Wednesday, 13th October, 2021
1/ Indexes find support
2/ JPMorgan Chase results disappoint investors
3/ Investors cautiously optimistic on Bank of America
4/ The bottom line
1/ Indexes Find Support
Markets remained muted as investors mulled the beginning of third-quarter earnings and parsed through the statements from the Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC). Invesco’s Nasdaq 100 ETF (QQQ) added 0.8% as the U.S. 10-Year Treasury Yield (TNX) pulled back, making the tech sector more appealing. State Street’s S&P 500 Index ETF (SPY) rose 0.3% after BlackRock (BLK) rose more than 4% on strong earnings to kick off the season. iShares Russell 2000 ETF (IWM) added 0.4%, while State Street’s Dow Jones Industrial Average ETF (DIA) remained flat.
The five-minute candles in the chart below depict how the markets sharply sold at the open but rebounded steadily throughout the day. That seems surprising considering that the Consumer Price Index (CPI) numbers came in slightly higher than expected. The change in price of goods rose 0.4% in September, as rises in food and energy prices offset declining used car pricing. CPI increased 5.4% on a year-over-year basis, the highest since January 1991. Minutes released from the Fed’s September FOMC meeting showed that the central bank could begin tapering its $120 billion per month in bond purchases as soon as November.
Major averages have maintained relative levels after a September swoon. With multiple macro factors at play—tapering, inflation, supply chain issues, earnings—it is interesting that markets have remained range-bound. Investors could be waiting for definitive signs of directional movement before joining the fray. As it stands currently, the glut of factors cited for day-to-day results of individual equities have not cause a widespread selloff of indexes.
2/ JPMorgan Chase Results Disappoint Investors
the fiscal third quarter. JPM reported $3.74 in earnings per share (EPS) and $29.6 billion in revenue, beating analyst predictions of $2.98 in EPS and $29.4 billion in revenue. A key metric for JPM is net interest margin, a measure of the difference between the interest banks earn on their assets and the interest they pay out to depositors and other creditors. JPM missed on this metric, with the 1.62% reported coming in slightly below analyst expectations of 1.64%.
JPM earnings are significant as one of the first major dominoes of the earnings season to fall. The chart compares the recent performance of JPM with State Street’s Financial Sector ETF (XLF). Today’s results saw the JPM share price fall below its 20-day moving average, yet the stock is still slightly ahead of its sector. JPM earnings were largely impressive, but the company did not offer forward guidance, which could have factored into today’s share price movement.
3/ Investors Cautiously Optimistic on Bank of America
Perhaps taking note of the earnings results of JPM, investors have bid down the share price of Bank of America (BAC) ahead of the company’s fiscal third-quarter earnings announcement. A key component could be BAC’s net interest margin, which JPM lagged on based on analyst estimates. Analysts expect BAC to report $0.70 in EPS and $21.6 billion in revenue. However, as illustrated by JPM today, solely exceeding analysts’ estimates for these metrics alone does not translate into positive stock price movement.
As investors brace for BAC earnings, the stock’s share price shed 1%. However, it remains slightly ahead of XLF of late, as illustrated on the chart below. If BAC follows JPM’s post-earnings trend, it will be interesting to see if the stock can find support above key moving averages. Currently, option traders appear to be positioned for BAC to move higher after earnings, as recent trading volumes favor calls more than 2-to-1.
BAC is one of several major banks due to report earnings tomorrow before the market opens, alongside Wells Fargo (WFC) and Citigroup (C).
4/ The Bottom Line
Benchmark indexes sold off strongly today at the open but rebounded through the rest of the session with no major impact from the release of minutes from the previous FOMC meeting. JPMorgan kicked off earnings season and investors seemed disappointed with the news that net interest margins shrunk over the last quarter.
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Originally posted on 13th October, 2021
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