The @Newsquawk US Market Open: Relatively contained trade ahead of data, earnings & FOMC 0 (0)

<p><a target=“_blank“ href=“https://newsquawk.com/daily/article/?id=2840-us-market-open-relatively-contained-trade-ahead-of-key-data-earnings-fomc&utm_source=newsquawk&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=newsletter&utm_content=us-open“ target=“_blank“ rel=“nofollow“>US Market Open: Relatively contained trade ahead of key data, earnings & FOMC</a></p><p>Key Points: </p><p>European bourses are little changed overall but with a modest positive bias, Euro Stoxx 50 +0.2%, ahead of data points and the FOMC.</p><p>Stateside, futures are a touch softer after yesterday’s strength, ES -0.4%, with an after-market update from Snap weighing on peersThe DXY is subdued and holding modestly below the 102.00 mark with slightly softer US yields vs global peers exerting pressure</p><p>EGBs are firmer but well off initial best levels, with Bunds below 137.00 after more than paring a knee-jerk spike on the EZ Flash CPI release, where once again the headline cooled but core remains hot.</p><p>Crude benchmarks have seen some modest two-way action throughout the morning, though the benchmarks are in relatively narrow ranges and near the unchanged mark overall.</p><p>Looking ahead, highlights include US Final Manufacturing PMI, US ADP, ISM Manufacturing, JOLTS, Construction Spending, FOMC Policy Announcement & Press Conference, OPEC+ JMMC, US Quarterly Refunding Announcement, Earnings from McKesson, AmerisourceBergen, Meta, T-Mobile, Thermo Fisher, & Altria.</p>

This article was written by Ryan Paisey at www.forexlive.com.

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Investment Outlook 2023 Made by OctaFX 0 (0)

<p>The year 2022 remains in the rear-view mirror. There
was no shortage of buzz in the market last year: rising interest rates, an
ongoing inflation shock, and, as a result, falling stock markets and a
strengthening dollar. Just imagine, at the end of the year the S&P500 was
headed down 18%. </p><p>If we speak about the stock market, we should not be
critical, as the decrease in the value of assets was mixed and there are even
positive moments:</p><p>●
The Energy sector is a striking example; it
added 52% for the year and is, in fact, the only sector in the green zone. </p><p>●
Utilities and Consumer Staples have proven to be defensive equities (and
practically unchanged). </p><p>●
Healthcare fell less than the entire
market (8% drop in total).</p><p>●
Other cyclical sectors (Basic
Materials, Industrials, Financials) have recovered over the past two
months, resulting in a decline of about 10%.</p><p>●
The Telecommunications,
Technology, Real Estate and Consumer Discretionary sectors, which are
sensitive to rising interest rates, remain deep in the negative zone.</p><p>We have taken all these trends into review and
provided you with the most probable scenario of the situation. The following
research aims to let our clients know the 2023 trends in the assets they trade
(currency pairs and stocks). </p><p>We’ve highlighted two sets of information. In the
first part we look at trends in the macroeconomics of countries and forecast
the value of the U.S. dollar, and in the second part we share a vision about
key industries that we think will perform in 2023.</p><p>As we said, this outlook will be of primary interest
to our clients, because they can use all the asset types and market situations
discussed to execute trades on their accounts. </p><p>United States
& US Dollar</p><p>We expect the U.S. recession to continue in the first
half of 2023, then recover and rebound, gaining strength by the end of
2023: </p><p>●
The business cycle will outpace the economic
cycle. Market players will be more optimistic, setting the stage for public
equities valuation growth. Nevertheless, the full-year targets for U.S.
economic growth and inflation may reflect a mostly recessionary outlook—we
forecast that the inflation shock of the last 18 months has stopped—core
inflation will slow from 5% now to 3% at the end of 2023. The unemployment rate
will rise from 3.5% to 4.0% by year-end.</p><p>●
We believe that in order to contain inflation (on the background of
stronger real income growth), the U.S.
Fed will raise the rate three more times in 25 bps increments to a peak of
5–5.25%. We also do not expect a rate cut in 2023. </p><p>●
Based on the above, the US dollar’s rise may slow and possibly reverse
due to a slowdown in inflation and monetary policy easing by the US Federal
Reserve starting in the second quarter (March–April) of 2023.</p><p>Global economies</p><p>US economic resilience is contrasted with a European
recession and a boomy reopening in China. The energy supply shock resulting
from the Russia-Ukraine war will contribute to weaker growth in the Eurozone.
The situation in Asia-Pacific (APAC) mirrors that of China’s reopening and
their rejection of zero tolerance Covid in China</p><p>Commodity still
looks attractive </p><p>●
All commodities had a strong two-year run, and we expect this rally to
continue, including Energy. The bullish super cycle that began in March 2020
continues. The lack of supply, which contributed to positive commodity returns
in 2021 and 2022, will continue into 2023.</p><p>●
OPEC+ has taken key strategic steps to minimise supply while maximising
the price. U.S. preferences are increasingly shifting toward renewable energy,
while Russian oil is subject to restraining sanctions. The implication is that
falling global oil production will contribute to higher prices over the next
few years. Thus, the International Energy Association (EIA) forecasts
production growth of 1% in 2023, which with the average assumed growth of
global GDP of 1.8%, creates these prerequisites (see fig.). </p><p>●
However, in 2023, commodity prices may reverse as we expect a recession
in the first half of the year. Once recession fears subside in the second half
and demand starts to pick up, we expect commodity prices to start rising. Our
year-end forecast is $95 for Brent and $91 for WTI.</p><p>two sectors that, for different reasons, have growth
potential and could be attractive in 2023, but at the same time do not rule out
separate market stories with other stocks:</p><p>Big Techs have
big trends</p><p>After the technology crash of 2022, some companies are
still struggling to recover, and investors may think that the best days of
technology companies have passed. </p><p>Ambitious plans can definitely be pushed aside. For
the technology sector, 2023 is a year of uncertainty and skills shortages. This
puts a strain on all activities in 2023. </p><p>Companies are focused on optimising business processes
and reducing budgets, which, in our opinion, will have a negative impact on
growth stocks.</p><p>However, we see the negative market sentiment as a
great opportunity for the “Big Techs” (Apple,
Microsoft, Nvidia, Visa, etc.), as their businesses have become
well-established.</p><p>We believe that rising interest rates and
macroeconomic and geopolitical concerns have simply distracted investors from
long-term trends that create growth opportunities for companies in Semiconductors, Cloud technologies and 5G. (Our clients can trade 22 shares in
this sector)</p><p>Healthcare—good
fundamentals creating upside opportunity</p><p>In the first half of 2022, we saw a massive selloff
across the entire spectrum of the market, and the Healthcare sector is no exception. But with so much negative
sentiment already factored into stock prices, the fundamentals become quite
interesting and speak to the undervaluation of this category of stocks. If
confirmed by investors‘ willingness to buy, the healthcare sector could rise in
2023.</p><p>Another tailwind is worth highlighting: The US
Inflation Reduction Act, which was signed into law in August 2022, included a
3-year extension of enhanced subsidies for consumers who purchase health
coverage on the Affordable Care Act marketplaces. This is a benefit to health
insurers offering Medicare and/or Medicaid plans.</p><p>Regardless of where the U.S. markets go next, the Healthcare sector may offer a
combination of protective and growth characteristics that could be attractive
in a variety of scenarios. (Our clients can trade 22 shares in this sector).</p><p>The Bottom Line</p><p>Due to the fact that business cycles outpace economic
cycles, we believe that cyclical stocks have growth potential first and
foremost.</p><p>We believe that the themes described in this review
are the key ones that will drive the world economy. </p><p>We deliberately divided the forecasts into America and
non-America, understanding that the U.S. dollar is the main measure of the
state of the world economy. And within 2023, the U.S. dollar tends to decline,
which is a leading positive signal for the global economy and all categories of
public equities.</p>

This article was written by ForexLive at www.forexlive.com.

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