The S&P 500 and the Nasdaq surged to record highs following better than expected earnings. Twitter (NYSE:TWTR), Hasbro (NASDAQ:HAS) and Lockheed Martin (NYSE:LMT) beat forecasts driving the equity index rally to record levels. The gains highlight a momentous run for U.S. equities which are up a staggering 25% from Christmas eve lows.
Earnings season is really gathering pace with a barrage of major releases due this week. The who’s who of the tech world, Amazon (NASDAQ:AMZN), Microsoft (NASDAQ:MSFT) and Tesla (NASDAQ:TSLA) are all posting earnings this week. 80% of firms have beaten expectations. Let’s be honest, expectations were fairly low coming in to earning season, the market was bracing itself for a pretty poor outpouring of numbers.
Yet time and time again we are seeing firms beat this low bar and are providing a strong forward guidance. There is a heavy focus right now on the health of corporate America and the U.S. economy. Companies are surprising to the upside, the U.S. GDP on Friday will also be a big test. There is a lot of positivity that has pushed U.S. equities to these levels. Traders will be looking to the U.S. GDP to support these levels or gains could be pared fairly quickly.
Asian markets failed to continue the positive run from the U.S. Markets across Asia lacked the corporate catalyst to charge higher. European bourses are also pointing to a negative start on the opening bell.
Euro traders look to IFO business climate figures
The euro continues to struggle versus the mighty dollar. Strong U.S. new home sales data combined with worse than expected Eurozone consumer confidence stats saw the Euro dangerously close to $1.1175, its yearly low. Today attention will shift towards the IFO German business climate data. After the ZEW survey showed improving sentiment investors are hopeful that the IFO data will show similar results posting another strong beat. The headline business gauge is expected to increase to 99.9 as it continues to rebound from a 5 year low. Given a lack of U.S. data due for release, a strong IFO reading could help the euro pare some of Tuesday’s losses to stay comfortably back over $1.12.
Pound remains sub $1.30
The pound was trading firmly below $1.30 in the previous session and remains there in early trade on Wednesday. Cross party talks are heeding little progress and are in danger of collapsing as soon as next week. Conservatives are also growing increasingly frustrated with Theresa May’s inability to deliver on Brexit. Theresa May potentially bringing the Brexit deal back for a fourth attempt in the Commons shows just how desperate she is. The overriding concern for currency traders right now is if Theresa May is ousted, who will replace her? And how far will they be willing to go to achieve Brexit. Suddenly, the no deal Brexit option could be back on the table.
Opening calls
FTSE to open 19 points lower at 7504
DAX to open 40 points lower at 12195
CAC to open 17 point lower at 5574