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Putin speech, Walmart earnings, Europe rebound - what's moving markets

Published 02/21/2023, 06:37 AM
Updated 02/21/2023, 07:12 AM
© Reuters.

By Geoffrey Smith

Investing.com -- Russian President Vladimir Putin signals no let up in the war in Ukraine in a major speech. Walmart and Home Depot shed more light on the health of the U.S. consumer at the end of last year, while stock futures continue to reel from last week's stronger-than-expected economic data. Europe's economy is feeling the benefits of a sharp drop in energy prices at the end of last year. Here's what you need to know in financial markets on Tuesday, February 21st.

1. Putin speech points to war dragging on

A day after U.S. President Joe Biden’s surprise trip to Kyiv, Vladimir Putin prepared Russia for a long war in Ukraine in a keynote speech that cast the conflict as an existential struggle against the West.

Putin’s speech gave no hint of any change in policy, nor of any immediate economic or political constraints on Russia’s ability to pursue a war that has been the dominant issue in geopolitics for a year. It repeated largely familiar grievances that Russia hadn't started the war, and is struggling against a western plot to destroy it.

Elsewhere, China said it would present proposals for peace talks between the two sides by the end of the week, and criticized the West for “fuelling” the war with its repeated packages of military aid to Ukraine.

This week will see the anniversary of Russia’s invasion, the third time Putin has ordered Russian troops into a neighbor’s territory since 2008.

2. Walmart, Home Depot earnings

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Walmart (NYSE:WMT) and Home Depot (NYSE:HD) report quarterly earnings, in what is likely to be seen as a litmus test for the health of the retail sector.

Analysts expect Walmart’s earnings to be largely unchanged from a year ago, despite a 4% rise in revenue. The retail giant is expected to have absorbed more of the rise in operating costs at the end of the year as consumer incomes weakened.

Home Depot’s adjusted earnings per share came in slightly ahead of expectations, but revenue was lower than street forecasts and the group's outlook for the year ahead was worryingly weak. The stock fell nearly 4% in premarket trading.

3. Stocks set to fall as rate fears persist

U.S. stock futures fell in premarket trading as equity markets prepared to reopen after the long holiday weekend.

Fears of higher interest rates appeared again to be the dominant worry, with bond yields still rising all along the yield curve in the wake of stronger-than-expected inflation and retail sales data last week.

By 06:20 ET (11:20 GMT), Dow Jones futures were down 274 points, or 0.8%, at a three-week low, while S&P 500 futures were down 0.8%, and Nasdaq 100 futures were down 0.9%.

In addition to Walmart and Home Depot, Medtronic (NYSE:MDT), Ingersoll Rand (NYSE:IR), Molson Coors (NYSE:TAP), Huntsman (NYSE:HUN), and Teck Resources (NYSE:TECK) all report quarterly earnings before the open, while Public Storage (NYSE:PSA), Palo Alto Networks (NASDAQ:PANW), Coinbase (NASDAQ:COIN), Caesars (NASDAQ:CZR), Diamondback (NASDAQ:FANG), and others report after the close.

4. Europe returns to growth, maybe

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Business surveys in Europe suggested that the euro zone and U.K. economies are growing again, thanks to the sharp drop in energy prices at the end of last year. The pound rose over half a percent against the dollar but the euro slipped.

Preliminary estimates of the composite purchasing managers indices were both above expectations and above the 50 line that typically denotes economic expansion. In addition, the German ZEW index of economic sentiment rose for a fifth month to its highest level in a year.

Analysts warned, however, that the figures excluded retail sales and construction – two sectors especially exposed to higher borrowing costs and falling real incomes.

5. Oil still adrift

Crude oil prices continued to struggle for direction, amid reports that suggest Russian oil continues to find its way to market easily enough despite western sanctions.

Global Witness reported on Monday that Shell (LON:SHEL) and Vitol – neither of which commented on the story – have sharply increased imports of fuel into Europe from Turkish refineries that have in turn increased their offtake of Russian crude.

By 06:35 ET, U.S. crude futures were up 1.1% at $77.42 a barrel, while Brent was down 0.1% at $84.00 a barrel.

The release of the American Petroleum Institute and U.S. government oil inventory estimates for last week are both delayed by one day owing to the public holiday on Monday.

Latest comments

Forget it russian trolls…russia is about to get their ass..es kicked in ukraine its only a matter of time
don't believe the hype. we have been backing out of the bi-lateral treaty too - doesn't make sense unless everyone with bombs signs.
If Putzin wants to bankrupt his country that's his problem. Joe shouldn't be helping him though.
helping russia bankrupt itself sounds like a good idea to me
Provide nuclear to ukurian ,lets them decide it
Provide hooked on phonixs for you.
What kind of an idiot must you be to think giving Ukraine nukes is a good idea?!?
Lazy westerners are afraid of their debt based asset bubble economy collapsing. Russia has real commodities, not crypto and real estate bubbles
Lol hopium.
yes, who wouldn't want to have the Russian economy instead of American or German economy???
Envy won't get you what you want.
"China said it would present proposals for peace talks between the two sides by the end of the week, and criticized the West for “fuellingg” the war with its repeated packages of military aid to Ukraine."  -- yes, the people fueling the war is not the invaders who actually started and continue the attacks, it's the people who gave weapons to the defenders to defend themselves.....interesting logic
What do you expect from communists?
As long as Putin/Russia is stifled in Ukraine, Putin's attempt to not be swallowed up by western-style democracy will be futile without him literally destroying the world with nukes. Time is not on Russia's side due to an already quickly contracting working age population, even before the war. And that attrition has only increased at a higher rate thanks to battlefield loses. And let's not forget China's One Child policy that is collapsing its working age population by the most of any country in the world. This is the last decade of significant relevance for either nation. Having an iron grip on your society comes with long-term consequences.
. "And that attrition has only increased at a higher rate thanks to battlefield loses."  -- and don't forget the 250k educated young people who ran away to escape the mobilisations.
"This is the last decade of significant relevance for either nation."  -- China is the second biggest economy in the world so let's not get over excited here
Tre, what I said is true of China's population woes. Their working age labor force is RAPIDLY diminishing...far beyond any other nation on the planet. China has been urgently trying to get their population to start having more kids but as you know, it takes time for a human being to grow enough to become an effective member of society. Meanwhile, the older members of their society are draining resources to stay alive with no support down the line from the younger generations. They are a collapsing social model. China themselves have admitted as much in their census counts. So unless they open their borders to mass immigration to prop up their labor force, they are going to languish for many years.
What happens when the Strategic Petroleum Reserve is empty? At current pace and trajectory it will be by 2024
they will figured it out, probably the usual: wash peoples brains, blame somebody abroad or bomb something. atom war with russia is the best option, it looks like people love to go for it.
Aw, man. That sounds terrible Bummer.
Dementia Joe has our back. He will claim we are now 100 % solar and won't need any more oil.
It's really all a scam , total manipulation .
So according to putin everything is much better for russia after they can no longer sell their oil and gas to the western world that would normally give 50 billion dollars pr. Day in russian coffers. And thousands of companies have left russia and millions of russians have escaped conscript for putins war. And the ukraine military operation is according to plan not 1 word about the 200.000 russian soldiers that are now gone forever from their families. Stop weeping putin says, trust me its all for the best and russia will start to build thousands miles of highways across russia sounds like another former dictator called adolf who also liked concrete roads.
 "Before destroying entire country"  -- I am pretty sure the Soviet Union and the Taliban already done that before the US showed up in Afganistan
  "west trying to start ww3" hahahah, sure. meanwhile the real invaders - russians are innocent yeah?
Dictators need concrete feet not roads.
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