TRADING DAY-Ceasefire sends stocks higher
BY Reuters | ECONOMIC | 05:00 PM EDTBy Jamie McGeever
ORLANDO, Florida, April 9 (Reuters) - U.S. stocks rallied on Thursday, with the S&P 500 and Nasdaq clocking their seventh daily gain, as investors shrugged off a rise in oil prices and pinned their hopes on the fragile U.S.-Iran ceasefire extending to Israel and Lebanon too.
In my column today I look beyond the market euphoria uncorked by Tuesday's announcement of the ceasefire, and outline why the economic, policy and geopolitical backdrop is still pretty sobering for investors.
If you have more time to read, here are a few articles I recommend to help you make sense of what happened in markets today.
1. Israel seeks Lebanon talks after bombardments threaten Iran truce
2. Hormuz at near standstill as Iran warns ships to keep to its waters
3. Iran's Hormuz 'toll booth' set to hardwire higher energy prices: Bousso
4. U.S. software stocks fall as Anthropic's new AI model revives disruption fears
5. Carlyle private credit fund bleeds out amid industry-wide investor exodus
Today's Key Market Moves
* STOCKS: Asia lower, with KOSPI -2%; Europe and UK benchmarks dip ever so slightly; Wall Street's big three rise 0.6% to 0.8%.
* SECTORS/SHARES: Nine of the 11 S&P 500 sectors rise, led by consumer discretionary, industrials and comms services. Energy -1%. Brown-Forman +13%, Amazon +5.6%, Intel +5%, Nike +2%
* FX: Dollar falls for fourth day in a row. AUD, NZD and NOK biggest G10 gainers, BRL and CLP among the biggest EM gainers.
* BONDS: European yields retrace only a fraction of Wednesday's fall, JGB yields inch up towards this week's multi-decade highs. U.S. yields narrowly mixed, 30-year auction passes without incident.
* COMMODITIES/METALS: Oil back up towards $100/bbl. Brent +1%, WTI +3.5%. Physical European, African crude hits record high. Gold +1%.
Today's Talking Points
* Stagflation nation
Figures on Friday are expected to show annual headline U.S. CPI inflation last month was 3.3%, up sharply from 2.4% in February. That would be the highest in nearly two years. Core goods prices are running hot, and with oil 65% more expensive than it was a year ago, inflation hitting 4% is more likely than the Fed's 2% target.
Some of the early March survey data suggest the economy remains pretty resilient. But incoming hard data isn't that robust, and the Atlanta Fed's GDPNow Q1 GDP estimate is now down to 1.3%. Plus, Q4 GDP was revised down on Thursday to 0.5%. Not great.
* AI disruption fears
U.S. software stocks tumbled on Thursday after Anthropic held back the wide release of a powerful AI model over concerns ?it could expose hidden cybersecurity vulnerabilities. Software stocks are down 25% this year, against a 4% decline for the wider tech sector.
Meanwhile, IMF Managing Director Kristalina Georgieva said Fund research shows AI could boost productivity by up to 0.8%, but also affect 60% of all jobs in developed economies. That is sobering, to put it mildly.
* Income incoming
The Q1 U.S. reporting season kicks into gear next week, and the outlook is pretty rosy. The LSEG I/B/E/S consensus is for a 14.4% rise in earnings, again led by tech - income is expected to rise 46%, and if consensus forecasts are met, that would mean tech accounting for 75% of the overall rise in dollar income.
A lot of optimism is built into these forecasts. The Nasdaq is back above its pre-war level, and on Thursday clocked its seventh straight rise, a run not seen since August 2024. But remember, tech's valuation premium over the broader market has collapsed to a 7-year low. So maybe the bullishness is justified?
What could move markets tomorrow?
* Developments in the Middle East
* Energy market moves
* Social media posts from Trump
* New Zealand manufacturing PMI (March)
* Taiwan trade (March)
* China PPI, CPI inflation (March)
* Japan wholesale inflation (March)
* South Korea interest rate decision
* Germany inflation (March, final)
* European Central Bank Vice President Luis de Guindos speaks
* Brazil inflation (March)
* Canada unemployment (March)
* U.S. CPI inflation (March)
* U.S. factory orders (February)
* U.S. University of Michigan consumer sentiment, inflation expectations (April, prelim)
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Opinions expressed are those of the author. They do not reflect the views of Reuters News, which, under the Trust Principles, is committed to integrity, independence, and freedom from bias.
(Reporting by Jamie McGeever; Editing by Nia Williams)
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