Chips Hurt by China Export Fears, Banks Await Stress Tests, Micron to Report

 | Jun 28, 2023 09:23AM ET

(Wednesday market open) Stocks lost ground early Wednesday following a report that the United States is considering more curbs on chip exports to China. At the same time, the financials sector braces for results of Federal Reserve “stress tests” later this afternoon, and Fed Chairman Jerome Powell speaks on a panel this morning. It’s a busy day all around.

Semiconductors came under pressure after The Wall Street Journal reported that the Biden Administration is considering new restrictions on exports of artificial intelligence (AI) chips to China, a move that could potentially hurt companies like Nvidia (NASDAQ:NVDA) and Advanced Micro Devices (NASDAQ:AMD). Shares of both fell around 3% in premarket trading.

Bank stocks are little changed as investors await the Fed’s assessment of how much capital banks would need to withstand a severe economic downturn. Passing these stress tests often frees up banks to raise dividends or buy back shares.

Yesterday’s rebound in high-flying info tech stocks didn’t mean other parts of the market flagged. While tech finished near the top of the leader board with 2% gains, behind only consumer discretionary, other sectors like industrials, materials, and real estate also delivered solid performance.

Financials showed up for the rally, too, and beleaguered regional bank stocks are up nearly 4% so far this month. Small-caps also found buying interest Tuesday, and the Russell 2000 (RUT) small-cap index is up nearly 6% in June—on pace for its best month since January.

h2 Morning rush/h2
  • The 10-year Treasury note yield (TNX) inched lower, to 3.74%.
  • The U.S. Dollar Index ($DXY) climbed to 102.72.
  • Cboe Volatility Index® (VIX) futures were steady at 13.72.
  • WTI Crude Oil (/CL) traded lower, at $67.81 per barrel.

A batch of solid U.S. economic data yesterday helped lift bond yields, but the dollar index didn’t find traction and remained stuck in the middle of its long-term range of 100–105.

h2 Eye on the Fed/h2
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Futures trading indicates a 74% probability that the Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) will raise rates 25 basis points at its July meeting, according to the CME FedWatch Tool.

Fed Chairman Jerome Powell takes part in a European Central Bank (ECB) policy panel discussion in Portugal this morning featuring several central bank leaders, so stay tuned for any possible headlines from that. Powell addressed Congress last week, so it seems unlikely he’d depart from the script so soon after that.

h2 What to Watch/h2
  • Dive into data: New Home Sales, Durable Goods, and Consumer Confidence from the Conference Board yesterday all exceeded analysts’ expectations, painting a cheerier picture of the economy and possibly injecting some optimism into stocks as well.
  • One caveat: The Consumer Confidence report’s “expectations” tab remained in recession territory, though it improved substantially in June from May.
  • Price check: This Friday features the May reading on Personal Consumption Expenditures (PCE) prices, the inflation metric most closely watched by the Fed. The last PCE update—for April—showed an annual increase of 4.4% in the overall rate and 4.7% in the core rate, which excludes food and energy prices. For May, monthly headline PCE prices are seen up just 0.1%, according to Briefing.com, but the more important core reading is expected to rise 0.3%. Both rose 0.4% in April. Analysts predict a year-over-year increase for core of 4.7%, unchanged from April and implying that “sticky” inflation remains an issue.
  • GDP update: While inflation worries persist, recession fears continue to haunt Wall Street. Tomorrow’s third and final Gross Domestic Product (GDP) estimate from the U.S. government, due out before the open, is a backward-looking number. For what it’s worth, analysts expect no change from the previous 1.3% estimate, according to Briefing.com. Arguably of more importance is what economists expect for Q2 GDP. We won’t get the government’s first estimate until late July, but most analysts expect little change from Q1, penciling in roughly 1% growth. The Atlanta Fed’s “GDPNow” tool is a bit more optimistic at 1.9%. Neither would represent sizzling growth, but the numbers don’t indicate a recession straight ahead, either.
  • Jobs in focus: One possible recession indicator is weekly Initial Jobless Claims. The next update is due early Thursday. The last few weekly reports showed elevated numbers near 260,000, but it would likely take an average of 300,000 or more to indicate an economic downturn. Consensus for tomorrow is 266,000, which would be the highest this year. The coming earnings season could give investors better insight into the labor market if companies discuss the issue on their calls or coordinate layoff announcements with earnings results.
h2 Stocks in the Spotlight/h2

Semiconductor giant Micron (NASDAQ:MU) will report earnings this afternoon, followed by Nike (NYSE:NKE) tomorrow afternoon to wrap up the preholiday earnings calendar.

Earlier this year, China effectively banned purchases of memory chips from Micron, drawing U.S. protest. Micron is the biggest U.S. maker of memory chips used in devices like laptops and mobile phones. Micron’s wrestled for some time with weak laptop and smartphone demand, driving concerns about swollen inventories.

Nike is in a very different business from Micron, but also dealing with inventory issues. The company’s last earnings report easily beat analysts’ estimates, but margins came under pressure as inventories rose 16% year-over year. The company’s supply situation will likely come under scrutiny when it reports tomorrow. Disappointing earnings and guidance from Foot Locker (NYSE:FL) in late May cast shadows ahead of Nike’s report. As a reminder, Nike and Foot Locker have a partnership, and Foot Locker said it was dealing with a “constrained supply” of Nike products.

Talking technicals: The S&P 500® Index (SPX) snapped back nicely on Tuesday after Monday’s test of technical support near the 4,325 level. The SPX fell to 4,328 on Monday, and that’s where buyers apparently stepped in. The 4,325 mark is significant because it signals an important Fibonacci retracement point from the January 2022 high to the October 2022 low. The test and then bounce off that level looks bullish from a chart perspective.