Selasa, 09 Juli 2019

Stocks slide as investors await more clarity on Fed rate-cut plans - MarketWatch

U.S. stocks fell at the start of trade Tuesday, putting them on pace for a third-straight losing session for Wall Street on Tuesday, as investors grew wary of equities ahead of key testimony from Federal Reserve Chairman starting Wednesday.

What are major indexes doing?

The Dow Jones Industrial Average DJIA, -0.33%  fell 117 points, or 0.4%, to 26,687, while S&P 500 futures SPX, -0.17% dropped 9 points, or 0.3%, to 2,968. The Nasdaq Composite COMP, +0.04%  dropped 12 points, or 0.2%, to 8,085.

On Tuesday, the Dow Jones Industrial Average fell 115.98 points, or 0.4%, to close at 26,806.14, while the S&P 500 index  declined 0.5% to finish at 2,975.95. The Nasdaq Composite Index declined 0.8% to end at 8,098.38.

Need to Know: Weaker growth will offset a Fed rate cut — so sell stocks, warns Morgan Stanley

What’s driving the market?

Investors appear less willing to hold stocks and other perceived riskier assets as they wait for two-day testimony before Congress by Fed Chairman Jerome Powell due to start Wednesday. Markets are hoping the central bank’s chief will shed some light on a meeting of the central bank’s interest-rate setting committee, slated for July 30-31, with investors clinging to hopes for a rate cut.

Expectations for interest-rate reductions have been scaled back since last week’s strong June jobs report, though a quarter-point reduction at the Fed’s meeting at the end of the month is still seen by market participants as virtually certain.

“A cut in July will be difficult to dodge given current market pricing but Powell may use the opportunity to manage expectations beyond the meeting,” said Craig Erlam, senior market analyst at OANDA, in a note to clients. “How successful he’ll be is another thing as investors don’t appear to want to hear it and may instead continue to apply the pressure going into the September meeting.”

Read: Could the Fed surprise the stock market by skipping a July rate cut? It’s not out of the question

On Tuesday, Powell gave opening remarks at a conference at 8:45 a.m. Eastern Time to discuss recent stress tests for banks. Vice Chairman Randal Quarles will speak at that same conference at 2 p.m. Eastern Time. St. Louis Fed President Jim Bullard and Atlanta Fed President Raphael Bostic are also due to make appearances elsewhere Tuesday.

Trade concerns may also be weighing on market sentiment, after the US announced new preliminary tariffs on certain steel imports from Mexico and China, pending an investigation into subsides, with a final decision due in November.

Meanwhile, a diplomatic dispute between Japan and South Korea, which has led to Japan imposing new export restrictions on three materials used in the production of advanced consumer electronics, appears to be worsening after comments Tuesday from South Korean Industry Minister Sung Yun-mo suggested the country will soon impose countermeasures, according to Reuters.

The dispute — over a Seoul court ruling allowing the seizure of some assets of Japan’s Nippon Steel & Sumitomo Metal Corp. to compensate South Korean citizens for forced labor during World War Two — could lead to added disruption in the global supply of smartphone and chips, analysts say. The PHLX Semiconductor index SOX, -0.01%   was down 0.3%.

“Japan’s decision to restrict exports on fluorinated polyimide, resist polymers and hydrogen fluoride is starting to resonate with the South Korean technology sector,” wrote Michael O’Rourke chief market strategist at JonesTrading, in a note, adding that Japan controls 80%-90% of these markets. “There is concern that the restrictions will hurt Samsung and Hynix’s chip production. The concern extends to US tech companies, which may see delays to the products they have manufactured in or parts sourced from South Korea.”

On the economic data front, the National Federation of Independent Business released its small business optimism index, which fell to 103.3 in June, from 105 in May. The decline follows gains in the previous four months, and remains above the historical average.

At 10 a.m. Eastern Time, the Labor Department will issue its estimate of employment openings in the U.S. in May, along with the rate at which Americans were hired, fired, or left their jobs.

Which stocks are in focus?

Shares of beverage maker PepsiCo Inc. PEP, -0.04%  were up 0.1% Tuesday, after reporting second-quarter results that topped expectations and affirming its full-year outlook.

Shares of Piper Jaffray Co. PJC, +0.55%   could be in focus, after a report in the Wall Street Journal that the firm is nearing a deal to buy Sandler O’Neill + Partners LP for $485 million in cash and stock. Piper stock rose 1.8% in early trade Tuesday.

Etsy, Inc. ETSY, +3.11%   announced its intention Tuesday to offer free shipping for customers with orders of at least $35. Shares were down 2.7% Tuesday morning.

Shares of Netflix Inc. NFLX, +2.13%   rose 1.5% Tuesday, after Raymond James reiterated its bullish call on the streaming video giant citing the record start for the new “Stranger Things” season.

How are other markets trading?

The yield on the 10-year U.S. Treasury TMUBMUSD10Y, +0.46%   note has edged up nearly 2 basis points, to 2.054%.

In Asia, stocks struggled, and the Hang Seng HSI, -0.76%  led decliners with a drop of 0.7%. European stocks SXXP, -0.60%  were under pressure, led by a 1.3% drop for the German DAX 30 index DAX, -0.97%  

In commodities markets, oil prices CLQ19, -0.23%   moved higher, while gold prices GCQ19, -0.44% fell 0.7%. The U.S. dollar DXY, +0.13% was higher, notably against the British pound GBPUSD, -0.4154%

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2019-07-09 13:47:00Z
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IBM closes its $34 billion acquisition of Red Hat - CNBC

IBM closed its $34 billion acquisition of Red Hat, the companies announced Tuesday.

Shares of IBM were flat during premarket trading, while Red Hat shares were halted.

The deal was originally announced in October, when the companies said IBM would buy all shares in Red Hat at $190 each in cash.

The acquisition of Red Hat, an open source, enterprise software maker, marks the close of IBM's largest deal ever. It's one of the largest in U.S. tech history. Excluding the AOL-Time Warner merger, it follows the $67 billion merger between Dell and EMC in 2016 and JDS Uniphase's $41 billion acquisition of optical-component supplier SDL in 2000.

Under the deal, Red Hat will now be a unit of IBM's Hybrid Cloud division, according to the original announcement. The companies said Red Hat's CEO Jim Whitehurst would join IBM's senior management team and report to CEO Ginni Rometty.

IBM previously said it hopes its acquisition of Red Hat will help it do more work in the cloud, one of its four key growth drivers, which also include social, mobile and analytics. The company lags behind Amazon and Microsoft in the cloud infrastructure business. IBM has seen three consecutive quarters of declining year-over-year revenue. But some analysts are hopeful of the Red Hat deal's opportunity to bring in new business.

In an April note, Nomura Instinet analysts led by Jeffrey Kvaal said, "OpenShift [a Red Hat product] should help IBM win new customers and new workloads as enterprises begin to usher mission-critical applications from on-premise to public or private clouds."

Goldman Sachs, J.P. Morgan and Lazard advised IBM on the Red Hat deal. Morgan Stanley and Guggenheim advised Red Hat.

-CNBC's Jordan Novet, Alex Sherman and Lora Kolodny contributed to this report.

Subscribe to CNBC on YouTube.

Watch: Red Hat deal will grow cash flow, gross margins in first year: IBM CEO

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2019-07-09 13:03:34Z
CAIiEBhlg0A4_PgVPeFeWMVtoe0qGQgEKhAIACoHCAow2Nb3CjDivdcCMJ_d7gU

Burger King rolls out $1 Crispy Taco nationwide for limited time - AOL

Talk about Taco Tuesday.

Starting Tuesday, Burger King is rolling out a $1 Crispy Taco nationwide for a limited time. The new menu item has been tested out in select restaurants prior to this launch across America.

"We’ve seen success with tacos in our west coast restaurants and knew it was time to bring this west coast favorite nationwide,” said Chris Finazzo, Burger King’s president, North America. “The Crispy Taco adds variety to our snacking items and truly hits the spot.”

The Crispy Taco boasts a crispy tortilla shell stuffed with seasoned beef, shredded cheddar and lettuce and topped with taco sauce.

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While it costs just a buck at most locations, prices will be higher at Alaska and Hawaii eateries.

As for why a burger and fries chain is getting into taco territory, don’t forget that Mexican-inspired fast food chain Taco Bell recently brought back Nacho Fries for a limited time.

A standard order of these seasoned fries and nacho cheese dip costs about $1.29 at most locations. Or you can step it up with an order of Nacho Fries Supreme (which costs $2.89 and comes loaded with seasoned beef, nacho cheese, tomatoes and reduced fat sour cream) or Nacho Fries BellGrande, a bigger version of the Supreme.

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JACKSONVILLE, IL - JULY 17: General atmosphere at the wedding of Ashley King and Joel Burger on July 17, 2015 in Jacksonville, Illinois. (Photo by Tasos Katopodis/Getty Images for Burger King)

JACKSONVILLE, IL - JULY 17: General atmosphere at the wedding of Ashley King and Joel Burger on July 17, 2015 in Jacksonville, Illinois. (Photo by Tasos Katopodis/Getty Images for Burger King)

JACKSONVILLE, IL - JULY 17: General atmosphere at the wedding of Ashley King and Joel Burger on July 17, 2015 in Jacksonville, Illinois. (Photo by Tasos Katopodis/Getty Images for Burger King)

JACKSONVILLE, IL - JULY 17: General atmosphere at the wedding of Ashley King and Joel Burger on July 17, 2015 in Jacksonville, Illinois. (Photo by Tasos Katopodis/Getty Images for Burger King)

JACKSONVILLE, IL - JULY 17: General atmosphere at the wedding of Ashley King and Joel Burger on July 17, 2015 in Jacksonville, Illinois. (Photo by Tasos Katopodis/Getty Images for Burger King)

JACKSONVILLE, IL - JULY 17: General atmosphere at the Ashley King and Joel Burger wedding on July 17, 2015 in Jacksonville, Illinois. (Photo by Tasos Katopodis/Getty Images for Burger King)

JACKSONVILLE, IL - JULY 17: General atmosphere at the wedding of Ashley King and Joel Burger on July 17, 2015 in Jacksonville, Illinois. (Photo by Tasos Katopodis/Getty Images for Burger King)

JACKSONVILLE, IL - JULY 17: General atmosphere at the wedding of Ashley King and Joel Burger on July 17, 2015 in Jacksonville, Illinois. (Photo by Tasos Katopodis/Getty Images for Burger King)

JACKSONVILLE, IL - JULY 17: General atmosphere at the wedding of Ashley King and Joel Burger on July 17, 2015 in Jacksonville, Illinois. (Photo by Tasos Katopodis/Getty Images for Burger King)

JACKSONVILLE, IL - JULY 17: General atmosphere at the wedding of Ashley King and Joel Burger on July 17, 2015 in Jacksonville, Illinois. (Photo by Tasos Katopodis/Getty Images for Burger King)

JACKSONVILLE, IL - JULY 17: General atmosphere at the Ashley King and Joel Burger wedding on July 17, 2015 in Jacksonville, Illinois. (Photo by Tasos Katopodis/Getty Images for Burger King)

JACKSONVILLE, IL - JULY 17: General atmosphere at the wedding of Ashley King and Joel Burger on July 17, 2015 in Jacksonville, Illinois. (Photo by Tasos Katopodis/Getty Images for Burger King)

JACKSONVILLE, IL - JULY 17: General atmosphere at the Ashley King and Joel Burger wedding on July 17, 2015 in Jacksonville, Illinois. (Photo by Tasos Katopodis/Getty Images for Burger King)

JACKSONVILLE, IL - JULY 17: General atmosphere at the Ashley King and Joel Burger wedding on July 17, 2015 in Jacksonville, Illinois. (Photo by Tasos Katopodis/Getty Images for Burger King)

JACKSONVILLE, IL - JULY 17: General atmosphere at the wedding of Ashley King and Joel Burger on July 17, 2015 in Jacksonville, Illinois. (Photo by Tasos Katopodis/Getty Images for Burger King)

JACKSONVILLE, IL - JULY 17: The Jacksonville Burger King congratulates Ashley King and Joel Burger on their wedding on July 17, 2015 in Jacksonville, Illinois. (Photo by Tasos Katopodis/Getty Images for Burger King)

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2019-07-09 12:24:27Z
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U.S. stock futures fall as investors brace for comments from Fed Chairman Powell - MarketWatch

U.S. stock-index futures pointed to what could be the third-straight losing session for Wall Street on Tuesday, as investors grew wary of equities in the countdown to comments from Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell.

What are major indexes doing?

Dow Jones Industrial Average futures YMU19, -0.41%  fell 95 points, or 0.4%, to 26,698, while S&P 500 futures ESU19, -0.37%  dropped 10.35 points, or 0.4%, to 2,968.25. Nasdaq-100 futures NQU19, -0.38%  dropped 31.5 points, or 0.4%, to 7,770.

On Tuesday, the Dow Jones Industrial Average DJIA, -0.43% fell 115.98 points, or 0.4%, to close at 26,806.14, while the S&P 500 index SPX, -0.48%  declined 0.5% to finish at 2,975.95. The Nasdaq Composite Index COMP, -0.78% declined 0.8% to end at 8,098.38.

Need to Know: Weaker growth will offset a Fed rate cut — so sell stocks, warns Morgan Stanley

What’s driving the market?

Investors appear less willing to hold stocks and other perceived riskier assets as they wait for two-day testimony before Congress by Fed Chairman Jerome Powell due to start Wednesday. Markets are hoping the central bank’s chief will shed some light on a meeting due later this month, with investors clinging to hopes for a rate cut.

Expectations for interest-rate reductions have been scaled back since last week’s strong June jobs report, though a quarter-point reduction at the Fed’s meeting at the end of the month is still seen by market participants as virtually certain.

“A cut in July will be difficult to dodge given current market pricing but Powell may use the opportunity to manage expectations beyond the meeting,” said Craig Erlam, senior market analyst at OANDA, in a note to clients. “How successful he’ll be is another thing as investors don’t appear to want to hear it and may instead continue to apply the pressure going into the September meeting.”

Read: Could the Fed surprise the stock market by skipping a July rate cut? It’s not out of the question

On Tuesday, Powell is scheduled to give opening remarks at a conference at 8:45 a.m. Eastern Time to discuss recent stress tests for banks. Vice Chairman Randal Quarles will speak at that same conference at 2 p.m. Eastern Time. St. Louis Fed President Jim Bullard and Atlanta Fed President Raphael Bostic are also due to make appearances elsewhere Tuesday.

On the economic data front, the National Federation of Independent Business released its small business optimism index, which fell to 103.3 in June, from 105 in May. The decline follows gains in the previous four months, and remains above the historical average.

At 10 a.m. Eastern Time, the Labor Department will issue its estimate of employment openings in the U.S. in May, along with the rate at which Americans were hired, fired, or left their jobs.

Which stocks are in focus?

Shares of beverage maker PepsiCo Inc. PEP, -0.35%  were up 0.9% in premarket action after reporting second-quarter results that topped expectations and affirming its full-year outlook.

Shares of Piper Jaffray Co. PJC, -1.52%   could be in focus, after a report in the Wall Street Journal that the firm is nearing a deal to buy Sandler O’Neill + Partners LP for $485 million in cash and stock. Shares were unchanged so far in premarket action.

Etsy, Inc. ETSY, +0.99%   announced its intention Tuesday to offer free shipping for customers with orders of at least $35. Shares were down 0.6% before the bell Tuesday.

How are other markets trading?

The yield on the 10-year U.S. Treasury TMUBMUSD10Y, +0.04%   note has edged up to 2.064%.

In Asia, stocks struggled, and the Hang Seng HSI, -0.76%  led decliners with a drop of 0.7%. European stocks SXXP, -0.75%  were under pressure, led by a 1.3% drop for the German DAX 30 index DAX, -1.08%  

In commodities markets, oil prices moved higher, while gold prices GCQ19, -0.40% fell 0.7%. The U.S. dollar DXY, +0.12% was higher, notably against the British pound GBPUSD, -0.4234%

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2019-07-09 11:47:00Z
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Poll: ride hailing - Poll - Castanet.net

The B.C. government has set up a series of rules and regulations as it opens the door to ride hailing applications for the service on Sept. 3.

There's no exact day when ride hailing could start in the province, and opinion varies from mid-September to as late as the end of the year.

New Democrat Bowinn Ma, who heads an all-party committee that deals with ride hailing, says the service could start by year's end, while a Transportation Ministry bureaucrat says the companies could be approved to operate as early as Sept. 16.

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July 09, 2019 at 09:50AM

Why OPEC+ Will Outlive Shale | OilPrice.com - OilPrice.com

A form of cognitive dissonance seems to be taking over oil market watchers, a sort of a blind belief that US shale oil production is set to grow, and grow at an aggressive rate, indefinitely. This erroneous belief seems to be the underlying cause for much of the pessimism as to the oil price outlook over the coming years. While, it is undeniable that US shale growth over the last several years has been nothing short of phenomenal, the US shale industry geological and financial resources are not infinite.

Post the OPEC+ meeting in early July, a host of market commentators lampooned OPEC+ for pursuing a policy of strategic patience. On July 2nd the Financial Times published an article under the somber  heading: “OPEC is stuck in a production-cutting cycle it cannot get out of”. On July 3rd, CNBC published a similarly ominous prediction: “Defensive OPEC alliance has ‘no clear endgame’ in an era of abundant supply, expert says.” On July 4th, The Economist published a critical article under the title: “OPEC’s Predictable deal cannot hide its giant problems.”

The thrust of the above articles, as well as many others like them, is this: US shale oil growth is virtually unlimited and OPEC is fighting for a lost cause. This kind of narrative is attractive to many, for OPEC represents much of what the west dislikes: Many of OPEC’s autocratic members have had a confrontational relationship with the west at one point or another, and OPEC’s founding objective of managing oil supply is antithetical to the western ideal of free markets. Although, considering the current level of western governments and central banks market intervention, one wonders if the latter remains a concern. To make matters worse, the fact that Russia, the West’ classic nemesis, is playing a supportive role to OPEC has only made the organization that more off-putting.

is OPEC truly losing the shale war?

Wishful thinking aside, is OPEC truly losing the shale war? Is OPEC really stuck in an endless supply cutting cycle it can’t get out of? To answer these questions, one must define what constitutes winning? Do we measure winning by market share? Revenues? Profits? Reserves? Reading the aforementioned articles, the overwhelming measure for success seems to be production levels and market share. Not withstanding the obvious flows in focusing exclusively on production regardless of financial returns, lets examine data from a production level standpoint:

In 2014, prior to the shale induced oil price collapse, OPEC produced 30.6M barrels per day (OPEC Annual Statistical Bulletin). In Q1/19, OPEC produced 30.4M barrels per day (OPEC MOMR). A cursory review of the data indicates that OPEC has barely reduced its production since 2014. Furthermore, if one were to exclude Venezuela and Iran from the calculation due to US sanctions, one would notice that OPEC production actually increased during this period from to 24.8M bpd to 26.8M bpd, or a 2M barrels increase. In terms of market share (excluding Venezuela and Iran) OPEC market share actually increased from 26.8% in 2014 to 27.1% in Q1/19. Thus, one wonders as to the veracity of the research underpinning much of the press critical of OPEC.   

Related: Why Natural Gas Prices Collapsed

Since 2017, having tried and failed to destroy US shale in 2015/2016, OPEC in collaboration with Russia, has been pursuing a very shrewd strategy of opening a path for US shale to claim a slice of the market with minimal market disruption possible. Many of OPEC’s critics seem to believe OPEC’s lacks a long-term strategy, but this is far from accurate. As a matter of fact, the Saudi oil minister, Al-Falih, said as much on July 1st: “I have no doubt in my mind that U.S. shale will peak, plateau and then decline like every other basin in history.” In December 2018, Russian energy minister, Alexander Novak, took a similar position by voicing doubt as to US shale ability to grow in the medium term.

Basically, OPEC and Russia are planning to wait out the strong growth phase in US shale, and the reality is they probably don’t have to wait too long. US shale growth due to a host of geological, financial and logistical factors is set to slowdown in the early 2020s. Rystad Energy, one of the staunchest believers in US shale, is expecting US production growth to slowdown meaningfully as early as next year:

(Click to enlarge)

After having grown by 2.1M bpd in 2018, Rystad expects US oil production growth to slow to 1.3M bpd in 2019, followed by another slowdown to 900K barrels bpd by 2020. Said another way, Rystad expects US oil production growth to slow by 60% between 2018 and 2020. Rystad is not alone, the EIA, in its latest STEO, is forecasting US crude production growth to slow from 1.4M bpd in 2019 to 900K bpd in 2020, or a 35% decrease in the growth rate in one year. The IEA is no different, its expectating a slowing in US liquids growth from 1.7M bpd in 2019 to 1.3M bpd in 2020. The trend in all these forecasts is unmistakable: US production growth is set to deaccelerate sharply from 2020, and it will only get worse down the line as the sheer size of US oil production, and the industry persisting inability to generate positive cash flow, makes sizable production growth ever harder to sustain.

Related: Oil Prices Set For Worst Weekly Drop In Five Weeks

Nothing captures the demoralized spirit of US shale producers as Scott Sheffield, CEO of Pioneer Natural resources, back in 2014, Mr. Sheffield claimed that Pioneer would produce 1m barrels of oil equivalent  by 2024. Last month, Pioneer’s CEO walked back this lofty goal in an interview with the Wall Street Journal. Today, no reference is made to the one million goal in any of Pioneers’ investor slides after many such references were made in the past several years. Recently, Steve Schlotterbeck, former CEO of EQT labelled the shale gas revolution as an “unmitigated disaster” while listing a total of 172 North American E&P companies, with nearly $100B in debt, that filed for bankruptcy since 2015, as well as, highlighting the 80% loss of value for the remaining key players. Echoing Mr. Schlotterbeck, Scott Sheffield at Pioneer Natural Resources said to this WSJ, “We lost the growth investor, now we’ve got to attract a whole other set of investors.” (Translation: Now that we’ve lost the confidence (and the money) of the first group of gullible investors, we need to find a new set of naïve investors.). Over the past 10 years, 40 of the largest independent oil and gas producers collectively spent roughly $200 billion more than they took in from operations according to the Wall Street Journal. Pierre Andurand, one of the world’s foremost oil traders, pins the US E&P industry overspend at $300 Billion since 2006, and the industry enterprise value destruction at half a trillion dollars since 2003.

Despite all the above, US shale production is unlikely to decline or even stall anytime soon, especially now that the super majors such as Exxon and Chevron having moved into the Permian. However, what’s clear, and what truly matters to OPEC (and Russia) is not the absolute level of US production growth as much as the rate of that growth. Multiple datapoints and a host of reliable forecasters signal an impending flattening in US shale production growth, and as that flattening takes place, OPEC will claim ownership of the oil market once more.  

Conclusion

While, the US shale industry has grown its production significantly since the oil price collapse in 2014, OPEC’s core members have managed to protect and grow their market share.  Most importantly, the surge in US oil production has drowned the US E&P industry in red ink: close to 200 E&P companies have filed for bankruptcy and hundreds of billions of dollars in US energy stocks market value have been lost. Furthermore, the E&P industry has lost access to the debt market and equity markets, meanwhile industry insiders are being forced to admit their mistakes, change their ways and walk down their rosy production forecasts. Ed Morse, head of Commodities Research at Citi bank, had this to say about OPEC’s decision to extend its production cuts:

“The countries involved have no clear endgame other than to push back the inevitable time in which the age of supply abundance can no longer be held back.”

Its hard to know whether Mr. Morse, a respected market veteran, truly believes in his own statement. The OPEC+ policy of awaiting a projected flattening in US shale growth is the literal definition of an end game. As to the “abundance of supply”, it is not as much of oil as it is of cheap capital, and now that Wall Street has closed the money spigots, the illusion of unlimited US shale growth is soon to be shattered.  

By Nawar Alsaadi for Oilprice.com

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July 08, 2019 at 02:00AM

North American stock markets start week lower on fading hopes of U.S. rate cuts - CTV News


Ross Marowits, The Canadian Press
Published Monday, July 8, 2019 12:01AM EDT
Last Updated Monday, July 8, 2019 5:24PM EDT

TORONTO -- North American stock markets started the week lower on fading hopes of U.S. interest rate cuts later this month.

The decreases followed a downward movement on Friday after a strong U.S. jobs report suggested that deep cuts weren't as paramount to support the economy.

That is causing equity markets to recalibrate expectations around what the U.S. Federal Reserve might do with rates at its July meeting, and over the remainder of the year, says Craig Fehr, a Canadian markets strategist with Edward Jones.

"I think the Fed will probably cut at some point this year. I don't know that it's fully in stone if it's going to be at the July meeting," he said in an interview.

Investors had thought before Friday that the U.S. central bank would cut several times over the balance of 2019.

"I think with the strong economic data, particularly the strong jobs data that we got on Friday from the U.S., that signals that perhaps the Fed doesn't need to or isn't going to be as aggressive with any cuts in the back half of the year."

The S&P/TSX composite index closed down 79.04 points at 16,462.95 after hitting an intraday low of 16,458.47.

In New York, the Dow Jones industrial average was down 115.98 points at 26,806.14 as shares of Apple Inc. fell 2.1 per cent on an analyst downgrade. The S&P 500 index was down 14.46 points at 2,975.95, while the Nasdaq composite was down 63.41 points at 8,098.38.

Fehr expects equity markets will be volatile because market expectations and economic realities might be disjointed. U.S. stock markets last week hit record highs on hopes of easier Fed policy, but are softening as those expectations are losing strength.

This week's U.S. inflation data will provide another economic signal, but all eyes will be focused on Federal Reserve chairman Jerome Powell's congressional testimony on Wednesday, Fehr added.

"I think that the market is going to pay very, very close attention to the tone and any wording that he uses as to the approach that they're taking."

Eight of the 11 major sectors of the TSX were lower, led by health care. It lost 1.82 per cent as shares of CannTrust Holdings Inc. plummeted nearly 23 per cent after it warned of product shortages because Health Canada flagged its Niagara-area greenhouse for growing cannabis in rooms not licensed by the regulator.

The key energy sector dropped 0.78 per cent, followed closely by telecommunications, materials and industrials.

Canadian Natural Resources and Encana Corp. each lost more than two per cent as the price of crude oil decreased with geopolitical concerns over Iran's nuclear program offset by worry about weakening global demand.

The August crude contract was up 15 cents at US$57.66 per barrel and the August natural gas contract was down 1.5 cents at US$2.40 per mmBTU.

Telecommunications dropped with shares of Rogers Communications and several other companies decreasing following service outages.

A 4.4-per-cent decrease in shares of Turquoise Hill Resources Ltd. pushed the materials sector lower as metal prices fell and the U.S. dollar rose on the prospect that the Fed might not cut rates.

The August gold contract was down 10 cents at US$1,400 an ounce and the September copper contract was down 0.2 of a cent US$2.66 a pound.

The Canadian dollar traded for an average of 76.45 cents US compared with an average of 76.34 cents US on Friday.



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July 09, 2019 at 04:24AM