Before the Open (May 2)

Good morning. Happy Thursday.
The Asian/Pacific markets leaned to the upside. China, Hong Kong, South Korea, New Zealand and the Philippines posted gains while Australia, Malaysia and Indonesia posted losses. Europe, Africa and the Middle East are currently mostly down. The Czech Republic is up, but Denmark, Poland, France, Turkey, Finland, Norway, Spain, the Netherlands, Israel, Austria and Sweden are down. Futures in the States point towards a positive open for the cash market.
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VIDEO: The Difference Between Tops and Continuations
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The dollar is down. Oil and copper are down. Gold and silver are down. Bonds are mixed.
Stories/News from Seeking Alpha…
Vegan burger maker Beyond Meat has priced its initial public stock offering at $25 per share, the top of its anticipated range in a reflection of brisk investor demand. At this price, the company raised around $240M at a $1.5B valuation, including underwriters’ options. The company starts trading today on the Nasdaq under symbol “BYND” as consumers increasingly opt to eat less meat or turn to vegan or vegetarian foods. Beyond Meat will use the proceeds from its IPO to invest in new manufacturing facilities and R&D, stepping up competition with rival Impossible Foods.
Futures look past Fed meeting
For all the political pressure to ease policy and the mixed signals on growth and inflation, the Fed refused to signal anything other than that it was still on pause, while Chair Jerome Powell said the factors dragging on inflation might be “transitory,” not “persistent.” That cooled over-excited U.S. shares on Wednesday, snapping the S&P 500’s three-day winning streak and dragging down Wall Street. U.S. futures this morning are turning higher once again – with the DJIA up 59 points – as the focus shifts to the next round of corporate earnings as well as economic data on U.S. jobless claims and factory orders.
Chip stocks faced with mixed signals
Apple’s (NASDAQ:AAPL) better-than-expected report on Tuesday evening was in contrast to a lackluster quarterly sales forecast last night from semiconductor giant Qualcomm (NASDAQ:QCOM). “You’re going to see Chinese weakness reflected in the next couple of quarters,” CEO Steve Mollenkopf declared, sending shares down 3.5% AH, although Qualcomm also said it expects to receive $4.5B-$4.7B from its royalty settlement with Apple (AAPL). Ssince the deal on April 16, the chipmaker’s stock is up over 43%.
Facebook closer to FTC settlement
Facebook (NASDAQ:FB) and the FTC are negotiating a potential settlement that would create new serious privacy practices and roles along with an expected multibillion-dollar fine, Politico reports. But the current plan doesn’t have new restrictions on the company’s data handling, nor does it call for any checks on CEO Mark Zuckerberg himself, nor his removal as chairman. Facebook’s earnings report last week was marked by a legal expense charge of $3B it took on in anticipation of an FTC fine and it’s provided for that sum to rise to $5B.
Iran feels pinch from oil ban
U.S. waivers on purchasing Iranian oil expired overnight for eight countries, including Iran’s main oil customer, China. Speaking at an oil conference in Tehran, OPEC secretary-general Mohammed Barkindo said his group is working to “depoliticize oil” and “insulate our organization against geopolitics,” but didn’t directly address the U.S. sanctions. Some Iranian and U.S. officials project that the country’s exports might fall as low as 400K barrels a month by this summer (before the U.S. exit from the nuclear deal, Iran exported 2.5M barrels a day).
BOE likely to keep rates steady
Policymakers at the Bank of England are set to keep rates on hold this morning, but may adopt a more hawkish tone aimed at preparing financial markets for the possibility of a hike this year. It’ll be the first meeting since the U.K. and EU agreed to kick the Brexit can down the road until jack-o’-lanterns come out in October. Meanwhile, Theresa May faces big losses in local elections today as voters register a protest against the prime minister’s handling of Brexit.
Shell gets boost from trading, LNG sales
Royal Dutch Shell (NYSE:RDS.A) rose nearly 3% premarket after reporting a 2% fall in Q1 profits to $5.43B, but easily beat expectations as lower oil prices and refining earnings were offset by stronger trading and higher LNG prices. Shell also announced the latest tranche of its $25B buyback program, which it had promised after its BG Group deal. The share repurchases, which were launched in July 2018, will amount to nearly $2.8B in the coming quarter.
Merck steps up MMR vaccine production
Merck (NYSE:MRK), the sole U.S. supplier of measles vaccines, has increased output to meet an uptick in U.S. demand amid the country’s biggest outbreak in 25 years. “The demand side of the equation hasn’t been outstripping our underlying capacity,” Chief Marketing Officer Mike Nally said in an interview. The CDC reported 704 cases of measles as of April 26, a 1.3% increase since the 695 reported the week before, with the vast majority of cases occurring in children who have not received the MMR vaccine.
What else is happening…
Contributer Dave Kranzler talks more about semiconductor chips, likening them to “modern Dutch tulip bulbs.”
The EU will seek a sharp increase of LNG imports from the U.S.
USMCA deal faces mounting resistance in the Democratic House.
Pork is the next target of a widening spat between China and Canada.
PG&E (NYSE:PCG) seeks court approval for a $105M fund to help wildfire victims.
Maine becomes the first state to outlaw single-use Styrofoam.
U.S. House panel sets a May 15 hearing for Boeing’s (NYSE:BA) 737 MAX.
Wednesday’s Key Earnings
Annaly Capital (NYSE:NLY) -1.6% AH on plans to cut Q2 dividend.
Apache (NYSE:APA) -2.2% AH after big Q1 earnings miss.
CVS Health (NYSE:CVS) +5.4% raising EPS guidance.
Enterprise Products (NYSE:EPD) +1.6% with crude volumes at quarterly record.
Fitbit (NYSE:FIT) +2.1% AH as revenues grew near 10%.
MetLife (NYSE:MET) unchanged after mixed results.
Southern Co. (NYSE:SO) -1.3% missing expectations.
Square (NYSE:SQ) -6.1% AH amid weaker payment volumes.
Qualcomm (QCOM) -3.5% AH on lackluster sales forecast.
Zynga (NASDAQ:ZNGA) +9.8% AH smashing bookings estimates.

Today’s Economic Calendar
Auto Sales
7:30 Challenger Job-Cut Report
8:30 Productivity and Costs
8:30 Initial Jobless Claims
10:00 Factory Orders
10:30 EIA Natural Gas Inventory
4:30 PM Money Supply
4:30 PM Fed Balance Sheet

Other
today’s upgrades/downgrades from briefing.com
this week’s Earnings from Morningstar

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