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Xi Vents at U.S., Netflix Reports, Tobacco Slumps, CO2 - What's Moving Markets

Published 04/20/2021, 06:35 AM
Updated 04/20/2021, 06:37 AM
© Reuters.

By Geoffrey Smith 

Investing.com -- China’s President Xi Jinping lashes out against the U.S. in a high-profile speech. World carbon dioxide emissions are set for their biggest rise in 10 years this year. Tobacco stocks slump on fears of new U.S. regulation, and Netflix (NASDAQ:NFLX) reports its latest pandemic-fueled numbers after the close. Here’s what you need to know in financial markets on Tuesday, April 20th.

1. Xi lashes out at U.S. (without naming it)

Chinese President Xi Jinping lashed out at the U.S. in a widely-trailed keynote speech, again underlining the uninterrupted level of tension between the world’s two largest economies as they vie for supremacy in the post-pandemic world.

Although he didn’t mention it by name, Xi’s criticism of U.S. attempts to form a broader coalition to contain China’s growing economic and military clout was only thinly disguised.

“One or a few countries shouldn’t impose their rules on others, and the world shouldn’t be led on by the unilateralism of a few countries,” Xi told a high-profile business event.  He also knocked attempts by other countries to reduce their reliance on supply chains originating in China, saying that ““any effort to build barriers and decouple works against economic and market principles, and would only harm others without benefiting oneself.”

The speech comes a day after another carefully orchestrated social media blitz against western corporate interests, this time in the shape of a protest against Tesla at a Chinese auto show.

2. Big Tobacco hurts

Tobacco stocks tumbled after The Wall Street Journal reported that the U.S. administration is planning new regulation to reduce the addictiveness of cigarettes by reducing the amount of nicotine in them. New Zealand recently moved to introduce similar regulation.

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The WSJ said the decision is likely to be taken in conjunction with another one, due by April 29, on whether to ban menthol cigarettes.

Altria (NYSE:MO) stock was down another 1.8% in premarket after losing over 6% on Monday. In London, British American Tobacco (NYSE:BTI) stock and Imperial Brands (OTC:IMBBY) stock both fell over 5%. Pot stocks, meanwhile, benefited on perceptions that many smokers would switch to cannabis-related products.

Philip Morris (NYSE:PM), which owns the international rights to Marlboro, is one of many companies reporting before the open.

3. Stocks set to open lower on Covid, China fears

U.S. stocks are set to open lower later on fresh concerns that the spread of Covid-19 outside the U.S. will hamper the global recovery and weigh particularly on the guidance from U.S. companies that are active internationally.

By 6:30 AM ET (1030 GMT), Dow Jones futures were down 154 points, or 0.5%, while S&P 500 futures were also down 0.5% and Nasdaq 100 futures were down 0.4%.

Stocks likely to be in focus later include IBM (NYSE:IBM), which said its revenue grew for the first time in 11 quarters after the close on Monday, as well as Peloton (NASDAQ:PTON) and Tesla (NASDAQ:TSLA), which are both under pressure over unresolved safety issues.

The earlier reporters in earnings season are led by Johnson & Johnson (NYSE:JNJ), Procter & Gamble, Abbott Labs (NYSE:ABT), Lockheed Martin (NYSE:LMT) and Omnicom.

4. Netflix to keep riding the pandemic wave

The day’s biggest earnings release, however, arguably comes after the close as Netflix reveals its numbers for the first quarter.

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The streaming giant is expected to have added 6 million new subscribers on a net basis, with the northern hemisphere winter and repeated pandemic-related lockdowns both providing tailwinds. Of more interest may be its guidance, given that both the seasonal and the pandemic factors are likely to tail off over the next six months.

Analysts expect earnings per share to nearly double to $2.97, while revenue is expected to have risen to $7.14 billion from $5.77 billion a year ago, thanks to price increases as well as membership gains.

5. Emissions rebound 

World carbon dioxide emissions are set to rise sharply this year after plummeting in 2020 as the pandemic wrought havoc with world energy demand.  

In its World Energy Outlook for 2021, the International Energy Agency said C02 emissions will rise 4.8% this year, their biggest in a decade, after slumping by 5.2% in 2020. That will still leave them below 2019 levels, however.

The rise is due in large part to the predominance of coal in the energy mix of emerging markets, which account for 70% of the expected 4.6% increase in global energy demand this year. Advanced economy energy consumption will also grow, but will remain 3% below 2019 levels, the IEA said.

Elsewhere on the energy radar later, the American Petroleum Institute reports its weekly assessment of U.S. crude and product inventories.

Latest comments

Geoffrey Smith, you are a liar
Xi and China the victimizer, giving a speach pretending to be the victum. how pathetic. Xi sounds like a trump want a be... the world is waking up to Chinese criminal behavior internationally, and inside China's borders.
China is complaining? What a joke. They’ve been seeding around the world, quietly, for decades, from South America to Africa. Now, as for the nicotine, good riddance.
Give me a break. China give all the finger n imposes it rules on south east asia sea, countries. China took other countries land or the whole countries such as Tibet, Uirghurs, etc and it is for ‘world peace’
Reducing the amount of nicotine will make smokers smoke more cigs not less. I have always smoked more when I switched to lighter cigs. Makes as much sense as a square wheel.
China owns the USA. The USA is a broke nation of debt
lol we’re switching from “covid fears” to “china fears” now?
Can't keep harping the same thing even though neither may be the reason moving the market if at all.
fear rules
The leader of a comunist party/regime defending free flows of capital and merchandizes at a global level... the world is really upside down
Its time to stop printing money and live within ones means. Why burden the future generation with our debts? Unless we don’t care about the future of our kids.
Stupid Xi thinks everyone else is a fool. Dominating the world at the expense of other countries is exactly the goal stupid Xi is trying to accomplish, and he thought nobody knows it.
Whats wrong with economic domination by China? Chinese economy is fueled by USA companies operating with chinese labour. Seems they are all happy making money.
at the expense of which countries
Carefully orchestrated wording of "carefully orchestrated". It's just a women did a funny protest that successfully caught eyes of Chinese people on social media. Shanghai police even kept the woman in detention for 5 days for the protest. I thought western media should criticise China government's violation of so-called human rights, rather than describe the protest as "carefully orchestrated social media blitz."
what
 A women was kept in detention for 5 days by Shanghai police, because she protested against brake failure of her father's Tesla model 3 at Shanghai International Automobile Industry Exhibition. Her protest had became a hot topic on Chinese social media.
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