Morgan Stanley Beats Q1 Expectations; Tesla's Price Cuts Electrify Wall Street

 | Apr 19, 2023 09:59AM ET

Another day began with another major bank surpassing Wall Street’s earnings estimates.

Today’s results came from Morgan Stanley (NYSE:MS) (MS), the last of the “big banks” to report. Still, stocks declined in overnight futures trading after barely moving on Tuesday amid the lowest volatility in more than a year. Major indexes remain near recent two-month highs as ) results this afternoon following fresh price cuts by the electric vehicle company.

Rising Treasury yields and a U.S. dollar showing signs of life appear to be two pressure points early Wednesday. Economic data from across the Atlantic and here at home also may be dragging stocks.

From overseas this morning came more signs of stubbornly high prices, as the U.K.’s annual inflation remained just above 10%. Food inflation hit 19.1%—the worst level since 1977.

Back home, mortgage applications last week fell almost 9%, according to the Mortgage Bankers Association, as the 30-year mortgage rate rose for the first time in six weeks.

h2 Morning rush/h2
  • The United States 10-Year Treasury note yield (TNX) rose 4 basis points to 3.61%.
  • The U.S. Dollar Index ($DXY) climbed to 102.12.
  • The Cboe Volatility Index® (VIX) futures jumped to 17.49.
  • WTI Crude Oil (/CL) fell to its lowest point since the recent OPEC production cuts to $79.34 per barrel.

A higher dollar and yields could reflect growing ideas of another Federal Reserve rate hike next month. This could hurt commodity prices, which might explain crude’s softness early Wednesday.

h2 Just In/h2

Morgan Stanley (MS) reported earnings per share of $1.70—about four cents above Wall Street’s consensus estimate—and revenue of $14.52 billion, beating consensus of $13.96 billion. Strength in the bank’s equity and fixed income trading businesses appeared to outweigh weakness on the investment banking side.

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Netflix (NASDAQ:NFLX) (NFLX) shares boomeranged from losses of 9% to around unchanged in premarket trading after reporting earnings late yesterday. They fell 1% by early Wednesday. The company’s earnings topped estimates, but an arguably disappointing forecast made investors uneasy. NFLX posted revenue of $8.17 billion, just below its projection for $8.2 billion. Analysts had expected a rise in subscribers of 2.26 million, but the actual number was only 1.75 million. NFLX sees revenue of $8.24 billion in the second quarter, below the $8.5 billion analysts expect. NFLX faces mounting competition even as subscriber growth appears to be slowing. It added only half as many subscribers in 2022 as in 2021, perhaps reflecting falling demand since the end of pandemic restrictions.

Summer trips? Like Delta (DAL) last week, United Airlines (UAL) expressed optimism about Q2 travel demand, helping its shares climb in premarket trading after reporting earnings late Tuesday. “Demand remains strong, especially internationally, where we are growing at twice the domestic rate,” the company said in its earnings press release. Bookings have been strong, UAL’s CEO told CNBC this morning.

h2 Eye on the Fed/h2

The probability of a 25-basis-point increase next month stood near 89% as of this morning, according to the CME FedWatch Tool. That’s up from 70% a week ago.

Fed officials maintained their hawkish drumbeat earlier this week, helping solidify ideas that another rate hike is in the offing. Atlanta Fed President Raphael Bostic said on CNBC yesterday he thinks another rate increase is called for in May and that the Fed should hold rates there “for quite some time.” He also doesn’t think the market’s expectations for a rate cut later this year are accurate, or that inflation will drop quickly.

And St. Louis Fed President James Bullard told Reuters he thinks the Fed should keep raising rates based on recent data showing inflation remains persistent. Bullard didn’t mince words about the U.S. labor market, calling it “very, very strong,” Reuters reports.

Interestingly, neither Bostic nor Bullard indicated that they believe recession is likely this year, even though Fed minutes from the last Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) meeting showed that members predicted a “mild recession.”

h2 Stocks in Spotlight/h2

Tesla (NASDAQ:TSLA) (TSLA) is expected to report after the close today. Back in January, the car maker electrified auto industry-watchers with a global price cut of as much as 20% on certain models, and more cuts have come since. The latest were announced this morning and affect several models. Prices are down double-digits for the Model 3 this year, bringing it below $40,000. Analysts wonder how these price cuts will affect margins in a still-nervous interest rate environment with heightened recession fears, and Wall Street expects Q1 margins to drop.

Q1 deliveries came in at a record 422,000 vehicles, but overall sales totals fell short of analysts’ expectations.

Here are analysts’ consensus estimates for TSLA’s Q1 earnings:

  • Expected Q1 EPS (analysts’ consensus): $0.86
  • Year-ago EPS: $1.07
  • Expected Q1 revenue (analysts’ consensus): $23.31 billion
  • Year-ago revenue: $18.76 billion
h2 What to Watch/h2

Travel update: Yesterday’s report of better-than-expected Q1 growth in China could have a broader impact on certain sectors. In terms of benefit for the rest of the world, travel and luxury spending is most likely to see the biggest impact from the recovery, says Schwab’s Michelle Gibley, director of international research. Chinese consumers represented one-third of global luxury spending before the pandemic vs. 17% last year.

On the move: March Existing Home Sales are due out soon after the open Thursday, and one question is whether median prices will fall again as they did in February for the first time in 11 years. February’s price drop probably reflected rising mortgage rates and slowing demand for pricier homes, Briefing.com said at the time. Still, sales surged 14.5% in February on a seasonally adjusted basis. Supplies remained tight. Analysts expect a slight decline in the headline figure to a seasonally adjusted 4.5 million in March, according to consensus from Briefing.com.

Engine check: Leading Indicators from research group The Conference Board also come out tomorrow morning, and Wall Street expects another decline, this time of 0.4%. This report can provide a look under the hood at consumer sentiment and manufacturing, among other economic metrics.

Debt clock ticks: As you might have noticed, yesterday was Tax Day. (Did you file on time?) Unlike many tax deadlines, this one could have major market ramifications by giving the federal government a better sense, within a week or two, how much revenue is coming in. Knowing that can help Washington figure out when the debt ceiling debate must be resolved before risking possible default. Yesterday, Goldman Sachs (NYSE:GS) (GS) warned the government might have only until early June to take action, Reuters reports.