U.S. Opening Bell: Strong Earnings Lift Stocks; Dollar Hits 20-Year High Vs. Yen

 | Apr 28, 2022 07:46

  • Corporate earnings results prop up equities
  • Dollar hits 20-year high versus Japanese yen
  • Gold recovers
  • h2 Key Events/h2

    Better than expected earnings helped propel US futures on the Dow Jones, S&P 500, NASDAQ and Russell 2000 as well as European shares higher on Thursday. Clearly, traders believe better than expected results indicate the global economy can withstand recent pressures including inflation, the war in Ukraine and a resurgence of coronavirus in China.

    Markets are now keenly awaiting results today from mega cap tech giants Apple (NASDAQ:AAPL) and Amazon (NASDAQ:AMZN) after the US close.

    Oil moved higher as European countries search for alternative energy sources to Russian natural gas.

    h2 Global Financial Affairs/h2

    All four US contracts were well in the green this morning, with NASDAQ futures racing ahead, almost up 2.5%. Growth stocks were back in the lead as traders have renewed optimism on continued economic growth dispelling recession fears.

    Futures on the tech-heavy index were driven higher by Meta Platforms (NASDAQ:FB) which jumped 18% in pre-market trading after the social network announced results Wednesday after the close. Among other things, the release showed user growth was slightly higher than estimated.

    European stocks also rallied on Thursday, with the STOXX 600 Index over 1% higher as all industry groups rose. TotalEnergies (EPA:TTEF), Glencore (LON:GLEN) and Capgemini (EPA:CAPP) outperformed, pushed up by positive earnings.

    The French energy major TTEF announced first-quarter profits grew on surging energy prices but registered a $4.1 billion impairment expense for a liquefied natural gas operation in the Russian Arctic. TotalEnergies posted a $4.94 billion quarterly net profit, up from last year's corresponding quarter's $3.34. The company also announced the first interim dividend for the year of 0.60 euro per share, a 5% increase from last year.