T3 Live
Shares

Coffee With Greta: Failed Rally?

Shares

DJIA Futures: -186 (-0.5%) SPX Futures: -27 (-0.6%) NASDAQ Futures: -135 (-0.8%) Good morning friends! Futures are slipping as stocks fail to hold onto Monday’s gains.  Let’s get right to it! Juniper Networks Pops  Juniper Networks (JNPR) shares are surging 20.5% in premarket trade following a report that Hewlett Packard Enterprise (HPE) is in advanced talks to buy the company. The Wall Street Journal reported HPE is set to buy JNPR for about $13 billion.  Sources say a deal could be announced as soon as this week.  HPE shares are down 7.4% ahead of the open.  Unity Software To Layoff 25% Of Staff Unity Software (U) shares are slipping 1.1% ahead of the open after announcing it will lay off about 25% of its workforce.  The cuts will impact 1,800 jobs at the gaming technology company.  In a regulatory filing, Unity said the move is part of a corporate restructuring plan.  The company said it’s unable to “reasonably estimate the costs and charges in connection with this reduction, which it expects will be substantially incurred in the first quarter of 2024.” Match Group Jumps On Activist Investor Stake Match Group (MTCH) shares are jumping 12.6% in premarket trade following a Reuters report that activist investor Elliott Investment Management has built a $1 billion stake in the company.  Match Group is the owner of dating apps Tinder, Hinge, Match.com, and more.  Elliott reportedly plans to push the company to take steps to improve its performance and boost its stock price.  In a statement, a Match spokesperson said, “Our team regularly engages with investors, and will continue to work to create great experiences for our users and value for our shareholders.”

Continue Reading -->

Coffee With Greta: Key Week

Shares

DJIA Futures: -131 (-0.4%) SPX Futures: +2 (+0.03%) NASDAQ Futures: +26 (+0.2%) Good morning friends! Futures are mixed as Boeing drags down the Dow. Let’s get right to it! Important Week This will be another important week of economic data for the market and the Fed.  All eyes are on Thursday as the December CPI is set to be released before the market open.  This will be the final piece of inflation data for 2023 and comes before the Fed meeting at the end of the month.  Economists expect headline inflation to have picked up slightly at the end of the year while core inflation cooled further.  CME Group’s FedWatch Tool shows over 95% of traders expect the Fed to keep rates unchanged at the first meeting on January 31 and just under 63% currently expect the first cut at the March 20 meeting.  Q4 earnings season also officially kicks off with the big banks at the end of the week. JPMorgan Chase (JPM), Bank of America (BAC), Wells Fargo (WFC), Citigroup (C), UnitedHealth (UNH), and Delta Airlines (DAL) are all scheduled to report Friday morning.  Boeing Drops After FAA Grounding Boeing (BA) shares are down 7.1% ahead of the open after the FAA ordered airlines to ground dozens of Boeing 737 Max 9 aircraft over the weekend.  The grounding order was issued Saturday after a door plug blew out on an Alaska Airlines (ALK) flight on Friday.  ALK shares are also down 4.9%. Grounded aircraft will undergo urgent inspections.  The FAA said around 171 planes would be affected by the order.  Alaska Airlines and United Airlines (UAL) are the largest operators of the 737 Max 9 model. Oil Prices Slide Oil is starting the new week lower amid sharp price cuts by Saudi Arabia and an increase in OPEC output.  West Texas Intermediate crude futures are down 3.4% at $71.30 bbl while Brent crude futures are down 3.1% at $76.29 bbl.  Due to rising supply and competition with rival producers, Saudi Arabia cut the February official selling price of its Arab Light crude to Asia on Sunday.  That price is now at its lowest level in 27 months.  A new Reuters survey also found OPEC output rose in December as increased production in Iraq, Angola, and Nigeria offset cuts by Saudi Arabia and other OPEC+ members.

Continue Reading -->

Coffee With Greta: Yields Spike

Shares

DJIA Futures: -96 (-0.3%) SPX Futures: -13 (-0.3%) NASDAQ Futures: -55 (-0.3%) Good morning friends! Futures are falling as yields spike after the hot December jobs report. Let’s get right to it! December Jobs Report Beats The U.S. economy added far more jobs than expected in December. The Labor Department reported employers added 216,000 jobs last month while the unemployment rate was unchanged at 3.7%.  That was stronger than expectations for a gain of 170,000 jobs and a 3.8% unemployment rate. Government jobs saw the largest gain rising by 52,000, leisure and hospitality added 40,000, healthcare added 38,000, social assistance increased by 21,000, construction added 17,000, and retail trade increased by 17,000.  Transportation and warehousing lost 23,000 workers. October was revised down by 45,000 to 105,000 while November was revised lower by 26,000 to 173,000. There were 2.7 million total job gains in 2023, down from 4.8 million in 2022.  Yields Spike After Hot Jobs Report Treasury yields are popping higher this morning after the release of that stronger-than-expected jobs data.  The 10-year yield is up seven basis points at 4.07% while the 2-year yield is up seven basis points at 4.45%. If the labor market remains hot, it gives the Fed more room to hold rates higher before starting cuts.  CME Group’s FedWatch Tool now shows just under 54% of traders expecting a 25 basis point cut at the March 20 meeting.  Costco Reports Strong December Sales Costco (COST) shares are up 0.8% ahead of the open after reporting strong sales at the end of 2023.  The warehouse retailer said revenue jumped 9.9% year over year in December to $26.2 billion.  That was up from the 5.1% increase in November.  Same-store sales rose 8.5% vs 3.5% In November. Foot traffic in Costco stores jumped 6.5% in the U.S. and 7.5% worldwide. Online same-store sales surged 17.7%. In Case You Missed It Peloton (PTON) shares surged 13.9% on Thursday after announcing a new partnership with TikTok. The partnership will create a new fitness hub on the social media platform, known as #TikTokFitness Powered by Peloton. It will feature short-form fitness videos, longer live classes, content from Peloton instructors, and collaborations with TikTok creators. 

Continue Reading -->

Coffee With Greta: Labor Market Strength

Shares

DJIA Futures: +99 (+0.3%) SPX Futures: -1 (-0.01%) NASDAQ Futures: -67 (-0.4%) Good morning friends! Futures are mixed as traders digest stronger-than-expected jobs data. Let’s get right to it! Private Job Growth Tops Expectations The U.S. private sector added more jobs than expected in December.  Payroll firm ADP reported private employers added 164,000 workers last month.  That was higher than 130,000 expected and a sharp increase from the downwardly revised 101,000 in November.  The leisure and hospitality sector led the gains, adding 59,000 jobs.  Construction added 24,000, other services added 22,000, and financial activities added 18,000.  Manufacturing lost 13,000 jobs while information services and natural resources and mining both lost 2,000. The pace of wage growth continued to slow with annual pay increases of 5.4%. Weekly Jobless Claims Fall Weekly jobless claims fell more than expected in the final week of 2023.  The Labor Department reported 202,000 Americans filed initial claims for unemployment benefits last week.  That was down by 18,000 from the previous week and lower than 219,000 expected.  Continuing claims fell by 31,000 to 1.855 million in the week ending December 23. Yields Pop On Strong Jobs Data Treasury yields are pushing higher this morning after the release of that strong labor market data.  The 10-year yield is up six basis points at 3.98% while the 2-year yield is up three basis points at 4.37%. This week’s jobs data is key for traders attempting to assess the Fed’s plans for monetary policy this year.  CME Group’s FedWatch Tool now shows just over 60% expecting a rate cut at the March 20 meeting, down from over 70% a few weeks ago.  Walgreens Slashes Dividend Walgreens Boots Alliance (WBA) shares are down 1.5% after beating fiscal Q1 expectations but slashing its quarterly dividend.  Here’s how the retail pharmacy giant’s results compared to analysts’ estimates:  Adjusted EPS: $0.66 vs $0.61 expected Revenue: $36.71 billion vs $34.86 billion expected Revenue jumped 10% year over year and Walgreens reiterated its fiscal 2024 outlook.  The company cut its quarterly dividend to $0.25 from $0.48. The CEO said that move is meant to “strengthen [its] long-term balance sheet and cash position.” The cut brings Walgreens’ dividend yield down to 3.9% from more than 7% previously, which had made it the highest-paying dividend stock in the Dow.  In Case You Missed It Job openings fell to a 32-month low in November as the labor market cools. The Labor Department’s job openings and labor turnover survey (JOLTS) showed there were 8.8 million available jobs during the month. That was in line with expectations. Quits also dropped to a 33-month low of 3.5 million. There were 1.4 open jobs to every available worker in November, down from the 2 to 1 ratio in 2022. 5.5 million workers were hired during the month, the smallest monthly increase since April 2020. The minutes of the Fed’s December meeting showed members are not ruling out the possibility of more rate hikes. That readout was released Wednesday afternoon. Even as the dot plot showed plans for three rate cuts in 2024, the minutes said those forecasts were associated with an “unusually elevated degree of uncertainty.” They also said “several” officials discussed the need to hold rates steady for “longer than they were currently anticipated.

Continue Reading -->

Coffee With Greta: Tech Decline

Shares

DJIA Futures: -113 (-0.3%) SPX Futures: -17 (-0.4%) NASDAQ Futures: -83 (-0.5%) Good morning friends! Futures are dropping as traders continue to sell-off big tech stocks. Let’s get right to it! Tech Slide Continues Tech stocks are leading the decline again this morning after the Nasdaq logged its worst day since October on Tuesday.  Apple (AAPL) shares are down 0.4% ahead of the open with other Magnificent 7 names like Nvidia (NVDA), Tesla (TSLA), and Meta (META) all falling more than 1%.  The pullback in tech also comes as Treasury yields push higher.  The 10-year yield is up three basis points at 3.97% while the 2-year yield is up two basis points at 4.35%. Hawkish Fed Comments Richmond Fed President Thomas Barkin refuses to say rate hikes are definitely done.  Speaking at an event this morning, Barking said hikes remain “on the table” if inflation does not continue on a downward path.  But he also expressed optimism about the chance for a soft landing saying, “Now, everyone is talking about the potential for a soft landing, where inflation completes its journey back to normal levels while the economy stays healthy. And you can see the case for that.” Barkin compared the Fed’s fight against inflation to landing an airplane, he said, “The airport is on the horizon. But landing a plane isn’t easy, especially when the outlook is foggy, and headwinds and tailwinds can affect your course. It’s easy to oversteer and do too much or understeer and do too little.” CME Group’s FedWatch Tool still shows over 67% of traders expecting the Fed’s first rate cut at the March 20 meeting.  The Fed releases the minutes of its December meeting at 2:00 p.m. ET which will give more insight into the discussion around the updated dot plot which showed plans for three rate cuts this year. Mortgage Demand Drops  Mortgage demand tumbled at the end of 2023 despite lower rates.  The Mortgage Bankers Association reported total application volume dropped 9.4% last week compared with two weeks earlier.  Purchase applications ended the year 12% lower compared to a year ago while refinance applications were up 15% year over year.  The average 30-year fixed contract rate ended 2023 at 6.76%.

Continue Reading -->

Coffee With Greta: New Year

Shares

Set a reminder for today’s New Year market discussion with David Prince LIVE at 12:00 pm ET! DJIA Futures: -242 (-0.6%) SPX Futures: -40 (-0.8%) NASDAQ Futures: -183 (-1.1%) Good morning friends! Futures are dropping as the new year of trade begins on Wall Street. Let’s get right to it! Stocks Drop, Yields Climb The major indexes are all falling ahead of the open as yields rise to kick off the New Year.  The 10-year Treasury yield is up 9 basis points at 3.97% while the 2-year yield is 10 basis points higher at 4.36%. The market is widely expecting the Fed to approve its first rate cut at the second meeting of the year, with over 69% of traders anticipating a cut on March 20.  This will be an important week of data for that outlook on the Fed’s plans.  The Labor Department reports job openings for November on Wednesday, ADP releases its private employment report for December on Thursday, and the official December jobs report will be out Friday morning.  Apple Drops After Barclays Downgrade Apple (AAPL) shares are falling 2.3% in premarket trade after Barclays downgraded the stock to underweight.  The group trimmed its price target to $160 from $161 due to “lackluster” sales of the iPhone 15, specifically in China.   In a note, Barclays analyst Tim Long wrote, “We are still picking up weakness on iPhone volumes and mix, as well as a lack of bounce-back in Macs, iPads and wearables.” Long said he expects that weakness in hardware sales to continue. Tesla Tops Q4 Delivery Estimates Tesla (TSLA) shares are up 0.9% ahead of the open after reporting stronger-than-expected deliveries in Q4.  The electric automaker says it delivered 484,507 vehicles in the final three months of 2023 and produced 494,989.  That topped analysts’ estimates for 477,000 Q4 deliveries.  461,538 of the vehicles delivered in the quarter were Model 3 and Model Y cars.  The number brings Tesla’s total deliveries for the year to 1,808,581 while production totaled 1,845,985.  That was better than the company’s own forecast for 1.8 million in deliveries and represents 38% year over year growth in deliveries and 35% production growth. 

Continue Reading -->

Coffee With Greta: Year End

Shares

DJIA Futures: -6 (-0.02%) SPX Futures: -2 (-0.1%) NASDAQ Futures: -7 (-0.04%) Good morning friends! Futures are flat ahead of the final trading day of 2023. Let’s get right to it! Final Day of 2023 The S&P 500 enters today’s trading session less than 0.5% away from a new record high.  The index is up 24.6% so far in 2023, with the Dow up 13.8%, and the Nasdaq up 44.2%.  The tech-heavy Nasdaq is on track for its largest annual gain since 2003.  All three major indexes are also on track for their ninth straight weekly gains, the longest streak for the S&P 500 since 2004. The gains have extended to small caps this month as the Fed signaled plans for three rate cuts in 2024. The Russell 2000 is up nearly 14% in December, on track for its best month since November 2020.  Nvidia Announces Slower Gaming Chips For China Nvidia (NVDA) shares are up 0.3% ahead of the open after announcing it will launch an adjusted version of its gaming processor with slower performance in China.  A spokesperson told Reuters, the new Nvidia RTX 4090D will be launched in January and has been “designed to fully comply with U.S. government export controls.” The GPU has 11% fewer Compute Unified Device Architecture or “CUDA” cores than versions of the chip sold outside of China.  The spokesperson said Nvidia “extensively engaged with the U.S. government” while developing the new chip. Fisker Rallies Fisker (FSR) shares are rallying 9.3% in premarket trade after announcing strong growth in deliveries between the third and fourth quarters.  The electric vehicle maker said it grew deliveries by over 300%, driven by strong demand for its Ocean SUV.  Deliveries for all of 2023 totaled 4,700 vehicles as Fisker produced 10,142 EVs.  The majority of those deliveries were the Fisker Ocean One which is priced at $68,999.  The company said it will announce a plan in January to accelerate its sales and deliveries further in 2024. In Case You Missed It Pending home sales were flat in November even as mortgage rates declined. The National Association of Realtors pending home sales index was unchanged at 71.6 last month vs expectations for a 1% increase. Year over year, pending sales declines 5.2%. 

Continue Reading -->

Coffee With Greta: Counting Down

Shares

DJIA Futures: -48 (-0.1%) SPX Futures: -1 (-0.02%) NASDAQ Futures: +44 (+0.3%) Good morning friends! Futures are little changed as traders gear up for the second-to-last trading session of 2023. Let’s get right to it! SPX Inches Toward Record The S&P 500 is inching closer to setting a fresh all-time record before 2023 ends.  The index closed within just over 0.3% of its previous closing record on Wednesday.  That mark was set at 4,796.56 in January 2022.  SPX is on track to finish the year up more than 24%, the Dow is poised to rise more than 13% for the year, and the Nasdaq is on track for yearly gains of more than 44%.  All three major indexes are also on track to notch their ninth straight winning week.  Bonds Rise Treasury yields are rising this morning as traders continue to assess the economic outlook for 2024.  The 10-year yield is up 3 basis points at 3.83% while the 2-year yield is up 2 basis points at 4.26%. Today, CME Group’s FedWatch Tool shows over 73% of traders expecting a March rate cut.  Important economic data for the Fed and that decision kicks off right away next week with new labor market data from JOLTS to the December jobs report. Weekly Jobless Claims Jump Weekly jobless claims rose more than expected last week.  The Labor Department reported 218,000 Americans filed initial claims for unemployment benefits.  That was up by 12,000 from the previous week and higher than 215,000 expected. Continuing jobless claims rose by 14,000 to 1.875 million as expected in the week ending December 16. 

Continue Reading -->

Coffee With Greta: Quiet Week

Shares

Register now for today’s free pro trading Q&A on LinkedIn with T3 Trading Group’s Josh Lefler! DJIA Futures: -5 (-0.01%) SPX Futures: +2 (+0.04%) NASDAQ Futures: +17 (+0.1%) Good morning friends! Futures are flat as the S&P 500 nears a fresh all-time high. Let’s get right to it! Flirting With A Record The S&P 500 closed Tuesday with 0.5% of its previous closing record that was set in January 2022.  The major indexes are all set to post strong gains for the year with just three trading days left.  In 2023, the Dow is up 13%, the S&P 500 is up 24%, and the Nasdaq has surged 44%.  The tech-heavy Nasdaq is on track for its largest annual gain since 2003, when it rallied over 50%. Bonds Continue Downtrend Treasury yields are continuing to fall this morning as traders assess the future of Fed policy in 2024. The 10-year yield is down 5 basis points at 3.85% while the 2-year yield is 1 basis point lower at 4.27%. CME Group’s FedWatch Tool shows nearly 73% of traders expecting the first rate cut at the Fed’s March 20 meeting.  The market will be focused on data in the weeks ahead like the jobs report and the CPI to gauge whether those predictions should stand.  Oil Prices Stabilize Oil prices are lower this morning after jumping on Wednesday amid tensions in the Red Sea.  West Texas Intermediate crude futures are down 0.8% at just under $75 bbl while Brent crude futures are down 0.6% at over $80 bbl.  Major shippers resumed passage through the key trade route in the Red Sea today after fresh attacks on ships in the region.  The American Petroleum Institute is set to release its inventory report today while the Energy Information Administration will release its report on Thursday. Tesla To Refresh Model Y  Tesla (TSLA) shares are up 0.6% ahead of the open following a Bloomberg News report the company plans to revamp its Model Y.  The refreshed SUV is expected to be built at the automaker’s plant in Shanghai.  It will reportedly feature significant changes to both the interior and exterior and is expected to reach mass production in mid-2024.  Sources told Bloomberg the Shanghai factory will pause production for about a week after the new year to upgrade its production capabilities and the plant will need another upgrade later in the year.  In Case You Missed It Home prices rose at the strongest pace of 2023 in October. The S&P Case-Shiller national home price index jumped 4.8% from October 2022. That was up from the 4% gain in September. The 20-city index rose 4.9% and the 10-city index rose 5.7%. Detroit saw the largest gain with prices up 8.1%, prices rose 7.2% in San Diego, and 7.1% in New York.

Continue Reading -->

Coffee With Greta: Did Traders Make The Nice List?

Shares

Register now for tomorrow’s free pro trading Q&A on LinkedIn with T3 Trading Group’s Josh Lefler! DJIA Futures: +15 (+0.04%) SPX Futures: +4 (+0.1%) NASDAQ Futures: +22 (+0.1%) Good morning friends! Futures are up slightly as the final week of 2023 begins. Let’s get right to it! Win Streak Continues The S&P 500 logged its eighth straight weekly gain last week, marking the longest win streak since 2017.  The Dow and the Nasdaq also both rose for the eighth consecutive week.  The S&P ended last week 0.9% below its all-time closing record of 4,796.56 and the index is 1.3% from its intraday record high.  It is a light week of economic data to close out the week.  The S&P Case-Shiller home price index will be released at 10:00 a.m. ET today.  Then weekly jobless claims, the advanced goods trade balance, advanced retail inventories, and advanced wholesale inventories at 8:30 a.m. ET Thursday.  The National Association of Realtors reports pending home sales at 10:00 a.m. ET on Thursday.  Bonds Tick Slightly Higher U.S. Treasury yields are up slightly this morning after dipping earlier in the session.  The 10-year yield is currently one basis point higher at 3.91% with the 2-year yield up two basis points at 4.36%.  Recent data supports the Fed’s plans to cut rates in 2024 after the PCE price index came in lighter than expected on Friday. CME Group’s FedWatch Tool now shows over 74% of traders betting on the first rate cut at the March 20 meeting.  Intel Jumps On Israeli Grant Intel (INTC) shares are up 2.2% ahead of the open after news the Israeli government agreed to grant the company $3.2 billion for a new $25 billion chip plant in southern Israel.  It is the largest investment Israel has ever made in a company.  Intel said the expansion plan for its Kiryat Gat site is an “important part of Intel’s efforts to foster a more resilient global supply chain, alongside the company’s ongoing and planned manufacturing investments in Europe and the United States.” The chipmaker also agreed to buy $16.6 billion worth of goods and services from Israeli suppliers over the next decade.  The new plant is expected to open in 2028 and operate through 2035.

Continue Reading -->
1 48 49 50 51 52 261