits, BASF in chemicals, Melexis in semiconductors, and Capgemini in consulting are all under pressure.
In Asia, rumor has it that China is mulling over raising more than 10,000 billion yuan (around $1,400 billion) in public debt to spur growth in the coming years. This figure aligns with recent whispers. Meanwhile, the surtax on Chinese electric vehicles imported into Europe kicks in today. One can only imagine LVMH, Rémy Cointreau, and their peers holding their breath, fearing Beijing’s retaliation—and their shareholders too. In the UK, it’s budget day for Rachel Reeves and the Labour Party. In the Asia-Pacific region, whispers about China’s plan haven’t stopped Hong Kong from shedding over 1.5% this morning. Japan’s market is more upbeat, enjoying a third session of notable gains. South Korea remains under pressure, with the KOSPI down 0.9% after a lackluster earnings season. Australia is down 0.8%, and India limits its decline to 0.5%. European indices are bearish, with the STOXX EUROPE 600 down 1.4%.
Today’s economic highlights:
Germany’s Q3 GDP and the first estimate of October inflation are on the agenda, while in the US, we have the ADP employment change, Q3 GDP, pending home sales and DOE crude oil inventories. The full agenda here.
The dollar is worth EUR 0.9235 and GBP 0.7713. The ounce of gold rose to USD 2,774. Oil regained some ground, with North Sea Brent at USD 71.75 a barrel and US light crude WTI at USD 68.08. The yield on 10-year US debt stands at 4.23%. Bitcoin is just over USD 72,000.
In corporate news:
Today’s top earnings reports: Microsoft, Meta Platforms, Eli Lilly, AbbVie, Caterpillar, Amgen, Booking, Automatic Data Processing, Starbucks, KLA Corporation, Trane, Equinix, DoorDash, Humana, Kraft Heinz, Coinbase…
Analyst recommendations:
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