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Meta Selloff, Amazon Reports, Jobless Claims, ECB & BOE - What's Moving Markets

Published 02/03/2022, 06:35 AM
Updated 02/03/2022, 06:42 AM
© Reuters

By Geoffrey Smith 

Investing.com -- Facebook (NASDAQ:FB) owner Meta Platforms is set for a $200 billion wipeout when it opens later, after reporting a drop in users and predicting more pain from Apple (NASDAQ:AAPL)'s privacy settings late on Thursday. The mixed performance of the so-called FAANG stocks will make Amazon (NASDAQ:AMZN)'s earnings after the bell particularly interesting. Jobless claims data are due, a day after a shocking fall in private employment in January. The Bank of England is expected to raise its key rate for the second meeting in a row, but the European Central Bank is set to stay strictly in talking mode. Shell (LON:RDSa) adds to the good news from Big Oil. Here's what you need to know in financial markets on Thursday, 3rd February.

1.  Meta's Mega Selloff 

Facebook owner Meta Platforms is set to lose nearly $200 billion of market value when it opens later, after reporting its first ever drop in daily active users and a broader set of quarterly numbers that spelled various kinds of trouble for the company.

The company managed another gain in revenue thanks to higher ad rates, but the squeeze from Apple’s new privacy laws is set to get worse this year, costing it $10 billion in revenue, according to CEO Mark Zuckerberg. Profit, meanwhile, fell due to ever-heavier investment in long-term plays related to the so-called Metaverse.

That makes the Facebook owner the second of the once-untouchable FAANG club to endure a wipeout after its fourth-quarter report (Netflix (NASDAQ:NFLX) being the first). The numbers will add to the importance of Amazon’s results for market sentiment. The e-commerce giant reports after the close.

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2. Jobless claims and unit labor costs

After the shock drop in private hiring in January reported by ADP, there’s an added spice to this week’s jobless claims numbers at 8:30 AM ET, which will show how quickly and to what degree the labor market is getting over the soft patch caused by the wave of Omicron-variant Covid-19. The Institute of Supply Management’s non-manufacturing index for January will also throw out some clues on that score, given that services were disproportionately hard hit by Omicron.

Analysts expect initial claims to have fallen to 245,000 from 260,000 the previous week. If that bears out, then it will put claims firmly back on a path to test their recent lows.

Also due later are data on U.S. unit labor costs for the fourth quarter, which will provide fresh fuel for the inflation debate. 

3. Stocks set to open lower; T-Mobile set for new 2022 high

U.S. stock markets are set to open lower again after Meta’s shocking results sparked fears that even the most reliable cash generators of recent years aren’t immune to abrupt repricings. The owner of Facebook was in good company on Wednesday, with PayPal (NASDAQ:PYPL) also losing a quarter of its value in response to weak earnings and guidance.

 By 6:15 AM ET, Dow futures were down 138 points, or 0.4%, while S&P 500 futures were down 1.3% and NASDAQ 100 futures were down 2.4%, more than reversing Wednesday’s gains.

Late earnings on Wednesday weren’t uniformly negative – T-Mobile (NASDAQ:TMUS) blew past expectations and is marked up 7.4% at a new high for the year. McKesson (NYSE:MCK) stock is also set to open at a new all-time high after it handily beat expectations.

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Companies reporting early on Thursday include pharma giants Eli Lilly (NYSE:LLY), Biogen (NASDAQ:BIIB) and Merck  (NYSE:MRK), along with Honeywell (NASDAQ:HON), Cigna (NYSE:CI) and Becton Dickinson (NYSE:BDX). Joining Amazon later will be Estee Lauder (NYSE:EL), Ford Motor (NYSE:F) and Activision Blizzard (NASDAQ:ATVI).

4. ECB and BoE meetings

The Bank of England is set to raise its key interest rate in back-to-back meetings for the first time since before the Great Financial Crisis when its monetary policy council meets later.  Analysts expect a 25-basis point increase to 0.5% in the refinancing rate.

That comes on the same day that the country’s energy markets regulator Ofgem announced it would lift the cap on some energy bills by 54% from April, a move that’s set to take a big bite out of disposable incomes, especially among low earners.

Meanwhile, over in Frankfurt, the European Central Bank will keep its interest rates unchanged despite a shock rise in inflation to 5.1% in January, suggesting that prices will stay higher for longer than the bank anticipated. That means  the key variable will be any change in guidance about the pace at which it runs down its asset purchases after the scheduled end of the Pandemic Emergency program in March.

5. Oil weakens on fresh demand fears

Crude oil prices came off their recent highs after Meta’s earnings and the ADP payrolls report sent a chill through risk assets in general.

By 6:30 AM ET, U.S. crude futures were down 1.5% at $86.91 a barrel, while Brent crude futures were down 1.4% at $88.20 a barrel.

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The market has overcome any brief disappointment it may have had about OPEC and its allies not speeding up the return of oil to the global market, but the spread of the new and more infectious subvariant of Omicron is leading to fresh fears that the disruption to demand may last longer than first thought.

Earlier, there was fresh evidence of prices restoring the health of Big Oil, as Shell followed Exxon (NYSE:XOM) in reporting stellar earnings. It also increased its buyback program by $3 billion. ConocoPhillips (NYSE:COP) reports its earnings later.

Latest comments

I'm new please let's we shere...
I can't wait until their lose their section 230 coverage next year. Then Meta Platforms becomes an oxymoron and THEN we will see if they go the way of aol.
1. Facebook has ruined its name so much it had to change it.2. no-one likes or trusts Mark Zuckerberg. 3. core business is in decline with an unknown high capex pivot into the metaverse.
Agrees! Just look at FB the way you would look at any web site. It’s boring and lacking in creativity. Neat columns all laid out with a heading image. It’s rudimentary at best. They just used shady addiction psychology to get the whole globe hooked. Just like a crack addict in a crack house, users are so hooked they don’t realize they are in a crack house huddled in corners waiting for the next like hit. I think people are starting to realize this too.
Had a FB account for approximately 2 years around 2008, found everyone I wanted and shut it down. I knew it was poison then before all the truth came out. Why would any self respecting human have a FB account or use any of its other services?
Same dude, I work in IT and even back then 2008 at 18 I knew it was tracking me. I actually got banned for providing fake names to FB to prevent it lol fk them
i like thise
META is what buying
FB will eventually follow AOL'S demise, hopefully.
And one can only hope Twitter tanks as well.
I suspect that FB will clean up its act to some extent, invest heavily into the infrastructure and remain very profitable going forward. They are far from obsolescence. The price will ebb and flow over time. This is most likely a sound long haul hold.
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