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Week Ahead: 26 April 2021

Fawad Razaqzada Fawad Razaqzada 26/04/2021
Week Ahead: 26 April 2021 Week Ahead: 26 April 2021
Week Ahead: 26 April 2021 Fawad Razaqzada

The stock markets have started the new week little changed after Friday’s session was ended on the front-foot in what a was very choppy week. The positive session on Friday helped to keep the safe-haven dollar under pressure and support the major currency pairs, as investors continued to play the ongoing “reflation trade.” Copper has rallied to a fresh 2021, in yet another risk-on sign. Cryptos, which tumbled last week, have rebounded sharply at the start of Monday’s session with Bitcoin up nearly 8% at just shy of $52900. Gold and silver, which lost their shine towards the end of the week, were flat. Crude oil has dropped however as virus cases in India hit 1 million in just three day, with investors worried that demand from one of the world’s largest consumers will be hurt as a result.
 

When in doubt, buy risk is what the market finally decided on last week after indecisive price action had dominated earlier in the week. Stronger data and faster Covid vaccinations continued to keep sentiment positive after the markets were tested a few times with bearish catalysts, including news of Biden’s capital gains tax proposals and the upsurge in virus cases in India and a few other places.
 

In the week ahead we have policy meetings from the Bank of Japan and more significantly the Fed Reserve, as well as lots of data and earnings all to look forward to. Could the Fed finally put an end to the dollar’s bearish trend this month with a surprisingly hawkish policy meeting? Time will tell. In addition to macro events, the week ahead is filled with plenty of company earnings from major household names, including most of the big tech giants such as Apple and Amazon. It is going to be a very busy week indeed.


Fed to follow footsteps of BOC?
 
Investors will be looking forward to the FOMC policy meeting on Wednesday. Jay Powell and his colleagues are widely expected to leave monetary policy unchanged and re-affirm that there will be no shift in stance until “substantial further progress” on the recovery is made. At the FOMC’s March meeting, the dot plots suggested that the start-point for lift-off in interest rates would be in 2024. Although there won’t be any updates to the dot plots at this meeting, investors will be wondering whether the Fed will deliver a surprise like the BOC did last week and suggest a quicker policy tightening. If that’s the case, then it will most likely underpin the dollar after the greenback’s weak start to Q2 despite mostly positive news from the world’s largest economy. The US economy is in a much better position compared to a few months ago, thanks to government stimulus and the fast pace of Covid vaccinations. So far, the strength of US data hasn’t prevented the Fed from keeping the QE taps wide open. But if the improvement in data persists then it will only be a matter of time before the Fed tapers its emergency stimulus measures.  Against this backdrop, the dollar could be on the verge of a comeback soon, especially against currencies where the central bank is more dovish. Watch out for a potential rebound in US bond yields, too. This could keep gold under pressure.


dollar index
Source: ThinkMarkets and TradingView.com

With employment improving and inflation likely to rise well above the 2% target and stay there for a while, the Fed could start tapering asset purchases before the end of the year and then start hiking rates before 2024, possibly in in the first half of 2023.

FAAMG and other tech stocks face key risks
 
The so-called FAAMG group of US technology stocks (Facebook, Apple, Amazon, Microsoft, and Google), which represent a quarter of the S&P 500’s market capitalization, will be reporting their results in the next few days. Their quarterly numbers and outlooks will have significant impact on the S&P 500 and obviously the tech-heavy Nasdaq indices. The tech sector was among the biggest beneficiaries of the lockdown but as Netflix and Intel reminded us last week, past performance is not necessarily a good indicator for the future.
 
Working from home may soon become a thing of the past for many employees and other pandemic-driven consumer preferences are going to evolve. This might have major implications, especially for the technology sector. For example, companies with subscription-based services might struggle to win new customers the same way they did during lockdown when people stayed at home mostly and purchased services online. Taking Netflix as an example, its subscriber growth slowed far faster than anticipated in Q1 and was the smallest first quarter gain in four years. Its shares slumped, even though it reported better-than-expected top and bottom lines. So, it is going to become increasingly difficult for these types of companies that excelled last year to keep up pace. Investors will be focusing on what company execs will be highlighting about the changing behaviour of consumers in their quarterly reports and earnings calls, than just merely concentrating on the top and bottom lines.
 
Another big risk facing US companies is tougher regulations and higher taxes for the richest Americans. President Joe Biden and the Democratically-controlled Congress will be keen to regulate tech giants, with regulators continuing to pursue anti-trust actions against the likes of Apple and Alphabet. Meanwhile Biden’s proposal of nearly doubling levies on capital gains for people earning more than $1m could provide a massive blow to the equity markets, if it ultimately passes in a form similar to the initial proposal. It could discourage the richest Americans who are likely to own shares from allocating money towards long-term investments. They might sell shares before the tax increase becomes low, potentially derailing the stock market rally.
 
 
Meanwhile, as global lockdown measures are slowly likely to ease, things will hopefully return to more normal ways in the coming months. The US economy is likely to rebound strongly, and inflation will probably heat up as a result, requiring tighter monetary policy as a result. If the Fed were to start tapering bond purchases later in the year, this will likely put upward pressure on bond yields. Rising yields are seen as negative for the growth stocks, whose dividend yields are comparatively lower than what you would get from fixed income.
 
So, the technology sector may not perform as spectacularly as it did last year and there is a risk even, we could see a reversal in shares of tech giants as investors worry about rising borrowing costs, tougher regulations, higher taxes and lower earnings potential in the coming quarters.
 
 
Macroeconomic and earnings highlights
 
Monday
  • Data: German Ifo business Climate
  • Earnings: Tesla
 
Tuesday
 
  • Data: Bank of Japan policy decision
  • Earnings: AMD, Microsoft, Google, Visa, Texas Instruments, GE and Starbucks
 
Wednesday
 
  • Data Aussie CPI, Canadian retail sales
  • FOMC statement and press conference
  • Earnings: Apple, Facebook, eBay, Qualcomm, Boeing
 
Thursday
 
  • Data: German CPI and unemployment change; US Advance GDP estimate and jobless claims
  • Earnings: Amazon, Twitter, McDonalds and Mastercard
 
Friday
 
  • Chinese manufacturing PMI
  • Eurozone data dump, including CPI and GDP estimates
  • Canada monthly GDP
  • US PCE Core Price Index, personal income and spending
  • Earnings: Alibaba, Exxon Mobil and Chevron


 
Any opinions, news, research, analyses, prices or other information contained on this website is provided as general market commentary and does not constitute investment advice. ThinkMarkets will not accept liability for any loss or damage including, without limitation, to any loss of profit which may arise directly or indirectly from use of or reliance on such information.

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Any opinions, news, research, analyses, prices or other information contained on this website is provided as general market commentary and does not constitute investment advice. ThinkMarkets will not accept liability for any loss or damage including, without limitation, to any loss of profit which may arise directly or indirectly from use of or reliance on such information.
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