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Coffee With Greta: Powell Spooks the Bond Market

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Editor’s Note: Coffee With Greta is a FREE morning update from our newest contributor Greta Wall. Want to get it by email every day? Click here. ******** DJIA Futures: -104 (-0.3%) SPX Futures: -8 (-0.2%) NASDAQ Futures: +7 (+0.1%) Good morning friends! Futures are mixed as yields spike following a hawkish speech from the Fed Chair. Let’s get right to it! Short-Term Yields Spike Short-term Treasury yields are rallying after hawkish comments from the Fed Chair on Thursday.  The 1-year Treasury yield is up 18 basis points to 2.07% while the 2-year yield is up 16 basis points to 2.74%. And the curve between the 5-year and 30-year yields is inverted.  The 5-year yield is at 2.97% with the 30-year yield at 2.91%. Powell Spooks Traders Fed Chair Jerome Powell spooked Wall Street Thursday as he officially put his support behind larger rate hikes.  Speaking at an IMF panel, Powell said he thinks “there is something to be said for front-end loading any accommodation one thinks is appropriate. … I would say 50 basis points will be on the table for the May meeting.” Several other officials, including St Louis Fed President James Bullard, have previously called for “front-loading” rate hikes to tackle inflation this year. The Fed Chair said, “It’s absolutely essential to restore price stability. Economies don’t work without price stability.” He also said inflation may have peaked in March but the bank is “not going to count on it”. CME Group’s FedWatch Tool shows 99.8% of traders expect a 0.5% rate hike in May.  The market expects the federal funds rate to be at 2.75% by year-end. The Fed meets again May 3-4. Snap Misses Q1 Expectations Snap (SNAP) shares are up 1% ahead of the open after reporting a “challenging” Q1.  The Snapchat parent company reported a loss of $0.02 per share vs analysts’ expectations for earnings of $0.01 per share.  The company’s $1.06 billion in revenue was shy of the $1.07 billion Wall Street was looking for.  But Snap reported strong user numbers.  Global Daily Active Users rose 18% year-over-year to 332 million vs 330 million expected. Average revenue per user jumped 16.8% year-over-year to $3.20.  Snap forecast Q2 revenue growth between 20% and 25%, lower than analysts’ expectations for 28%.  The company expects to have 344 million users by the end of June. Kimberly-Clark Earnings Kimberly-Clark (KMB) shares are rallying 5.5% in premarket trade after beating Q1 expectations.  The consumer products company reported adjusted earnings of $1.35 per share on $5.095 billion in revenue.  That was better than analysts’ expectations for adjusted EPS of $1.24 on $4.916 billion in revenue.  Kimberly-Clark hiked its full-year guidance.  The company now expects sales to rise 3% to 4% in 2022 vs the previous forecast for 1$% to 2% growth.  Kimberly-Clark reiterated its adjusted EPS guidance at $5.60 to $6.00. Old Navy CEO is Out as Gap Slashes Outlook Gap Inc (GPS) shares are tumbling 15.9% ahead of the open after the company slashed its fiscal Q1 2022 forecast. Gap also announced the CEO of its Old Navy division, Nancy Green, will step down this week.  The company now expects its revenue loss will be in the low to mid-teens vs previous guidance for a loss in the mid to high-single digits.  Gap cited “macro-economic dynamics as well as the execution challenges at the Old Navy brand” as reasons for that downgrade. The retailer will report earnings on May 26 and said it will provide updated full-year guidance then. Oil Prices Fall Oil prices are falling today as growth concerns outweigh supply worries.  West Texas Intermediate crude futures are down 1.3% to $102.43 bbl while Brent crude futures are down 1.3% to $106.94 bbl. The drop comes as China’s largest city, Shanghai, is slowly emerging out of a Covid lockdown.  The city announced a new round of mitigation measures today including daily testing.  The European Union is still considering a ban of Russian oil but has not made a decision. In Case You Missed It Weekly jobless claims fell less than expected last week. The Labor Department reported Thursday, 184,000 Americans filed initial claims last week vs expectations for 180,000. Continuing claims fell by 58,000 to 1.417 million in the week ending April 9. A new SEC filing shows Tesla (TSLA) CEO Elon Musk has secured $46.5 billion to finance a tender offer for Twitter (TWTR). That funding includes $21 billion of his own money and $25.5 billion in debt financing from Morgan Stanley Senior Funding. The tender offer comes as Twitter’s board has not responded to Musk’s original $43 billion cash offer. Freddie Mac’s average 30-year fixed mortgage rate jumped to 5.11% over the past week. It’s the first time that rate has been above 5% since 2011. The 30-year rate was 2.97% at the same time a year ago. The 15-year fixed-rate rose to 4.38% from 4.17% a week ago and 2.29% a year ago.

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Derrick Oldensmith Interview on “2 Bulls In a China Shop Podcast”

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Hit the Play Button to Listen to Derrick Oldensmith’s interview on the “2 Bulls In a China Shop Podcast.” Derrick discusses: What it really takes to succeed as a trader Why this is not a glamorous way to make a living How to learn to trade the right way How he combines fundamental and technical analysis Why his professional kickboxing background laid a strong foundation for trading And a whole lot more!

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Coffee With Greta: Tesla Crushes Q1 Expectations

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Editor’s Note: Coffee With Greta is a FREE morning update from our newest contributor Greta Wall. Want to get it by email every day? Click here. ******** DJIA Futures: +237 (+0.7%) SPX Futures: +38 (+0.9%) NASDAQ Futures: +168 (+1.2%) Good morning friends! Futures are higher as traders digest the latest round of Q1 earnings.  Let’s get right to it! Tesla Crushes Q1 Expectations Tesla (TSLA) shares are rallying 8.7% ahead of the open after the electric automaker crushed Q1 expectations.  The company reported earnings of $3.22 per share on $18.76 billion in revenue.  That beat analysts’ expectations for EPS of $2.26 on $17.80 billion in revenue.  Revenue surged 81% year-over-year as Tesla delivered a record-high 310,000 vehicles last quarter. The company’s automotive margins jumped to a record 32.9% in Q1. Tesla did not give detailed 2022 guidance but said it expects annual growth of 50% on a multi-year basis. The company did warn supply constraints are expected to continue through the end of this year. United Airlines Forecasts Profit in 2022 United Airlines (UAL) shares are up 8.3% in premarket trade after the airline forecast a return to profitability this year. United’s Q1 performance was weaker than expected. The company reported an adjusted loss of $4.24 per share vs analysts’ expectations for $4.22.  $7.57 billion in revenue was shy of analysts’ estimates for $7.68 billion. Fuel costs jumped to $2.88 per gallon in the first quarter, up from $1.74 in 2021 and $2.05 in 2019.  United forecast its costs excluding fuel will rise 16% in Q2 compared to 2019. The airline expects to fly 87% of its 2019 schedule this quarter. American Airlines Expects Q2 Profit American Airlines (AAL) shares are surging 10% ahead of the open after beating Q1 expectations and forecasting a return to profit soon. The airline reported an adjusted loss of $2.32 per share on $8.9 billion in revenue.  That was better than analysts’ estimates for a loss of $2.40 on $8.826 billion in revenue. American said its revenue March surpassed 2019 levels for the first time since the pandemic began.  The company forecast Q2 revenue up to 8% higher than three years ago and said it expects to fly 94% of its 2019 schedule this quarter.  Carvana Drops on Steep Q1 Loss Carvana (CVNA) shares are tumbling 4.1% in premarket trade after reporting a steeper-than-expected Q1 loss.  The used-car retailer reported a loss of $2.89 per share and $2.25 billion in revenue.  Analysts were expecting a per-share loss of $1.44 and $3.4 billion in revenue.  In its letter to shareholders, Carvana said that loss was caused by higher volume than was needed last quarter.  The company also cited the spread of the omicron variant and used-car prices as factors that hurt its performance and said it had issues with “reconditioning and logistics network disruptions”. Carvana declined to provide Q2 or full-year guidance. Labor Market Remains Tight The latest weekly jobless claims report shows the labor market remaining tight.  The Labor Department reported 184,000 Americans filed initial claims for unemployment benefits last week.  That was down 1,000 from the previous week and above economists’ expectations for 180,000. Continuing claims fell by 58,000 to 1.417 million vs expectations for 1.459 million.  The U.S. labor market is nearing full employment levels as businesses struggle to find qualified workers. Oil Prices Up Oil prices are higher today as supply concerns remain.  West Texas Intermediate crude futures are up more than 1% to over $103 bbl while Brent crude futures are up 1.3% to over $108 bbl. The International Energy Agency reported U.S. crude inventory tumbled by 8 million barrels in the week ending April 15.  That sharply missed expectations for an increase of 2.5 million barrels.  U.S. oil exports hit the highest level since March 2020 and imports fell to the lowest level since April 2021. Libya is losing more than 550,000 barrels per day due to production shutdowns at some of its major oil facilities. Analysts expect the oil market to remain volatile as the EU is still considering a ban on Russian oil.  Fed Beige Book The Federal Reserve’s April Beige Book shows the U.S. economy expanded at a “moderate” pace between March and early April. That report was released Wednesday. Although that growth was an upgrade from the “modest to moderate” pace in the February Beige Book, the Fed cited uncertainty about the future due to high inflation and the war in Ukraine.  The bank said, “Outlooks for future growth were clouded by the uncertainty created by recent geopolitical developments and rising prices”. The Beige Book also said the shortage of workers in the labor market remains the biggest obstacle to hiring. Fed Chair Jerome Powell is set to address the International Monetary Fund in a speech about the global economy at 1:00 p.m. ET today. Netflix’s Worst Day In 17 Years Netflix (NFLX) shares cratered 35.1% on Wednesday, marking the streaming giant’s largest one-day decline since October 15, 2004. That plunge wiped more than $50 billion off the company’s market cap.  Netflix reported a surprise net loss of 200,000 subscribers in Q1 and forecast a loss of 2 million subscribers in Q2.  The company blamed its “revenue growth headwinds” on password sharing and increased competition. Netflix estimates more than 100 million global households are sharing passwords. The company warned a crackdown on that practice is in the works. NFLX shares are down 3.2% ahead of the open. In Case You Missed It The National Association of Realtors reported existing home sales fell 2.7% in March to a SAAR of 5.77 million units. The median price of an existing home sold last month hit a new record-high at $375,300. There were 950,000 homes for sale at the end of March, representing a 2-month supply. 

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Coffee With Greta: Netflix Is Bleeding

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Editor’s Note: Coffee With Greta is a FREE morning update from our newest contributor Greta Wall. Want to get it by email every day? Click here. ******** DJIA Futures: +142 (+0.4%) SPX Futures: +19 (+0.4%) NASDAQ Futures: +60 (+0.4%) Good morning friends! Futures are higher as traders shake off Netflix’s bleak Q1 earnings report. Let’s get right to it! Netflix Plunges on Subscriber Loss Netflix (NFLX) shares are plummeting 27.5% ahead of the open after the streaming giant reported its first subscriber loss in more than 10 years. The company reported earnings of $3.53 per share vs $2.89 expected.  Revenue of $7.78 billion missed analysts’ estimates of $7.93 billion.  Netflix lost 200,000 subscribers last quarter, sharply missing its own forecast for a gain of 2.5 million and analysts’ expectations for growth of 2.73 million.  The company said shutting down its service in Russia resulted in the loss of 700,000 subscribers. Netflix forecast a sharper contraction in Q2, expecting to lose 2 million more this quarter.  It blamed “revenue growth headwinds” on password sharing among its subscribers and increased competition from other services. IBM Rallies on Strong Q1 Earnings, Outlook International Business Machines (IBM) shares are 2.4% higher in premarket trade after beating Q1 expectations.  The tech giant reported earnings of $1.40 per share on $14.2 billion in revenue.  That was better than analysts’ expectations for EPS of $1.38 on $13.85 billion in revenue. CEO Arvind Krishna said, “Demand for hybrid cloud and AI drove growth in both Software and Consulting in the first quarter. Today we’re a more focused business and our results reflect the execution of our strategy. We are off to a solid start for the year, and we now see revenue growth for 2022 at the high end of our model.” Procter & Gamble Earnings Boosted by Price Hikes Procter & Gamble (PG) shares are up 1% ahead of the open after beating Q1 expectations.  The consumer goods giant reported adjusted earnings of $1.33 per share on $19.38 billion in revenue.  That was better than analysts’ expectations for adjusted EPS of $1.29 on $18.73 billion in revenue.  Revenue was up 7% year-over-year but sales volume, which strips out currency and price changes, only rose 3%. Procter & Gamble’s health care sector saw the strongest growth with organic sales rising 16%.  Sales rose 10% in the fabric and home care division as well as the baby, feminine and family care segment. Grooming sales rose 8% and beauty sales rose just 3%. Procter & Gamble raised its 2022 revenue growth forecast to a range of 4% to 5% and said it expects earnings to be at the lower end of its range of 3% to 6%. Tesla Earnings On Deck Tesla (TSLA) shares are up 0.7% ahead of the open as traders gear up for the electric automaker to report Q1 earnings after the market close today.  Tesla already reported record deliveries in the first quarter. The automaker delivered more than 310,000 vehicles last quarter and produced more than 305,000.  Analysts are expecting $17.659 billion in Q1 revenue and earnings of $2.26 per share. Oil Rebounds On Supply Concerns Oil prices are rebounding today as concerns about supply weigh on the market.  West Texas Intermediate crude futures are up more than 1% to over $103 bbl while Brent crude futures are up 1%, topping $108 bbl. A new report from OPEC+ shows the group produced 1.45 million barrels per day below its production target in March as Russian output fell.  Russia is part of OPEC+. Libya has also been forced to shutdown several oil facilities due to protests. The American Petroleum Institute reported Wednesday that U.S. crude stocks fell by 4.5 million barrels last week.  The Energy Information Administration releases its weekly crude inventory report today. Mortgage Demands Plummets Mortgage demand has plunged to nearly half of what it was a year ago. The Mortgage Bankers Association reports total application volume fell 5% weekly last week and was down nearly 50% year-over-year.  The drop comes as the average 30-year contract mortgage rate rose to 5.2% from 5.13%.  That rate was 3.2% a year ago.  Refinance applications tumbled 8% weekly and 68% annually.  New purchase applications were down 3% last week and 14% lower compared to a year ago. Existing Home Sales Preview The National Association of Realtors releases its existing home sales report for March at 10:00 a.m. ET.  That data is expected to show home sales fell last month to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 5.75 million units.  Pending home sales tumbled 4.1% in February. Those pending sales represent contracts signed for a purchase expected to close in 30 to 60 days.  The spring buying season is expected to be tight as supply remains low and mortgage rates spike. In Case You Missed It The Census Bureau reported housing starts rose 0.3% in March to a seasonally adjusted rate of 1.79 million units vs 1.73 million expected. Single-family starts fell 1.7% while multi-family starts rose 7.5%. Building permits rose 0.4% last month to a SAAR of 1.87 million units vs 1.82 million expected. Single-family permits tumbled 4.8% while multi-family permits surged 10.9%. The International Monetary Fund slashed its global economic growth forecast for 2022 and 2023. The group now expects global GDP to expand 3.6% this year and next. The IMF’s chief economist cited the war in Ukraine for that downgrade. The group also hiked its 2022 inflation forecast. The IMF expects 5.7% inflation in advanced economies this year and 8.7% inflation in developing economies.

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Selloff on the Horizon

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strategic-swing-trader-sami abusaad

Based on recent activity in SPY and QQQ, Sami says we’re looking at a prolonged selloff with an eventual probable recession, meaning a bearish sentiment for the near future. How should you plan to trade, especially this week? In this video, Sami explains: – How airlines will react to a recession – What is interesting about AKBA – Which Chinese stock looks special and unique from the rest of the market – Why he took DTSS off of his ideas list – How the defense sector looks for the next week

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Coffee With Greta: Housing Market Still Strong

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Editor’s Note: Coffee With Greta is a FREE morning update from our newest contributor Greta Wall. Want to get it by email every day? Click here. ******** DJIA Futures: +9 (+0.02%) SPX Futures: -1.5 (-0.03%) NASDAQ Futures: -15 (-0.1%) Good morning friends! Futures are mixed as traders digest new economic data and Q1 earnings.  Let’s get right to it! Housing Starts, Building Permits Beat Expectations U.S. home construction rose more than expected last month even as mortgage rates surged.  The Census Bureau reported housing starts rose 0.3% in March to a seasonally adjusted annualized rate of 1.79 million units.  That was better than economists’ expectations for a SAAR of 1.73 million units.  Housing starts were 4% higher year-over-year.  But that growth was centered in multi-family units.  Single-family starts fell 1.7% from February to March while multi-family starts jumped 7.5%. The strength in building is expected to continue as the number of permits approved for future projects also rose more than expected. The Census Bureau reported permits rose 0.4% to a SAAR of 1.87 million units vs 1.82 million units expected. Single-family permits fell 4.8% monthly while multi-family starts surged 10.9%. Johnson & Johnson Lowers 2022 Outlook Johnson & Johnson (JNJ) shares are down 0.7% ahead of the open after beating Q1 profit expectations and lowering its full-year guidance.  The pharmaceutical giant reported earnings of $2.67 per share vs $2.58 expected.  Revenue came in short at $23.4 billion vs analysts’ expectations for $23.6 billion.  The company said it sold $457 million of its Covid vaccine globally last quarter.  But J&J is no longer providing specific guidance for Covid vaccine sales. The company lowered its 2022 sales forecast by about $1 billion to between $94.8 billion and $95.8 billion.  J&J lowered its earnings forecast by about $0.25 per share to between $10.15 and $10.35. Hasbro Misses Q1 Earnings Expectations Hasbro (HAS) shares are up 0.3% in premarket trade despite missing Q1 profit expectations.  The toymaker reported adjusted earnings of $0.57 per share vs analysts’ estimates for $0.61.  Revenue of $1.16 billion was better than $1.15 billion expected.  Hasbro warned Russia’s invasion of Ukraine will cost it about $100 million in revenue this year. The company forecast fiscal 2022 profit growth in the mid-single digits, up from the previous guidance for growth in the low-single digits. Netflix Earnings On Deck Netflix (NFLX) shares are flat ahead of the open as traders look ahead to the streaming giant’s Q1 earnings this afternoon.  The company will be the first of the FAANG stocks to report this earnings season.  Netflix had a weak Q1 forecast in its Q4 earnings in January, projecting just 2.5 million net new subscribers.  The company forecast revenue of $7.9 billion.  Traders are focused on Netflix’s outlook for Q2, which has historically been the company’s weakest each year. Treasury Yields Jump U.S. Treasury yields are continuing to rally as traders remain concerned about inflation.  The yield on the 10-year Treasury note is up 5 basis points at 2.92%.  That’s the highest level since late-2018.  But the curve between the 2-year and 10-year yield remains positive.  The 2-year yield is up 6 basis points to 2.53% Oil Slides on Demand Concerns Oil prices are falling today amid new demand concerns.  West Texas Intermediate crude futures are down 2.4% to under $106 bbl while Brent crude futures are down 2.4% to about $110 bbl.  The drop comes despite Libya halting some exports due to closures at some of its facilities.  The IMF is set to release its World Economic Outlook today.  Analysts expect that growth forecast to be lower due to the war in Ukraine.  Natural Gas Prices Cool After Hitting 13-year High U.S. natural gas prices are cooling today after surging to the highest level in more than 13 years on Monday. LNG futures are down 4.9% at $7.44 per million British thermal units.  This comes after futures hit a high of $8.05 per million British thermal units Monday, the highest price since September 2008.  U.S. LNG prices are still up more than 100% YTD. The rally comes as the war in Ukraine continues to squeeze the global energy market.  Forecasters are also now expecting cooler spring temperatures this year, heightening the potential demand for natural gas.  In Case You Missed It A federal judge in Florida overturned the CDC’s mask mandate for public transportation Monday. The judge ruled the agency overstepped its authority when issuing the mandate. The Biden Administration confirmed TSA is no longer enforcing the mandate after that decision. The White House press secretary said they are reviewing the ruling and the Justice Department will decide whether or not to appeal.  The National Association of Homebuilders Sentiment Index fell 2 points this month to 77. That drop was in-line with expectations and marks the 4th straight decline. Sentiment about current sales conditions fell 2 points to 85, buyer traffic tumbled 6 points to 60, and 6-month sales expectations rose 3 points to 73. The drop in sentiment comes as mortgage rates have spiked over the past month, squeezing more buyers out of the market.    

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Scott Redler’s Dog Bytes: FAANG Under Pressure

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SPX futures are -15 but off the overnight lows. See if it reclaims 4381 to relieve pressure or if sellers push down towards the 4335 area. Strength has been sold since the Red Dog Reversal at 4593 on April 5.TSLA lost super special status on the Red Dog Reversal at $1150. Then it failed to hold the $1115 area. It made a low of $973 last week which is our new point of reference. It reports Wednesday. It’s up $10 on news the Shanghai Factory is back online. But it’s below the $1012-$1026 resistance area. It’s not a great setup. If it goes red it would be bad for the sentiment. $973 will be key. AMZN is tricky after it gave us a nice move from $2940 to $3400+. Then it lost special status like most tech names. Now it needs to hold $2992 support. Otherwise, it can be pressured more. It reports April 28. AAPL went red fast on Thursday, giving some clues to take risk down. It closed on the lows of the day. It’s below all the moving averages and just a tactical trade. Maybe it goes red to green if it can reclaim $165.05. I’d take trades though. It reports April 28.Positions Disclosure as of 4/18/2022 at 8:38 a.m. ET

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Coffee With Greta: 3-Year High for the 10-Year Yield

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Editor’s Note: Coffee With Greta is a FREE morning update from our newest contributor Greta Wall. Want to get it by email every day? Click here. ******** DJIA Futures: -37 (-0.1%) SPX Futures: -11 (-0.3%) NASDAQ Futures: -48 (-0.4%) Good morning friends! Futures are lower as Treasury yields pop and traders prepare for a big week of earnings. Let’s get right to it! 10-Year Yield Spikes to Fresh 3-Year High The 10-year Treasury yield spiked to a new 3-year high this morning as traders continue to assess the inflation picture.  That yield is currently up three basis points to 2.86% after hitting a high above 2.87% earlier today, the highest level since late 2018.  The rally in the bond market comes after the CPI hit the highest level since 1981 in March and the PPI hit a record-high.  CME Group’s FedWatch Tool shows 88.8% of traders expect a 0.5% rate hike at the next Fed meeting in response to that high inflation. Oil Prices Hold Higher Oil prices are sitting at nearly three-week highs as Russia continues its attacks in Ukraine.  West Texas Intermediate crude futures are 0.5% higher at $107.50 bbl while Brent crude futures are up 0.7% to $112.50 bbl.  The EU has been discussing a phased-in ban of Russian oil imports but Germany has so far not supported the embargo. The Biden Administration is resuming selling leases for oil and gas drilling on federal lands.  The Interior Department is set to release a sale notice today for leases to drill on 144,000 acres.  The move comes as the White House has faced increased pressure to give Americans relief from high gas prices. But experts say it will take at least 6 months to a year for any new drilling to produce additional supply that would impact the price of gas.  Bank of America Gains on Earnings Beat Bank of America (BAC) shares are up 0.9% ahead of the open after topping Q1 expectations.  The bank reported earnings of $0.80 per share on $23.33 billion in revenue.  That was better than analysts’ expectations for earnings of $0.75 per share on $23.2 billion in revenue.  Net loan charge-offs dropped 52% year-over-year to $392 million.  That was sharply lower than Wall Street’s expectations for $848.7 million.  Bank of America also released $362 million from its loan loss reserves. DiDi Global Tumbles on Revenue Drop, De-listing Plans DiDi Global (DIDI) shares are plunging 18.7% in premarket trade after reporting a sharp decline in Q4 revenue. The Chinese ride-share service’s revenue tumbled 12.7% year-over-year to $6.4 billion at the end of 2021.  Revenue from its core ride-hailing business in China plunged 15.1% annually.  DiDi also said it will hold a shareholder’s meeting on May 23 to vote on delisting from the New York Stock Exchange. The company is under a cybersecurity investigation in China. Chinese Q1 GDP Stronger Than Expected China’s economy expanded faster than expected in the first quarter.  Beijing’s National Bureau of Statistics reported today that GDP rose 4.8% year-over-year last quarter vs 4.4% growth expected.  Fixed asset investment rose 9.3% annually vs 8.5% expected.  The increase came as China’s industrial production rose 5% year-over-year in March vs 4.5% expected.  But retail sales tumbled 3.5% annually last month vs a 1.6% decline expected. Economic growth is expected to slow in China in Q2 after a new Covid outbreak prompted new lockdowns. Homebuilder Optimism Preview The National Association of Homebuilders releases its optimism index for April at 10:00 a.m. ET.  That survey is expected to show confidence among builders fell by 2 points this month to 77.  Builders have struggled with severe supply and labor shortages while buyer demand remains at a record high.  In Case You Missed It Twitter’s (TWTR) board of directors voted unanimously Friday to adopt a limited duration shareholder rights plan. That vote came in response to Tesla (TSLA) CEO Elon Musk’s $43 billion offer to buy the company. The so-called “poison pill” will allow shareholders to buy more TWTR stock at a discounted price if any person or group purchases a 15% or greater stake without board approval. The plan will expire on April 14, 2023. Twitter shares are up 2.8% ahead of the open.  

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Options In Play – Trending Stocks And Earnings

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GS and UNH were two big names that reported this morning, but both will end the day relatively flat. They highlight trending setups around earnings and why I tend to avoid those patterns.

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Coffee With Greta: Elon Musk Wants to Buy Twitter

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Editor’s Note: Coffee With Greta is a FREE morning update from our newest contributor Greta Wall. Want to get it by email every day? Click here. ******** DJIA Futures: +7 (+0.03%) SPX Futures: -8 (-0.2%) NASDAQ Futures: -22 (-0.2%) Good morning friends! A quick heads up there will be no Coffee with Greta tomorrow morning, the market is closed! Futures are flat as traders assess a huge Twitter buyout offer from Elon Musk, Q1 earnings, and new economic data. Let’s get right to it! Elon Musk Offers to Buyout Twitter Twitter (TWTR) shares are up 6.3% ahead of the open after Tesla (TSLA) CEO Elon Musk offered to buy the social media company for $43 billion.  A new SEC filing shows Musk offered to buy the company for $54.20 per share. In a letter to Twitter Chairman Bret Taylor, Musk said, “I invested in Twitter as I believe in its potential to be the platform for free speech around the globe, and I believe free speech is a societal imperative for a functioning democracy”. He said the company “will neither thrive nor serve this social imperative in its current form. Twitter needs to be transformed as a private company”. Musk said this is his “best and final offer” and he will have to reconsider holding the stock if it is not accepted.  In a statement, Twitter said, “The Twitter Board of Directors will carefully review the proposal to determine the course of action that it believes is in the best interest of the Company and all Twitter stockholders”. Morgan Stanley Tops Q1 Expectations Morgan Stanley (MS) shares are up 1.5% in premarket trade after reporting strong Q1 earnings.  The bank reported earnings of $2.02 per share on $14.8 billion in revenue.  That topped analysts’ expectations for EPS of $1.68 on $14.2 billion in revenue.  The beat came as trading revenue rose more than expected.  Morgan Stanley reported $3.2 billion in equity trading revenue vs $2.7 billion expected.  Fixed income trading revenue rose to $2.9 billion vs $2.2 billion expected.  But the bank’s $5.9 billion wealth management revenue was shy of expectations for $6.2 billion.  Investment banking revenue came in at $1.6 billion vs the $1.8 billion estimate. Citigroup Beats Q1 Estimates Citigroup (C) shares are 1.8% higher ahead of the open as strong trading revenue boosted its Q1 results.  The bank reported earnings of $2.02 per share on $19.19 billion in revenue.  That was better than analysts’ expectations for EPS of $1.55 on $18.15 billion in revenue.  Earnings were down 46% year-over-year due to higher expenses and credit costs and lower revenues.  Revenue dipped 2% annually.  Citigroup is expected to take the biggest hit of all U.S. banks from the war in Ukraine. The bank has operations in more than 100 countries.  Goldman Sachs Crushes Q1 Expectations Goldman Sachs (GS) shares are up 1.5% in premarket trade after crushing Q1 expectations.  The bank reported earnings of $10.76 per share on $12.93 billion in revenue.  That dominated analysts’ expectations for EPS of $8.89 on $11.83 billion in revenue. CEO David Solomon said, “The rapidly evolving market environment had a significant effect on client activity as risk intermediation came to the fore and equity issuance came to a near standstill.” Fixed income, currency, and commodities trading revenue surged 21% from a year earlier to $4.72 billion.  That topped analysts’ estimates for $3.04 billion.  Equities trading revenue fell 15% year-over-year to $3.15 billion but still beat expectations. Wells Fargo Q1 Revenue Falls Short Wells Fargo (WFC) shares are down 3.4% ahead of the open after missing Q1 revenue expectations. The consumer bank reported earnings of $0.88 per share vs expectations for $0.80 EPS.  But $17.59 billion in revenue was short of analysts’ expectations for $17.8 billion.  That miss came as rising mortgage rates caused a 33% year-over-year decline in home lending.  Mortgage banking totaled just $693 million in Q1 vs analysts’ expectations for $880 million.  UnitedHealth Group Raises Forecast After Strong Q1 UnitedHealth Group (UNH) shares are up 0.5% in premarket trade after a better-than-expected Q1.  The health insurance giant reported earnings of $5.49 per share on $80.1 billion in revenue.  That topped analysts’ expectations for EPS of $5.37 on $78.8 billion in revenue.  Revenue at its pharmacy division, Optum, rose 19% year-over-year to $43.1 billion.  UnitedHealth boosted its full-year earnings forecast by $0.10 to between $21.20 and $21.70 per share. Rent the Runway Beats Fiscal Q4 Expectations Rent the Runway (RENT) shares are down 1.2% ahead of the open after crushing fiscal Q4 expectations. The clothing rental service reported a loss of $0.62 per share on $64.1 million in revenue.  That was better than analysts’ expectations for a loss of $0.71 per share on $63.3 million in revenue.  The CEO said, “the inflationary environment is basically a competitive advantage for Rent the Runway.” The company forecast fiscal Q1 between $63.5 million to $64.5 million and full-year fiscal 2022 revenue between $295 million and $305 million.  Retail Sales Fall Short in March U.S. retail sales rose less than expected last month.  The Commerce Department reported retail sales rose 0.5% to $665.7 billion.  Economists were expecting a gain of 0.6%.  But the increase was all thanks to higher gas prices as gasoline sales surged 8.9%. Spending at gas stations was up 37% compared to March 2021 while spending at restaurants and bars jumped 19.4%. Excluding gas stations, retail sales fell 0.3% in March. February’s retail sales were revised higher to $662.4 billion.  This data is not adjusted for inflation. Weekly Jobless Claims Rise  Weekly jobless claims rose more than expected last week.  The Labor Department reported 185,000 Americans filed initial claims for unemployment benefits.  That was up 18,000 from the previous week’s revised level and higher than expectations for 172,000.  Continuing claims fell by 48,000 to 1.48 million in the week ending April 2. Fed’s Waller Predicts 0.5% Rate Hikes Fed Governor Christopher Waller told CNBC Wednesday that he expects multiple 0.5% rate hikes at future meetings.  In an interview, Waller said, “I

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