Three of the Magnificent Seven companies reported earnings after the bell on Thursday. Facebook parent Meta, Amazon, and Apple all exceeded expectations. Meta blew their number out of the water. Apple, after exceeding expectations, is trading down in the overnight market.
Stocks rallied to gain back most, if not all, of what they lost on Wednesday. Lots of big green numbers all up and down the Giant Quote Machine on Thursday.
Interest rates were mixed. But mostly lower at the longer end of the curve.
The 2-year/20-year spread looks to be in danger of inverting again.
We wish we had some witty or insightful explanation for the reversal of Wednesday’s sell-off yesterday. But we don't, except to say, “Overreaction, anyone?!”
We did get some economic news before the opening bell, and it seemed to imply a just bit of weakness, which may have convinced traders that the Fed will have room to cut rates sooner as opposed to later.
Initial jobless claims came in at 224,000 versus expectations of 213,000 and 215,000 last month. So they disappointed directionally and versus expectations. Continuing claims likewise exceeded expectations. They came in at 1.898 million versus an expectation of 1.840 million.
The labor market has been strong and is surely one of the reasons the Fed has hesitated to cut rates. On the other hand, the S&P Global US Manufacturing Purchasing Managers Index came in above 50. That means manufacturing is expanding. The news from the manufacturing sector has been, well, better lately after two years of moribund numbers.
This morning, we get the rest of the labor market complex, including nonfarm payrolls, the labor force participation rate—our favorite statistic—and the unemployment rate for January. All of it could move today’s markets, especially given all of the volatility this week.
Everyone here at the Ministry of Truth will be going through all of the numbers with a fine-toothed comb throughout the day today so we can report it all to you. Tomorrow on the Buzz.