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US equities ended their two-day slide as tech companies surged late in the session. The trading day has been choppy, with Wall Street now turning its attention to Apple's earnings after the bell. Some analysts anticipate Apple will reveal a major buyback program to offset potentially disappointing earnings amid countless reports from research firms in recent months about slumping iPhone sales overseas.
Let's begin with the choppy session in main equity index futures. Futs tumbled at the start of the cash session and caught a bid about 30 minutes later, or around 1000 ET. Since then, price action has been mostly higher into the late afternoon trade.
Despite the chop, Goldman's Most Shorted index (GSCBMAL) surged higher, up 4% on the session. Names like Carvana Co. were up 32% late in the session after a better-than-expected first-quarter earnings release. The company is heavily shorted, with about 27.6% of the float short, contributing to the surge in price.
Within the S&P500, consumer discretionary and technology stocks were up 1.49% and 1.39%, respectively. Almost green across the board.
Regarding the chop, most S&P500 sectors are still below levels after Wednesday's late session pump and dump.
NYSE TICK data shows that most buy programs were out ahead of Apple's earnings.
Again, more chop with individual names in the tech sector & Mag7.
Ahead of Apple earnings, here's Goldman's preview:
All eyes on AAPL tonight. We have positioning at a 7 out of 10, with a recent uptick in interest in the name (altho remains a BM underweight). Focus commentary 1) China trends in March qtr (cons has China revs -11% y/y in March vs the -13% y/y last qtr) .. 2) commentary on AI.. 3) Services visibility (including TAC + App Store)
In the macro world, Wall Street traders are preparing for Friday's announcement of March non-farm payrolls data. The median estimate tracked by Bloomberg is 240k.
22V Research polled investors and found that 30% of respondents believe Friday's jobs report will be "risk-on," 27% expect a "risk-off" reaction, and 43% said "mixed/negligible."
Meanwhile, the S&P500 is wedged between the 100-day Simple Moving Average (4979) and the 50-day Simple Moving Average (5129). A combination of Apple earnings (after the bell) and jobs data (Friday) could determine the next direction in price action.
One day after the Federal Reserve kept the target range for the benchmark rate at 5.25% to 5.5%—after serious concern that the US is headed for stagflation—bond yields across the curve leaked lower late in the session.
In FX, the greenback is on pace for its biggest drop this year as yields continue sliding. Cryptos, such as Bitcoin and Ethereum, trade mainly in chop. BTC/USD is trying to recover the $60k handle late in the cash session.
We noted early that BlackRock's ETF saw around $37 million in outflows for the first time, while the remaining spot Bitcoin ETFs collectively notched over $526.8 million in outflows.
Rate traders have priced in about 1.6 cuts this year—up from 1.15 yesterday—but down from nearly 7 earlier this year. There has been dramatic repricing in Fed cuts due to sticky inflation.
On inflation, using Bloomberg data, the number of mentions in earnings calls for "sticky inflation" surged to record highs in this earnings season. Several mega-corporations like Starbucks and McDonald's have warned about struggling working poor consumers.
Here's the recap of some of today's top corporate news (courtesy of Bloomberg):
By the way, Boeing shares continued to surge even after another Boeing whistleblower died.
A recap of this morning's macro data:
.... and it's an election year - remember that... We cited a note from Goldman's Adam Crook that points out the Fed and US Treasury are in 'full-blown stock support mode'... Powell can't let Biden's stock market crash... Pro subs read here.
Anyways, all eyes are on Apple after the bell.