pepsico

Soft inflation, strong earnings fuel stock rally 

We are having a great week in terms of US inflation news. After Wednesday's data showed that the US headline inflation slowed to 3%, and core inflation fell to 4.8% - both lower than what analysts had penciled in, yesterday's producer price inflation data also came in lower than expected. The monthly PPI eased to 0.1%, perhaps the last positive figure we see before sinking into negative territory in the coming months, and core PPI fell to 2.6%. One more good news, some underlying details in the PPI report, including health care and hotel accommodations, are used to compute the Fed's favourite PCE Price Index that will be released in the coming weeks – which could also benefit from softening inflation trend. 

 

As a result, the US 2-year yield fell another 15bp yesterday and hit 4.60%, while the 10-year yield retreated below 3.80%. The US dollar index slipped below the 100 mark. This is the first time the US dollar index has trad

To Simplify The Organization, Pepsico Will Lay Off Thousands Of Workers At The Headquarters In The USA

To Simplify The Organization, Pepsico Will Lay Off Thousands Of Workers At The Headquarters In The USA

Kamila Szypuła Kamila Szypuła 06.12.2022 15:24
The economic situation has also affected food companies. These types of companies are also planning layoffs. Laying off workers at the headquarters of North American In recent months, companies in the tech and media sectors have been laying off workers to cut costs as economic uncertainty puts pressure on their businesses. Several companies in the food industry have also made redundancies. The overall US labor market remains historically tight, with employers competing for limited labor pools and pushing up wages despite an uncertain economic outlook. PepsiCo, which makes the namesake Pepsi soda and products such as Gatorade, Lays chips and Quaker Oats, is reportedly cutting jobs. Food and beverages sold in grocery stores are in high demand despite rising prices affecting many households. PepsiCo and other food companies are raising prices to compensate for higher ingredient, shipping and labor costs. PepsiCo employed approximately 309,000 people worldwide, including approximately 129,000 in the US, as reported on December 25 last year. The layoffs will affect workers at her food and beverage businesses in Chicago; Plano, Texas and Purchase, New York. The company's beverage division is expected to be hit harder by the cuts, as the snacks division has already reduced staff through a voluntary retirement program, according to The Wall Street Journal. PepsiCo explained that the layoffs aimed to “simplify the organization” to ensure further operational efficiency. Wall Street is cautiously optimistic about PepsiCo stock. Currently, PEP is trading at the highest prices of the year. PepsiCo Inc. Chart Meta and cross check Unfair deference to VIP users of  Facebook and Instagram services under a program called “cross check”. Meta asked the board of directors to review the cross-checking process last October and has committed to responding to the group's questions. The Board noted that during the review period, Meta committed to carrying out annual cross-check reviews. The report provides the most detailed review to date of cross-checking, which Meta described as a quality control attempt to prevent moderation errors on content of increased public interest. The board report does not question the value of the secondary review system for moderating posts from high-profile or sensitive accounts. Moreover, the board's opinion blamed the company for its continued understaffing, opacity, and unfairness of the program. Meta claims that the board's content decisions are binding, but is under no obligation to follow its recommendations more generally. The supervisory board called on Meta to make 32 changes to the program. Examples of suggested improvements include separating the process of granting protections for public interest from the process of granting protections to Meta advertisers, or isolating the program from the influence of Meta's public policy team and other managers. Mr Rusbridger said he did not expect Meta to accept all of the board's recommendations. Currently, there is a correlation in the Meta stock price, the question is whether it will continue. Source: wsj.com
Nasdaq 100 posted a new one year high. S&P 500 ended the day unchanged

Saxo's analyst: While the big tech names have mostly reported, earnings season remains in full gear this week. We will be watching Walt Disney, PepsiCo and Kellogg.

Charu Chanana Charu Chanana 06.02.2023 10:55
Reserve Bank of Australia decision and ongoing earnings season are threads which are definitely worth a watch this week. It seems that Reserve Bank of Australia may still go for next rate hikes after tomorrow's decision. Speaking of earnings, Charu Chanana, Market Strategist at Saxo Bank, draws attention to Walt Disney, PepsiCo, Kellog and Japan's SoftBank. FXMAG.COM: Do you expect Reserve Bank of Australia to pause hiking after February decision? Charu Chanana (Saxo Bank): For the Reserve Bank of Australia: Inflation has continued to surge in Q4, and now with China's reopening, there is potentially some further upside possible in inflation, so keeping the door open for further rate hikes could be seen. Read next: The US Judge Denied The FTC's Request, Giving The Meta An Important Victory| FXMAG.COM We're almost past earnings of all most popular big tech companies. Do you think of any stock, which could really surprise markets next week? Charu Chanana (Saxo Bank): While the big tech names have mostly reported, earnings season remains in full gear this week. Key to watch will be whether the momentum in consumer spending is sustained despite recession concerns picking up. We will be watching Walt Disney, PepsiCo and Kellogg. Japan's SoftBank will also be a key focus in the tech space, and investors are looking for a buyback announcement.
The Japanese Yen Retreats as USD/JPY Gains Momentum

Stock Rally Driven by Soft Inflation and Strong Earnings

Ipek Ozkardeskaya Ipek Ozkardeskaya 14.07.2023 08:30
Soft inflation, strong earnings fuel stock rally  We are having a great week in terms of US inflation news. After Wednesday's data showed that the US headline inflation slowed to 3%, and core inflation fell to 4.8% - both lower than what analysts had penciled in, yesterday's producer price inflation data also came in lower than expected. The monthly PPI eased to 0.1%, perhaps the last positive figure we see before sinking into negative territory in the coming months, and core PPI fell to 2.6%. One more good news, some underlying details in the PPI report, including health care and hotel accommodations, are used to compute the Fed's favourite PCE Price Index that will be released in the coming weeks – which could also benefit from softening inflation trend.    As a result, the US 2-year yield fell another 15bp yesterday and hit 4.60%, while the 10-year yield retreated below 3.80%. The US dollar index slipped below the 100 mark. This is the first time the US dollar index has traded below this level since April 2022, as the Federal Reserve (Fed) is not seen getting more aggressive than this when inflation is slowing. Plus, one of the most aggressively hawkish Fed members, James Bullard, resigned yesterday. The probability of another 25bp hike at the Fed's July meeting didn't change much. It's still given more than 90% probability. But the chances of another rate hike following the June hike are getting blurrier, so equity markets cheer the softening Fed expectations. The S&P500 extended gains yesterday and closed the session above the 4500 mark for the first time since April 2022, while Nasdaq 100 rallied another 1.73%. Amazon jumped to a 10-month high yesterday after reporting record sales during its Prime Day. Happily, this week's inflation numbers were sufficiently soothing, so that the record Prime Day sales didn't boost inflation expectations. MAMAA stocks were up by 1.72%. Crude oil on the other hand rallied past the 200-DMA, near $77pb, and consolidates at around that level this morning. Supply shortages in Libya and Nigeria are pushing price higher but the IEA says that global oil demand won't rise as much as they previously forecasted due to the weakened economies of developed nations. It will increase by around 2.2mbpd, +2%. This is 200'000 barrels less than previously forecasted. It could help bring the bears back to the market at around the 200-DMA. The $77/80 barrel resistance will be difficult to drill because the market is now approaching overbought conditions and a key technical level is generally a good moment to sell, and because otherwise it would be bad news for inflation expectations, and the Fed.    One good news is that, although the resilience of the US jobs market remains a major concern for the Fed, the stock market rally could be a much smaller concern because the Fed recently launched a financial conditions index, an index that takes into account bond yields, mortgage rates, the stock market, Zillow's house price index and the dollar's value on global currency markets to determine how the market conditions would impact growth. And the index showed that the financial conditions in the US became increasingly less favourable this year and hit an all-time peak in December when they were more of a drag on growth than at any time in recent decades, apart from the 2008 financial crisis. And at the current levels, the market conditions remain historically unfavourable to growth – and that despite the stock market rally.     Slow growth is bad for stock valuations, but investors remain focused on earnings, rather than the overall financial conditions, and we have good news on the earnings front so far. Delta Airlines for example jumped to the highest level since April 2021 yesterday after reporting after announcing record revenue and profit in Q2 andsaying that they are 'looking at a very, very strong Q3', as indicated by their guidance, and that they could have a strong Q4 as well. While PepsiCo rallied almost 2.40% after revealing a strong quarter thanks to higher prices they could ask from customers, and after raising its sales and earnings estimates. Today, some big US banks will go to the earnings confessional. The big banks benefited from ample deposit inflows following the Silicon Valley Bank (SVB) collapse in March, but their net interest income is expected to have declined, credit costs are normalizing, and they have increased expenses due to inflation. So, the numbers could be soft, but what matters for investors is the comparison between the numbers and expectations. If expectations are better than the actual numbers, stock prices will not be hurt. And that's why Goldman Sachs is out trying to dampen expectations, so that the results can more easily beat them!    By Ipek Ozkardeskaya, Senior Analyst | Swissquote Bank