The FOMC minutes’ release continues to be the main driver in the markets. The minutes, to be released at 18:00 GMT, will hopefully provide some guidance about when the Fed will begin to taper its bond buying stimulus.
Top News
In other news around the markets:
- The euro/dollar exchange rate finally reached above $1.34 as investors pulled their money out of emerging markets and piled them into safer currencies.
- The Japanese nuclear watchdog will raise its warning about a toxic water leak from a level one “anomaly” to a level three “serious incident”. This will be the most serious warning since the plant was rocked in 2011 by an earthquake and tsunami.
- The UK posted its first July deficit in three years
- The Japanese government may revise plans to increase the nation’s sales tax to 8 percent from 5 percent in April. Instead, Prime Minister Shinzo Abe is considering raising the tax rate by 1 percentage point per year. However, BOJ Governor Haruhiko Kuroda has backed the 3 percent increase in April, saying the Japanese economy is strong enough to support the originally planned tax hike.
- In an effort to coordinate financial supervision, Chinese authorities are setting up a new agency that will help the nation’s current supervisors set up cross-asset financial products and streamline information sharing and accounting across financial sectors.
- On the campaign trail this week, German Finance Minister Wolfgang Schauble said Greece will need more money to stay afloat than previously estimated in the nation’s bailout agreement. Greece’s financing gap has been swept under the rug by eurozone policymakers, and the IMF has already threatened to discontinue its financial support for the country if the EU doesn’t address the issue.
Asian markets were positioning on the chance that the FOMC minutes will reveal that the Fed will begin its tapering plan at the next meeting. Japan’s NIKKEI index spent the night swinging between highs and lows but ended with a 0.21 percent increase. China’s Shanghai composite was flat at the end of trade with just a 0.02 percent gain. Hong Kong’s Hang Seng Index ended 0.69 percent down and South Korea’s KOSPI fell even more by 1.08 percent.
European Markets
European markets were mostly lower in anticipation of the FOMC minutes. Only France’s CAC 40 Index had squeaked out a modest gain of 0.08 percent as of 8:35 GMT. The eurozone’s overall STOXX600 index was down 0.11 percent while the London’s FTSE 100 Index shed 0.45 percent.
Commodities
Wall Street is backing off commodities as the end of easy stimulus money draws nearer and commodities prices across the board dropped. Brent futures for October fell 0.67 percent bringing the commodity’s price below $110. WTI futures also sunk 0.53 percent. Metals suffered losses as well with gold dropping 0.75 percent to $1,362.30 per ounce and silver slipping 1.07 percent to $22.87 per ounce.
Currencies
Currency markets were relatively quiet ahead of the Fed minutes. The euro/dollar rate pushed above $1.34 overnight but dipped back to $1.3389 by 8:50 GMT. The Yen gained early after news of Hiroshima’s radiation leak but steadied at ¥97.49 to the dollar. The pound/dollar exchange rate was little changed with the pound gaining just 0.05 percent against the dollar. Emerging market currencies like the Indian rupee and the Malaysian ringgit continued to tumble.
Earnings Reported Yesterday
Notable companies that reported earnings on Tuesday included:
- Analog Devices, Inc (ADI) reported third quarter revenue of $674.00 million with EPS of $0.57 vs. last year’s EPS of $0.56 on $683.03 million worth of revenue.
- Intuit Inc. (INTU) reported fourth quarter EPS of $0.00 vs last year’s $0.03 EPS. The company’s revenue fell short of estimates at $634.00 million
- Home Depot, Inc. (HD) reported second quarter EPS of $1.24, beating last year’s EPS of $1.01. The company’s revenue came in ahead of expectations at $22.52 billion.
- Vanguard Health Systems (VHS) reported fourth quarter earnings in line with expectations at $0.18. The company reported revenue of $1.45 billion, which is equal to last year’s reported revenue.
Stocks moving in the pre-market included:
- Proctor & Gamble (PG) rose 0.21 percent in pre-market trade as the company lobbied in Brussels to ease limits on the company’s teeth whitening products sold in the EU.
- Hewlett-Packard Co (HPQ) slipped 0.31 percent in pre-market trade, which some worry could be the end of an impressive rebound.
- General Motors Co (GM) fell 0.43 percent in pre-market trade as rumors that new smog rules which could affect car sales in China could spell disaster for the company.
Notable companies expected to report earnings on Wednesday include:
- Hewlett-Packard Co (HPQ) is expected to report third quarter EPS of $0.86 on revenue of $27.25 billion, down from last year’s EPS of $1.00 on revenue of $29.67 billion.
- Lowe’s Companies, Inc. (LOW) is expected to report EPS of $0.78 vs. last year’s EPS of $0.65. The company’s revenue is expected to come in at $15.02 billion.
- Staples, Inc. (SPLS) is expected to report second quarter EPS of $0.18 on revenue of $5.39 billion, compared to last year’s revenue of $5.50 billion.
- Target Corporation (TGT) is expected to report second quarter EPS of $0.99, below last year’s EPS of $1.06. The company’s revenue is expected at $17.33 billion.
The main event on today’s economic calendar is the release of the US Federal Reserve’s policy meeting minutes. The US is also set to release another pool of data including crude oil and gasoline inventories and existing home sales data. China will release HSBC manufacturing PMI data and Australia will put out its CB leading index.
BY Laura Brodbeck