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Apple Stagnation, NVIDIA Earnings, GDP Revision - What's Moving Markets

Published 2022-05-26, 07:02 a/m
Updated 2022-05-26, 07:02 a/m
© Reuters.

© Reuters.

By Geoffrey Smith 

Investing.com -- Nasdaq futures are underperforming again in premarket as stagflation hits Apple and NVIDIA. The U.S. will publish revised GDP figures for the first quarter, as well as jobless claims for last week, amid growing signs that the froth is starting to come off the labor market. Updates from Dollar General and Dollar Tree may shed light on how quickly consumers are scaling down their spending. Russia's central bank cut interest rates sharply as the risk of financial instability recedes, and the U.K. is set to raid energy producers in order to help poorer households. Here's what you need to know in financial markets on Thursday, 26th May.

1. Stagflation hits the market's darlings

Stagflation has reached Apple (NASDAQ:AAPL). The company expects not to increase production of its iPhones this year, according to a Bloomberg report citing unnamed suppliers. Lockdowns in China have disrupted production, while demand is stalling as consumers’ disposable income is eroded by inflation.

Bloomberg said Apple expects to ship some 220 million phones this year, rather than the 240 million consensus forecast of analysts. Apple stock fell 1.4% in premarket but is still comfortably above the 12-month low it hit last week.

Another market darling in the tech sector is having bigger problems in premarket. Chipmaker NVIDIA (NASDAQ:NVDA) warned that it lost $500 million in sales in China and Russia in the current quarter, as gaming and crypto mining demand slowed and orders for data center chips were canceled.

NVIDIA stock fell 5.3% in response. It still trades at 44 times trailing 12-month earnings, double Apple’s multiple.

2. U.S. GDP revision, jobless claims due

The U.S. will publish revised data for first-quarter gross domestic product at 8:30 AM ET (1230 GMT). Analysts expect only a marginal 0.1% upgrade from the preliminary reading of a 1.4% decline in the quarter.

The preliminary figure owed much to destocking but also showed signs of an incipient slowdown in consumer spending. Data since then have suggested that the slowdown is getting more severe as inflation starts to bite.

Of more timely nature will be weekly jobless claims, which are due at the same time. These have been trending up from historically low levels since early April and a further rise seems likely over the coming weeks as more and more companies come under pressure to improve profit margins. Initial claims are expected to have stayed around last week’s six-week high of 218,000.

3. Stocks set to open mostly higher; discounters' earnings eyed

U.S. stock markets are set to open mostly higher, despite the disappointments from Apple and NVIDIA, extending the gains they made after digesting the minutes of the Federal Reserve’s last meeting on Wednesday.

The minutes largely confirmed expectations of two more half-point increases in the Fed Funds target rate at the Fed’s next two meetings, but confidence is growing that the Fed may at least pause its tightening after that as the housing and labor markets lose more of their froth.

By 6 AM ET, Dow futures were up 90 points, or 0.3%, while S&P 500 futures were up 0.2%. Nasdaq 100 futures, however, couldn’t escape the NVIDIA news, falling 0.1%.

Other stocks likely to be in focus later include retailers Dollar General (NYSE:DG) and Dollar Tree (NASDAQ:DLTR), which report earnings alongside Macy’s (NYSE:M) and Build-A-Bear (NYSE:BBW). Costco (NASDAQ:COST) reports after bell. Ulta Beauty (NASDAQ:ULTA) and Zscaler (NASDAQ:ZS) are also due to report, as is soccer club Manchester United (NYSE:MANU) (for those who can bear to look).  

4. Russia cuts interest rates sharply as ruble panic subsides

Russia’s central bank cut its key interest rate by 3 percentage points and promised more easing to come, in a further sign of confidence that it has banished any threat of financial collapse.

Even so, the CBR chose not to relax any more of the capital controls it imposed at the start of the war and warned that “external conditions remain difficult” for the economy.

The dollar rose nearly 5% against the ruble to its highest in a week.

Elsewhere, newswires reported Turkey as saying it was negotiating with Russia over letting Ukraine export its grain through the Black Sea, amid growing warnings of a global food crisis due to shortfalls in wheat exports from the region.

5. Oil higher on Aramco warning; U.K. set to announce windfall tax

Crude oil prices pushed higher, still supported by Wednesday’s U.S. government data that showed a slightly larger-than-expected drop in crude inventories last week. Warnings from Saudi Aramco (TADAWUL:2222) CEO Amin Nasser about a lack of spare capacity in the global market also helped underpin prices.

By 6:10 AM ET, U.S. crude was up 0.9% at $111.31 a barrel, while Brent crude was up 0.6% at $111.73 a barrel.

The U.K. is set to become the latest country to impose a windfall tax on oil and gas producers Thursday, with Treasury chief Rishi Sunak expected to divert the money to subsidies for lower-income households. That comes a day after a damning report into repeated violations of lockdown rules on partying at 10 Downing St. Prime Minister Boris Johnson has said he doesn’t intend to resign.

 
 

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