MARKET WRAPS

Stocks:

European stocks were mostly higher on Friday, following data from a purchasing managers survey showed activity in the eurozone manufacturing and services sectors increased in April.

The PMI data for the eurozone points to continued economic resilience in April, but this was fully driven by the services sector, which is still benefiting from the normalization of demand after the Covid-19 pandemic, Commerzbank said.

The services sector is unlikely to be able to compensate for the downturn seen at manufacturers in the long term, with business-related services likely to feel the effects from this weakness at factories soon, it added.

Moreover, the rapid interest-rate increases will also hit demand for services going forward, Commerzbank said.

Read the market and analyst reactions to the data here.

Stocks to Watch

Dutch charger manufacturer Alfen and operator Fastned are set for growth as the push toward zero-emission mobility and electric vehicles accelerates demand for a dense charging network, Deutsche Bank said, initiating coverage of both stocks with a buy rating.

The broker sees Alfen grow stronger than its underlying markets with sales increasing around 30% a year between 2022-25 against 26% for the market.

Fastned's carefully selected locations are forecast to lead it to widen its market share and translate into 72% annual sales growth between 2022-25 compared with 44% in the battery EV market.

Deutsche put a target price of EUR100 on Alfen stock and EUR50 on Fastned's.

Market Insight

Companies that sell eco-friendly products or services in the EU might be facing reputational and litigation risk from a new proposal to curb greenwashing, Sustainable Fitch said.

The legislation tabled by the EU Commission would set minimum requirements for making environmental claims about a service or product, exposing companies to regulatory scrutiny and possible penalties for false or unsubstantiated claims, Sustainable Fitch said.

Consumer organizations might also join the policing of greenwashing and that may lead to a significant number of cases as they join regulators to identify suspected non-compliance with the new standards, it added.

Fitch expects companies to modify their marketing before any such regulation is enacted, signalling some potential U-turns in environmental claims.

U.S. Markets:

Stock futures were treading water as investors awaited fresh data on the health of the economy and another batch of earnings.

"We are in the early stages of a labor-market slowdown and the early stages of an inflation slowdown, but neither is enough yet to stop the Fed from tightening," Principal Asset Management said. "It is a fairly bearish outlook."

Readings for the services and manufacturing sectors are due. The data are expected to point to a slowdown in activity, according to forecasts compiled by The Wall Street Journal.

Follow WSJ markets coverage here

Forex:

Sterling fell after retail sales dropped more than expected in March, as high inflation curtails household spending.

Moves were limited, however, and ING said the data are unlikely to dissuade the Bank of England from raising rates next month.

"The Bank of England is far more interested in inflation and this week's sticky readings point to a 25 basis-point hike on 11 May."

Read Sterling Stays Lower After UK PMI Survey

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The dollar edged higher as risk sentiment on currency markets stayed sour, but it lacks direction, with weak U.S. economic data set against Fed comments suggesting interest rates may need to rise further.

"The FX market continues to seesaw with a lack of a clear direction. U.S. economic data, swings in the 2-year U.S. Treasury yield and hawkish remarks by major central banks remain the major drivers for currencies," UniCredit Research said.

Bonds:

J.P. Morgan Asset Management said it continues to favor duration in bonds from a strategic perspective, given its base case of a recession ahead.

"After favoring a short duration positioning throughout 2022, investors have now shifted towards the very opposite end of the spectrum in anticipation of an end to the current cycle," JPM AM said.

"Taking out risk and adding duration have been the key plays."

The asset manager closely monitors factors that may have an impact on developed market central banks, in terms of when they may conclude their tightening.

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As 10-year German Bund yields have reached 2.50%, 10-year French OAT yields reached 3% and 10-year Italian BTP yields move towards the top end of this year's 4-4.50% range, "investors are being tempted to add to duration and 'buy the dips'," Societe Generale said.

That said, recent government bond auctions and syndications in the eurozone have received lower interest than has been the case since the start of the year, SocGen added.

In some transactions, the relatively weak demand was likely linked to low new issue premium or to investors being more selective, it said.

Energy:

Oil prices were lower and set for their first decline in a week since March as refinery margins were flashing warning signals about the health of the global economy.

Brent crude oil was on course for a decline of more than 6% this week.

Refinery margins are dropping, suggesting limited demand for diesel and other oil products, which could point to a sluggish economic outlook.

"The fall in refining margins-just weeks after oil prices jumped following the OPEC+ announcement on 2 April to sideline more production from May-raises credible concerns that demand for petrol and diesel may already be eroding because of high oil prices," Commonwealth Bank of Australia said.

Read Barron's OPEC Hasn't Fixed the Oil-Price Slump. The Problem Is Demand.

Metals:

Copper declined in early trading, as prices were under pressure from pessimism surrounding the health of the economy.

The outlook for demand is mixed, analysts said, while the prospect of further interest-rate rises in the U.S. was also dampening expectations.

"Copper fell on uncertainty over further rate hikes and sluggish demand in China," ANZ said.

Supply disruptions could provide support, the bank noted, pointing to major Chilean producer Codelco's lackluster production in the first quarter.

DOW JONES NEWSPLUS


EMEA HEADLINES

Eurozone Economy Gathered Pace in April, PMIs Suggest

Business activity in the eurozone continued its momentum in April, coming in better than expected as demand improved and inflation eased, data from a purchasing managers survey showed Friday.

The HCOB Flash Eurozone Composite PMI Output Index-which gauges activity in the manufacturing and services sectors-increased for the sixth consecutive month to 54.4 in April, from a downwardly revised 53.7 in March, the highest since May 2022.


UK Consumer Confidence Rose Again in April Despite High Inflation

Confidence among U.K. consumers rose for third consecutive month in April to its highest level in more than a year, indicating that momentum toward an economic recovery could be building, despite cost-of-living pressures from sky-high inflation.

Research firm GfK said its consumer-confidence barometer stood at minus 30 in April compared with minus 36 a month earlier, an improvement on the minus 34 expected by economists polled by The Wall Street Journal.


UK Retail Sales Fell on Month in March as High Inflation Weighed

U.K. retail sales fell more than expected on month in March, reflecting that cost-of-living pressures from high inflation are weighing on household spending.

Retail sales volumes dipped 0.9% in March from the previous month, compared with a downwardly revised increase of 1.1% in February, data from the Office for National Statistics showed Friday.


SAP Updates Guidance on Qualtrics Stake Divestment - Update

SAP SE on Friday updated its guidance for the year to account for the stake in Qualtrics International Inc. that it is divesting as the group continues to focus on its cloud business, the main driver of revenue growth in the first quarter.

The Germany-based software company said it now expects non-IFRS operating profit at constant currencies of between 8.6 billion and 8.9 billion euros ($9.43 billion-$9.76 billion) this year instead of EUR8.8 billion to EUR9.1 billion as previously expected.


EssilorLuxottica's 1Q Revenue Rose Boosted by Developing Regions

EssilorLuxottica SA said Thursday that its revenue grew in the first quarter boosted by outperformance in developing markets.

The Franco-Italian eyecare company said it achieved 6.15 billion euros ($6.74 billion) in first-quarter revenue, up 9.7% compared with EUR5.61 billion the year-prior.


Holcim Raises 2023 Sales Guidance After Better-Than-Expected 1Q

Holcim Ltd. on Friday raised its sales guidance for 2023 after reporting revenue and recurring earnings for the first quarter that fell compared with last year but exceeded consensus expectations.

The Swiss buildings-material company said it expects organic net sales growth for the year to be more than 6%, which compares with its previous guidance for a rise of between 3% and 5%. It also forecast full-year organic growth in recurring earnings before interests and taxes to top 10%, having previously guided for over-proportional growth in recurring EBIT on a like-for-like basis. Holcim said the recurring EBIT margin is expected to exceed 16%.


Glencore 1Q Met Guidance; Backs Full-Year Outlook

Glencore PLC said Friday that first-quarter production largely met its expectations, with declines across copper, zinc, nickel and coal, and backed its full-year guidance.

The FTSE 100-listed commodity mining and trading company said copper production declined 5% to 244,100 tons, largely due to planned lower grades in line with a pit phasing and delays associated with adverse weather.


Tele2 Backs Full-Year and Midterm Guidance

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04-21-23 0609ET