Stocks tread water ahead of earnings reality-check

Kitco Media
By Anonymous
Published:
Updated:
Reuters
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 World stocks flat, oil under pressure
 

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 BOJ meeting bookmarks a busy week of data
 

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 Analysts look for tech earnings to beat the Street
 

 
 (Updates prices)
 By Amanda Cooper
 LONDON, April 24 (Reuters) - Global shares held steady
on Monday ahead of a week packed with economic data and central
bank meetings, along with earnings from the tech giants that
have kept the S&P 500 afloat this year.
 The most recent data on global business activity shows a
broad-based pick-up in the services sector that, in the United
States at least, strengthens the case for interest rates to keep
rising.
 S&P 500 futures  and Nasdaq futures  were down
around 0.1%, while in Europe, the STOXX 600  trod water,
holding flat on the day.
 The MSCI All-World index  was steady. It's
still up almost 1% in April and not far off one-year highs,
thanks in large part to the strength in U.S. tech stocks.
 Apple Inc  and Microsoft Corp  alone have
accounted for nearly half of the S&P 500's gains in the last
month, so there is much riding on their outlooks. 
 "Having seen off largely better-than-expected numbers from
the U.S. banks last week, it’s now the turn of big Tech which
has driven most of the U.S. market rebound so far this year,"
said Michael Hewson, chief market strategist at CMC Markets.
 "With the likes of Microsoft, Alphabet, Meta Platforms, and
Amazon all set to report this week, the outperformance that
we’ve seen in the Nasdaq 100 so far this year is likely to face
a key test," he said.
 The U.S. House of Representatives could this week vote on a
Republican plan to raise the debt ceiling in exchange for
spending cuts. Weak tax receipts mean the government could run
out of money earlier than expected, and, as a result, the cost
of insuring against a U.S. sovereign default is at its highest
in well over a decade.
 
 BOJ's NEW BOSS
 Markets  are pricing in an 86% chance the Federal
Reserve will increase rates by a quarter point in May, and fully
expect a similar rise from the European Central Bank with some
risk of a half-point move.   
 Central banks in Canada and Sweden meet this week, but most
attention will be on the Bank of Japan for the first meeting
chaired by its new governor, Kazuo Ueda.
 Ueda on Monday said policy easing had to be continued since
inflation was still under 2% in trend terms.
 Only three out of 27 economists polled by Reuters expect the
BOJ to start to scale-back its yield curve control policy (YCC)
this soon.
 "The consensus expects it is too early to see any
adjustments yet to the BoJ's Yield Curve Control policy - though
changes may be forthcoming at the June meeting," strategists at
ING said in a daily note. 
 Meanwhile, the head of Belgium's central bank said in an FT
article on Monday that investors are underestimating how much
euro zone borrowing costs will rise.
 Pierre Wunsch, an ECB policymaker, said he would only agree
to pausing rate rises once there was evidence that wage growth
was slowing.
 The euro  rose 0.2% to $1.1006 against the dollar
The dollar was last up 0.4% against the Japanese currency at➖.69  .
 The confidence in the equity market hasn't translated into
optimism in the oil market, where crude prices struggled to
remain above $80 a barrel.
 Brent crude  fell 0.4% to $81.33 a barrel, as
investors fretted about the outlook for energy demand in an
environment of high interest rates and persistent inflation.

 
Asia stock markets 
Asia-Pacific valuations 
US tech earnings 
 
 (Additional reporting by Wayne Cole in Sydney; Editing by
Christopher Cushing and Lincoln Feast.)
 ((Wayne.Cole@thomsonreuters.com; 612 9171 7144; Reuters
Messaging: wayne.cole.thomsonreuters.com@reuters.net))
 
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