logo
Trading Day: Fading trade deal relief?

Trading Day: Fading trade deal relief?

Yahoo19 hours ago
By Jamie McGeever
ORLANDO, Florida (Reuters) -TRADING DAY
Making sense of the forces driving global markets
By Jamie McGeever, Markets Columnist
Investors' initial response to the U.S.-EU trade deal framework saw the euro and German stocks slammed lower on Monday, while the S&P 500 and Nasdaq notched fresh closing highs in choppy trade, also supported by optimism around U.S. tech earnings.
More on that below. In my column today I look at whether the Q2 earnings season could be an inflection point for U.S. stocks - does the 'Mag 7' megacap concentration persist, or is the market finally beginning to broaden out?
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. Out-gunned Europe accepts least-worst U.S. trade deal 2. U.S. tariffs will be test of luxury brands' pricingpower 3. EU's lopsided Trump trade deal will be short-lived 4. Fed rates are going nowhere fast: Mike Dolan 5. Bank of England poised to slow QT after rise in yields
Today's Key Market Moves
* FX: Euro falls 1.2%, dollar index up 1%; both biggestmoves since May 12. * STOCKS: Germany's DAX falls 1% after U.S.-EU trade deal,S&P 500 and Nasdaq notch fresh closing highs. * BONDS: U.S. yields rise 3 bps at long end, curve snaps7-day flattening streak. * COMMODITIES: Oil rises 2.4%, biggest rise in over twoweeks.
Fading trade deal relief?
The relief and feel-good factor for markets that Sunday's U.S.-European Union trade deal initially sparked waxed and waned on Monday, with European assets hit hard and Wall Street trading in negative territory for much of the session.
The S&P 500 and Nasdaq did manage to set new closing highs. The trade deals with the UK, Japan and now the EU are seen as significant wins for Washington and President Donald Trump, as they secure higher tariffs on imports into the U.S. without retaliation and include commitments for additional investment. Many Europeans have criticized the EU for caving in.
Oppenheimer Asset Management on Monday raised its year-end target for the S&P 500 index to 7,100, the highest among major Wall Street brokerages, betting on easing trade tensions and strong corporate earnings.
But as commentator Matthew Klein noted on Monday, it is odd that the country unilaterally making things more expensive for its citizens is somehow deemed to be "winning".
The longer-term impact on the U.S. economy and revenues remain to be seen, but most observers agree growth will slow, and inflation and unemployment will rise in the short-term. Joseph Wang, CIO at Monetary Macro, estimates that the "trade war is concluding with an effective tax hike worth about 1% of GDP."
With the tariff on most imports from the EU now set at 15%, America's overall average effective tariff rate is now 18.2%, according to the Yale Budget Lab, the highest since 1934.
Attention now turns to Stockholm, where U.S. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent and China's Vice Premier He Lifeng are seeking to extend a tariff truce by three months. These talks, set to conclude on Tuesday, could also pave the way for a meeting between Trump and Chinese President Xi Jinping in late October or early November.
On top of trade, there are plenty market-moving developments and events for investors to monitor this week, including top-tier corporate earnings, policy meetings in Japan and the U.S., and the latest U.S. inflation and employment reports.
This week is the busiest of the second-quarter earnings season with over 150 companies in the S&P 500 scheduled to report, including four of the 'Magnificent Seven' tech giants later in the week. Tuesday's focus will likely center on Visa, Proctor & Gamble, and Boeing.
Elsewhere, the U.S. Treasury on Monday said it expects to borrow $1.007 trillion in the third quarter, almost double the April estimate mainly due to the lower beginning-of-quarter cash balance and projected lower net cash flows.
Is U.S. stock rally near 'Mag 7' turning point?
As investors brace for the busiest week of the U.S. earnings season, with four of the 'Magnificent Seven' tech giants reporting, debate is picking up again about these megacap firms' influence over U.S. equity indexes and whether we could be seeing the beginnings of true market broadening.
By some measures, this small clutch of tech titans' profits, market cap, and valuations as a share of the wider market has never been bigger. Broader indices are at record highs, but strip out these firms and the picture is much less rosy.
Indeed, since the beginning of 2023, the S&P 500 composite - the benchmark 'market cap' index increasingly dominated by the 'Mag 7' - has gained 67%, more than double the 'equal-weight' index's 32%.
Only two years ago, the S&P 500 composite/equal-weight ratio was 0.66, meaning the composite index was worth around two-thirds of the equal weight index. That ratio is now 0.84, the highest since 2003.
There's good reason for that.
According to Larry Adam, chief investment officer at Raymond James, 12-month forward earnings estimates for the S&P 500 have outpaced estimates for the equal-weight index by 14%. And Tajinder Dhillon, senior research analyst at LSEG, notes that the 'Mag 7' last year accounted for 52% of overall earnings growth.
Many investors and analysts consider it unhealthy to have the fate of the entire market dependent on so few companies. It may be fine when they're flying high, but not so much if one or two of them take a dive. Plus, it makes stock picking more difficult. If the market basically goes where the 'Mag 7' or Nvidia go, why should an investor bother buying anything else? That's a recipe for market inefficiencies.
YACHTS AND ALL BOATS?
There have recently been nascent signs that the market may be broadening out beyond tech and AI-related names, largely thanks to positive news on the trade front. Last week, the equal-weight index eclipsed November's high to set a fresh record.
Raymond James's CIO Adam notes that the equal-weight index outperformed the S&P 500 last week for the fourth week in the last 13. More of the same this week would mark its first monthly outperformance since March.
Can it hit this mark? Around 160 of the S&P 500-listed firms report this week, including Meta and Microsoft on Wednesday and Amazon and Apple on Wednesday. It's not a stretch to say these four reports will move the market more than the rest combined.
LSEG's Dhillon says the Mag 7's share of total earnings growth is expected to fall to 37% this year and 27% next year. The expected earnings growth spread between Mag 7 and the wider index in the second quarter - 16.4% vs. 7.7% - is the smallest since 2023, and will shrink more in Q3, he adds.
Larry Adam at Raymond James, however, thinks the recent market broadening is a "short-term normalization" rather than a "material shift". He thinks the earnings strength of the tech-related sectors justifies the valuation premium on these stocks.
Regardless, what we know for sure is that fears about the market's concentration and narrowness have been swirling for years and there has yet to be a reckoning. The equal-weight index's rise to new highs last week suggests the rising tide is lifting all boats, not just the billionaire's yachts.
Essentially, the Mag 7 and large caps are outperforming, but if you peel back the onion, other sectors like financials and industrials are also doing well. And look around the world. Many indices outside the U.S. that aren't tech-heavy are approaching or printing new highs also, like Britain's FTSE 100 and Germany's DAX.
"To see the largest names leading isn't a worrisome sign, especially as they are backing it up with very strong earnings," says Ryan Detrick, chief market strategist at Carson Group. "This isn't a weak breadth market, it is broad based and a very healthy rally."
This week's earnings might go some way to determining whether this continues for a while yet.
What could move markets tomorrow?
* U.S. consumer confidence (July) * U.S. JOLTS job openings (June) * U.S earnings, including Proctor & Gamble, Visa, Boeing * U.S. Treasury auctions $44 billion of 7-year notes
Want to receive Trading Day in your inbox every weekday morning? Sign up for my newsletter here.
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.
(By Jamie McGeever; Editing by Nia Williams)
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Novo's new CEO faces sceptical investors with Wegovy US sales in focus
Novo's new CEO faces sceptical investors with Wegovy US sales in focus

Yahoo

time11 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Novo's new CEO faces sceptical investors with Wegovy US sales in focus

By Maggie Fick and Jacob Gronholt-Pedersen LONDON (Reuters) -Novo Nordisk's new CEO Maziar Mike Doustdar has been handed the reins to turn around the Wegovy-making firm's flagging sales growth and sliding share price. He first will need to win over sceptical investors. Doustdar, an Iranian-born Austrian national who grew up in the United States, is a company man. He joined Novo in 1992 as an office clerk in Vienna, rising through the ranks to head all commercial units globally - minus the U.S. "The company needs to address recent market challenges with speed and ambition," Novo Nordisk Chair Helge Lund said in a statement on Tuesday. "Mike has a clear vision of how to unlock the full potential of the opportunities ahead." Investors aren't so sure, worried that Doustdar's lack of U.S. experience will hinder his ability to turn things around in Novo's top market and take the battle to tough U.S. rival Eli Lilly. Novo, which became Europe's most valuable listed firm after the launch of Wegovy in 2021, has seen its shares slump since mid last year, which led to the abrupt removal in May of CEO Lars Fruergaard Jorgensen. On Tuesday the shares plunged more than 20%, knocking some $70 billion off the group's market cap. "When the stock falls as much as it has, people want to see change," said Barclays analyst Emily Field, adding that her sense was that "people are not happy" with the choice of CEO because it was not a big enough renewal. "My understanding is that he has never had U.S. operational experience, and the U.S. is all that matters." Novo - once worth as much as $615 billion, and now nearer $240 billion - has faced rising competition and been hit by copycat rivals to its weight-loss drugs, especially in the critical U.S. market, which led to a sharp profit warning earlier on Tuesday. In early calls with analysts and journalists, Doustdar said that there was an "urgency" to do things differently. "I don't like it," Doustdar said when asked about the share price plunge. "I don't like it as an employee, I don't like it as a CEO-elect, and I certainly don't like it as a shareholder myself. But setbacks don't define companies. Our response does." Jefferies analysts said they were surprised by the appointment of Doustdar, noting that feedback had suggested a preference for an external candidate. "I don't see this as super positive," said Lukas Leu, portfolio manager at Bellevue Asset Management, a Novo shareholder. Markus Manns, a portfolio manager at another shareholder, Union Investment, added there was "slight disappointment". "People had hoped for an external candidate," he said. Board chair Lund said external and internal candidates had been considered in the CEO search, and Doustdar had emerged as the leading candidate in part because he knows the company and its strengths and weaknesses. "He can respond and take actions on those, I think, quicker than anyone could do coming from the outside," Lund said.

Kering's quarterly sales weaker than expected, Gucci down 25%
Kering's quarterly sales weaker than expected, Gucci down 25%

Yahoo

time11 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Kering's quarterly sales weaker than expected, Gucci down 25%

By Mimosa Spencer and Tassilo Hummel PARIS (Reuters) -Kering, the French group that owns fashion labels Gucci and Saint Laurent, reported on Tuesday a 15% drop in quarterly revenues, falling short of market expectations as the luxury sector grapples with a prolonged slump. Sales in the second quarter totalled 3.7 billion euros ($4.3 billion), down 15% on a comparable basis, missing a Visible Alpha consensus estimate among analysts for a 13% drop cited by UBS. Gucci, which accounts for the bulk of group profits, reported sales of 1.46 billion euros, down 25% year on year. Kering, whose shares have lost around 60% of their value over the last 24 months, has struggled with falling sales for over two years. Last month, it said it had hired former Renault CEO Luca de Meo as its next chief executive from September. A newly-agreed 15% tariff rate on all European Union exports to the United States, a key market where Kering makes over 20% of its sales, will add to headwinds. "The tariff impact is perfectly manageable for us", Armelle Poulou, Kering's finance chief, told journalists. Kering's brands, which also include smaller labels Bottega Veneta and Balenciaga, have already raised prices globally and more specifically in the United States, where Poulou said the company was taking a measured approach with a close eye on consumer sentiment. "There could be a second wave of price adjustments in the autumn", she said. The French group controlled by the billionaire Pinault family reduced its net debt in the first half of the year to 9.5 billion euros from 10.5 billion at the end of last year, largely due to real estate sales.

Spirit Airlines furloughing 270 pilots, demoting another 140 amid slower schedule
Spirit Airlines furloughing 270 pilots, demoting another 140 amid slower schedule

The Hill

time12 minutes ago

  • The Hill

Spirit Airlines furloughing 270 pilots, demoting another 140 amid slower schedule

Spirit Airlines is furloughing around 270 pilots and demoting another 140 later this year as the budget carrier looks to slim down the workforce and adjust to a slower schedule. 'We are taking necessary steps to ensure we operate as efficiently as possible as part of our efforts to return to profitability. Among these steps, we have made the difficult decision to furlough approximately 270 Pilots, effective Nov. 1, 2025, to better align staffing with our flight schedule,' the airline said in an emailed statement to The Hill on Tuesday. The demotion of approximately 140 captains will take place on Oct. 1. They will downgraded to first officer, according to the Air Line Pilots Association, the largest pilot union in the world, CNBC reported. 'We recognize the weight of this decision and are committed to treating all affected Team Members with compassion and respect during this process,' the airline added. The Florida-based carrier had filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection in November, after failed attempts at merging with other airlines and financial losses. Spirit emerged from bankruptcy in March. Ahead of filing for bankruptcy, Spirit furloughed around 200 pilots in September. 'We know how hard this news hits, and there's no dressing that up. Spirit continues to shrink, and with it, the value of pilot seniority and Spirit careers continues to erode,' Ryan Muller, a captain and the chairman of Spirit's Air Line Pilots Association, said, according to CNBC.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store