The Week Ahead: Vive La France!

 | Apr 24, 2022 06:27

h2 Vive La France!

For most traders, the focus last week was on the ramp up into peak Q1 earnings season. We saw solid results from Tesla (NASDAQ:TSLA), the trillion-dollar market behemoth, and brutally bad earnings data from Netflix (NASDAQ:NFLX), leading to the streaming platform shedding a full third of its value.

Perhaps its time to replace Netflix with Tesla in the popular FAANG acronym? Maybe we could get FANTA soda to sponsor the rebrand?

Looking ahead, traders will spend Monday digesting the market implications of this weekend’s French Presidential election. Heading into the middle of the week, the focus will once again be on earnings with heavy hitters like Alphabet/Google (NASDAQ:GOOGL), Meta/Facebook (NASDAQ:FB), Microsoft (NASDAQ:MSFT), Apple (NASDAQ:AAPL), and Amazon (NASDAQ:AMZN) all scheduled to release their results between Tuesday and Thursday.

Later in the week, macroeconomic data will also drive markets, with the first estimate of Q1 US GDP on Thursday, along with inflation data from both the Eurozone and the US (Core PCE) on Friday with potentially big implications for central banks.

h2 75Bps?!/h2

Speaking of central banks, the pressure is growing on the US Federal Reserve as it enters the “blackout period” before the May 4 meeting. Notably, the last comments we heard from Fed policymakers were Fed Chairman Powell stating that “50 basis points will be on the table for the May meeting” and noted hawk James Bullard refusing to rule out a 75bps interest rate hike next month.

Indeed, it’s increasingly clear that the US central bank is coming around to the idea that it needs to raise interest rates extremely aggressively to rein in inflation.

In that light, the hint at a 75bps rate hike, a move the Fed hasn’t made since 1994, isn’t as outlandish as it may seem to traders who haven’t been in the game for the last 28 years (which is almost all of us!).

Indeed, according to the CME’s FedWatch tool, traders are currently pricing in a 95%+ chance of AT LEAST one 75bps rate hike in the Fed’s next two meetings: