MARKET WRAPS

Watch For:

Existing Home Sales for December; University of Michigan Preliminary Consumer Survey for January; Canada Retail Sales for November

Today's Headlines/Must Reads

- A Hot Debt Market Is Slashing Borrowing Costs for Riskier Companies

- AI Is the Talk of Davos. Is It Time to Sell?

- Trump and Biden Both Hate Pharma-Investors Shouldn't

- The Red Sea Conflict Is Scrambling Shipping. Europe Is Bearing the Brunt

Opening Call:

Stock futures were pointing higher on Friday, with the S&P 500 eyeing fresh highs.

Tech stocks are expected to lend a hand, with enthusiasm for the sector set to continue.

"Reflation trade is not happening, long technology is the most crowded trade of the moment," Swissquote Bank said.

"The Nasdaq-100 net long positions are at the highest levels in nearly two years. The stretched long positioning makes Nasdaq stocks vulnerable to a selloff, but the softening Fed expectations and robust AI-demand should keep the technology space well-funded," Swissquote Bank said.

A number of Federal Reserve officials will make appearances on Friday, including Austan Goolsbee at 8:30 a.m., Michael Barr at 1 p.m. and Mary Daly at 4:15 p.m.

Premarket Movers

Advanced Micro Devices rose 2% and Nvidia was up 1.4% after shares of both chip makers closed at all-time highs on Thursday. AMD has risen 10% this year while Nvidia has jumped 15%.

Shares of iRobot fell 36% after The Wall Street Journal reported the European Commission intends to block Amazon.com's acquisition of the Roomba maker.

Macy's plans to lay off 3.5% of its workforce and close five stores this year as the retailer looks to cut costs and reorganize its corporate structure. The stock rose 0.2%.

Spirit Airlines was down 1.6% after closing down 7.5% on Thursday following a Journal report that said the budget carrier was planning to explore restructuring options with advisors following the collapse of its merger with JetBlue Airways.

Super Micro Computer was up 13% after it said it expects fiscal second-quarter adjusted earnings of $5.40 to $5.55 a share, higher than analysts' estimates.

Wendy's named Kirk Tanner, who most recently served as CEO of North American beverages at PepsiCo, as president and chief executive. Wendy's rose 0.8%.

Post-Close Movers

AST SpaceMobile plans to sell $100 million of common stock in a public offering, a move that came minutes after the company said it had received investments from AT&T and Google, as well as a additional funds from existing investor Vodafone. Shares of AST fell 7.5%.

Mesa Air struck several agreements meant to bolster is liquidity with partner United Airlines. The company said it amended an agreement with United to increase its block-hour rate. Mesa's shares rose 78%.

Economic Insight

The U.S. is hobbled by its lack of pro-trade majority on both sides of the house, argues Jane Harman, chair of the U.S. Commission on National Defense Strategy.

The Democratic and Republican parties alike have been taken over by anti-trade wings, and that is stopping progress, Harman added.

Forex:

The dollar is likely to stay stuck in a tight range for now as market participants await key interest-rate announcements by central banks over the next two weeks. Investors are likely to wait for these key events "before riding more sustained trends," UniCredit Research

However, it expects the dollar will continue to retain a "bullish bias," with the DXY dollar index remaining firm at close to 103.50.

Sterling weakened slightly after data showed U.K. retail sales fell by 3.2% during December, much more than expected.

The data suggest the U.K. economy "certainly isn't out of the woods," Wealth Club said. "Whether December's weak retail sales are a blip or the start of a more worrying trend remains to be seen."

Energy:

Crude futures inched higher as extreme cold disrupts U.S. oil production and Middle East tensions grow following more U.S. strikes against Houthi anti-ship missiles.

"Sustained disruptions to Red Sea flows will increase the pressure on energy markets over time," BMI Research said. Yet, "energy-price action has been fairly muted in response to the crisis."

According to BMI, the market sees risks of a broader conflict and supply disruptions as unlikely or limited.

Metals:

Base metals were higher as the dollar eased back and gold made gains on heightened geopolitical risks.

"But waning market expectations of early rate cuts by the Fed and a rebound in the USD are likely to limit the upside," ANZ Research said.


TODAY'S TOP HEADLINES


Wendy's CEO Todd Penegor to Exit, PepsiCo Executive Kirk Tanner Named Successor

Wendy's Chief Executive Todd Penegor is departing and will be succeeded by PepsiCo executive Kirk Tanner in the role.

The Dublin, Ohio-based fast-food chain on Thursday said that Penegor, who has served as CEO since 2016 and joined the company a decade ago, will leave in February.


BASF Sales, Earnings Miss Forecasts on Lower Margins, Write-Downs

BASF said Friday that its 2023 results missed expectations, dragged by impairments and lower margins that weren't offset by cost cuts.

The European chemicals giant's key profit figure-earnings before interest, taxes and special items-fell to 3.81 billion euros ($4.14 billion) from EUR6.88 billion, compared with a EUR4 billion-EUR4.4 billion forecast range and an analyst consensus estimate of EUR3.93 billion.


Why India Isn't the New China

China's economy is struggling, but another Asian giant, neighboring India, is suddenly squarely on investors' and manufacturers' radar. The first two decades of the 21st century were largely the story of China's rise. Will the next two be the story of India's?

There are plenty of reasons for optimism. The country's population surpassed China's last year. More than half of Indians are under 25. And at current growth rates, it could become the world's third-largest economy in less than a decade, having recently overtaken the U.K., its old colonial ruler, for the no. 5 spot. India's equity market has now seen eight straight years of gains. Worsening trade relations between the West and China only helps its case.


Don't Watch the CPI. Inflation Is Lower, Says Blackstone's Steve Schwarzman.

DAVOS, Switzerland-Blackstone CEO Stephen Schwarzman has seen a lot in a half-century in finance, but right now he sees something stark in his empire of portfolio companies: Inflation is already near 2%, lower than what the consumer price index shows, he says. If the Fed sticks to its current policy stance, relying on the official numbers, it could mean that interest rates stay higher for longer than they need to.

While markets expect six or seven rate cuts from the Fed this year as inflation wanes, officials at the central bank have pushed back against that dovish view. After all, the annual gain in the CPI rose to 3.4% in December from 3.1% in November, a discouraging move that leaves the number firmly above the Fed's 2% target. Core CPI, the Fed's preferred metric, was at 3.9%.


Americans Are Finally Feeling Better About the Economy

Americans' gloomy mood about the economy is showing signs of lifting.

Persistently high inflation, the lingering shock from the pandemic's destruction and fears that a recession was around the corner put a damper on feelings about the economy in recent years, despite solid growth and consistent hiring.


North Korea's Missiles Are Being Tested on the Battlefields of Ukraine

SEOUL-One of the world's biggest illicit-arms suppliers just got a major advertisement.

In recent weeks, Russian forces have fired short-range ballistic missiles in Ukraine provided by North Korea, according to assessments from Washington, Seoul and Kyiv. Pyongyang has provided Moscow with dozens of the weapons, the U.S. says.


China's Strongest Ally in Taiwan Is Weaker Than Ever

TAIPEI-Beijing's closest political partner in Taiwan is fighting to remain relevant in an island democracy where voters increasingly see a future that is detached from an authoritarian China.

The Kuomintang, or Nationalist Party, once governed China and had dominated Taiwanese politics for decades. It is now on its longest losing streak in presidential elections since this self-ruled island started choosing its leader by popular vote, consigned to a third straight term in opposition.


Fani Willis, Prosecutor in Trump Georgia Case, Takes Swing at Affair Allegations

Fulton County District Attorney Fani Willis is seeking to avoid being deposed in the divorce proceeding of a colleague she is accused of having an affair with, calling a recent subpoena for her testimony a form of harassment meant to derail her criminal case against former President Donald Trump and others.

In an emergency motion Thursday, Willis asked a judge to block the subpoena in the divorce case of Nathan Wade, a lawyer in private practice whom she hired as a special prosecutor in the Trump case. His wife, Joycelyn Wade, filed the subpoena for Willis's testimony.


Write to paul.larkins@dowjones.com TODAY IN CANADA

Earnings:

None scheduled

Economic Calendar (ET):

0830 Nov Employment Insurance

0830 Nov Retail Sales

Stocks to Watch:

Mithaq Extends Offer for Aimia to Feb. 15; Believes That Following Departures of Phil Mittleman and Michael Lehmann 'There Is an Opportunity for Improved Engagement' With Aimia Board

Organigram Shareholders Approve C$124.6M Investment From BAT


Expected Major Events for Friday

04:30/JPN: Nov Tertiary Industry Index

07:00/GER: Dec PPI

07:00/UK: Dec UK monthly retail sales figures

13:30/CAN: Nov Employment Insurance

13:30/CAN: Nov Retail trade

13:30/US: U.S. Weekly Export Sales

15:00/US: Jan University of Michigan Survey of Consumers - preliminary data

15:00/US: Dec Existing Home Sales

21:00/US: Nov Treasury International Capital Data

All times in GMT. Powered by Kantar Media and Dow Jones.


Expected Earnings for Friday

(MORE TO FOLLOW) Dow Jones Newswires

01-19-24 0613ET