With Nvidia Corp. earnings just a day away and a heavy slate of US economic data scheduled for later in the week, there was little movement in markets on Tuesday.
US equity futures and the dollar were little changed, while Treasury yields inched up.
The stakes are high ahead of Nvidia, especially after an earnings season that showed disappointing results for other “Magnificent Seven” megacaps.
The upcoming reports on US economic growth, prices, personal spending and jobs are adding to the wait-and-see mood.
The heft of Nvidia, which has the second-biggest weighting in the S&P 500 after Apple Inc, and its heady valuation mean that it’s susceptible to big swings that could reverberate widely.
Pricing in the options market shows that traders see the potential for an almost 10 per cent move in either direction after earnings, which would translate to roughly 160 points in the Nasdaq 100 Index, or a 0.8 per cent move, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.
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Nvidia’s “numbers will be good but what matters is the guidance in order to understand if the demand is still healthy,” said Alberto Tocchio, a portfolio manager at Kairos Partners.
“If we get bad news, the rotation will be ever stronger as the market is still very heavy on the megacap.”
Among individual stocks in US premarket trading, Paramount Global fell after an acquisition contest for the CBS parent ended. The Hersey Co. dropped after Citigroup Inc. cut its recommendation on the stock to sell from neutral. JD.com Inc.’s depository receipts climbed after the Chinese online retailer announced a $5 billion share buyback.
Investors hope the bull market will broaden out of big tech after fed Chair Jerome Powell signalled Friday the central bank will cut rates soon.
Other policy makers echoed his dovish tone: Fed Bank of San Francisco President Mary Daly said it’s appropriate to begin cutting rates, while her Richmond counterpart Thomas Barkin said he still saw upside risks for inflation, though he supported “dialing down” policy.
Economists see the personal consumption expenditures price index excluding food and energy — the Fed’s preferred measure of underlying inflation — rising 0.2% per cent in July for a second month. That would pull the three-month annualised rate of so-called core inflation down to 2.1 per cent, a smidgen above the central bank’s 2 per cent goal.
Economists see the personal consumption expenditures price index excluding food and energy — the Fed’s preferred measure of underlying inflation — rising 0.2% per cent in July for a second month. That would pull the three-month annualised rate of so-called core inflation down to 2.1 per cent, a smidgen above the central bank’s 2 per cent goal.
“Of course, the central bank will emphasise that it has not yet made a decision and wrap that in the words ‘data dependent’,” said Volkmar Baur, a strategist at Commerzbank AG. “But 95 per cent of what it needs to know for its September meeting should already be available.”
Meanwhile, Europe’s Stoxx 600 Index edged higher, led by miners and carmakers. Trading volumes were low, with activity on most European benchmarks about three-quarters of the average level from the past 30 days.
Ryanair Plc led gains in European airline and travel stocks after CEO Michael O’Leary said a softening in fares
experienced between April and June has levelled out. Bunzl Plc shares soared after the distribution group raised its full-year profit guidance. Banco Santander SA advanced after announcing a buyback for as much as $1.7 billion.