The market the day before
The main American stock indexes ended the trading session on April 13 in positive territory. The S&P 500 rose 1.12% to 4447 points, the Nasdaq added 2.03%, the Dow Jones rose 1.01%. Nine of the 11 sectors of the broad market index showed an increase in quotations. The leaders were manufacturers of cyclical consumer goods (+2.51%) and IT companies (+1.59%). Utilities providers (-0.17%) and the financial sector (-0.08%) looked worse than the market against the background of falling income growth rates after the boom of 2021.
Company news
- British GlaxoSmithKline is considering the acquisition of biopharmaceutical company Sierra Oncology (SRRA: +38.5%) for $55 per share, or $1.9 billion. The transaction is expected to be completed in the third quarter of this year.
- Delta Airlines (DAL: +6.67%) reported smaller-than-expected quarterly losses. Management predicts revenue recovery to 2019 levels due to increased demand for air travel and bookings ahead of the holiday season.
- JPMorgan Chase & Co. (JPM: -3.2%) reported a 41.5% YoY drop in quarterly profit due to a reduction in investment banking revenues after record growth in 2021. At the same time, the company announced a $30 billion buy back from May of this year.
We expect
US manufacturing inflation accelerated to 1.4% mom in March after 0.8% in February, exceeding the consensus forecast of 1.1%. The annual growth rate reached 11.2% — the maximum value since the beginning of the calculation of the indicator in November 2010. However, even without taking into account volatile prices for energy, food and end-use goods, the basic producer price index increased by 1.1% mom. This is due to the imbalance between sustainable consumption and supply shortages, which is likely to persist in the current quarter due to additional pressure in supply chains due to the suspension of production in China and increased geopolitical tensions. The increase in producer prices may also again contribute to the acceleration of consumer inflation in April after its slight slowdown in March.
In a monthly report published yesterday, the International Energy Agency (IEA) lowered its forecast for oil demand due to lockdowns in China and weaker demand from OECD countries. The IEA also expects production volumes in Russia to fall by 27% amid a decline in exports, but believes that an increase in production in other countries and the release of raw materials from state reserves will help achieve a balance in the market. In April-May, a seasonal adjustment of oil quotes is not excluded, however, the geopolitical factor continues to influence market expectations for the time being.
- The stock exchanges of the Asia-Pacific region ended trading on April 14 with the growth of the main stock indices. Japan's Nikkei gained 1.22%, China's CSI 300 rose 1.25%, Hong Kong's Hang Seng rose 0.56%. EuroStoxx 50 gained 0.16% from the opening of trading.
- The price of Brent crude oil futures dropped to $108.18 per barrel. Gold is trading at $1970 per troy ounce.
In our opinion, the S&P 500 will hold the upcoming session in the range of 4390-4460 points.
Macrostatistics
Retail sales data in the US for March will be published today, which will allow us to assess the dynamics of consumer demand. The consensus assumes an increase in sales of the control group of goods by 1.0% mom (after +0.2% in February). A preliminary consumer sentiment index from the University of Michigan for April will also be released (consensus suggests a decline to 59.0 points after 59.4 in March).
Sentiment Index
The sentiment index rose by two points to 49, amid the release of a number of positive corporate news.
Technical picture
The S&P 500 played back Tuesday's drop. The shape of the candle for April 13 formed a pattern of absorption of sales of the previous day. At the same time, the RSI is held in the neutral zone, while the smoothing of the MACD indicator line indicates the parity of "bulls" and "bears". If buyers do not strengthen their positions, the benchmark will be able to test support at the level of 4350 points in the short term.