>>> US Early premarket gappers

Early premarket gappers
  • Gapping up:
    • GME +22.5%, GERN +17%, BRZE +15.2%, AVO +9.3%, NX +6%, AGX +5.5%, SMLR +4.4%, PAX +2.5%, SHAK +1.7%, OMAB +1.7%, IMOS +1.4%, ESP +1.1%, TSM +0.9%, UGI +0.7%, CHRW +0.6%, NAPA +0.6%, ARCB +0.5%, PL +0.5%
  • Gapping down:
    • BMEA -60.6%, BBCP -11.7%, MTN -8.5%, DOCU -7.9%, IOT -6.8%, NGL -4.9%, HSHP -3.5%, JFIN -3.3%, XPO -2.5%, HFFG -2.5%, ROG -2.2%, ANDE -1.9%, ZUMZ -1.6%, GVA -1.1%, QGEN -1.1%, VLRS -1.1%

>>> Moody's reviewing several U.S. regional banks for possible downgrade (FNB, W

Moody's reviewing several U.S. regional banks for possible downgrade (FNB, WAFD, FRME, FNB, FULT, ONB, PGC) (47.42)
  • Moody's Ratings affirms ratings of Zions; outlook remains stable
  • Moody's Ratings affirms Western Alliance's ratings (bank deposits at Baa1); outlook positive
  • Moody's Ratings places Peapack-Gladstone Financial Corporation's ratings on review for downgrade (subordinate debt Baa3)
  • Moody's Ratings affirms WSFS Financial Corporation's ratings (Baa2 issuer rating), outlook remains stable
  • Moody's Ratings affirms ratings of Bank OZK (LT bank deposits at A3); outlook remains negative
  • Moody's Ratings affirms Pinnacle's ratings (long-term issuer rating Baa2); outlook remains negative
  • Moody's Ratings affirms CTBC US's ratings (long-term issuer Baa2); outlook stable
  • Moody's Ratings affirms Synovus Bank (Issuer rating at Baa3); outlook remains Stable
  • Moody's Ratings affirms Cadence's ratings, outlook remains negative
  • Moody's Ratings affirms ratings of Associated Banc-Corp (subordinate Baa3); outlook remains stable
  • Moody's Ratings affirms Merchants Bank of Indiana (deposits at Baa1/Prime-2); outlook on bank-level issuer and deposit ratings negative, but outlook on holding company issuer rating positive on reduced double leverage
  • Moody's Ratings affirms Webster's ratings (long-term issuer Baa2); outlook stable
  • Moody's Ratings places F.N.B. Corporation's ratings (long-term issuer rating Baa2) on review for downgrade
  • Moody's Ratings affirms ratings of United Bank (LT bank deposits at A1); outlook negative
  • Moody's Ratings places First Merchants Corporation's ratings on review for downgrade (long-term issuer rating Baa1)
  • Moody's Ratings places Fulton Financial Corporation's ratings (long-term issuer rating Baa2) on review for downgrade
  • Moody's Ratings places Old National's long-term ratings on review for downgrade (senior unsecured Baa1)
  • Moody's Ratings places WaFd, Inc.'s ratings (long-term issuer rating Baa2) on review for downgrade
  • Moody's Ratings affirms Simmons First National Corporation (Issuer rating at Baa2); outlook remains negative

>>> Europe : Brokers Upgrades & Downgrades - 7th of June 2024

>>> Up
* Huntsman Raised to Overweight at JPMorgan; PT $27
* ING Raised to Overweight at Barclays; PT 20 euros
* Springvest Raised to Accumulate at Inderes; PT 6.20 euros
* Tecnicas Reunidas Raised to Outperform at Oddo BHF; PT 17 euros
* Var Energi Raised to Buy at SEB Equities; PT 38 kroner

>>> Down
* Burckhardt Cut to Reduce at Baader Helvea; PT 600 Swiss francs
* EQT Cut to Equal-Weight at Barclays; PT 340 kronor
* LEG Immobilien Cut to Equal-Weight at Morgan Stanley
* NIBE Industrier Cut to Hold at HSBC; PT 60 kronor
* NIO Inc. ADRs PT Cut to $8.50 from $10.40 at Citi
* UMG Cut to Hold at CFRA; PT 30 euros
* Vonovia Cut to Underweight at Morgan Stanley; PT 24 euros

>>> Initiation
* Amazon Rated New Add at Huatai Research; PT $197.86
* CVC Capital Rated New Buy at Citi; PT 21 euros
* CVC Capital Rated New Overweight at Barclays; PT 20.50 euros
* FedEx Rated New Equal-Weight at Wells Fargo; PT $275
* GXO Logistics Reinstated Overweight at Wells Fargo; PT $58
* UPS Rated New Overweight at Wells Fargo; PT $156

>>> Call
* Morgan Stanley’s Shalett Sees Further Gains Ahead for US Stocks

>>> What to look at today - 7th of June 2024

Asian stocks swung between gains and losses as markets awaited a key US jobs reading that’s likely to guide the Federal Reserve’s policy outlook.  The MSCI Asia Pacific Index was little changed as shares in South Korea and Australia rose, while those in Japan and China traded weaker. Futures contracts for US stocks were steady as traders refrained from big bets ahead of US nonfarm payrolls data. The dollar was little changed, while US Treasury yields edged higher. Traders have escalated rate-cut bets in the past week, emboldened by the slew of softer-than-forecast US data, the Bank of Canada’s decision to ease monetary policy, and bets the ECB would be the next to cut — a move confirmed on Thursday. Global stocks are on track for their first weekly gain in almost a month, while a Bloomberg gauge of global government bonds posted its longest rising streak since November on Thursday. In Asia, China’s exports jumped more than expected in May, boosting the growth outlook in the world’s second-biggest economy. Reserve Bank of Australia Deputy Governor Andrew Hauser is also due to speak after the nation’s growth almost stalled in the first quarter.   Investors will be also be monitoring the Indian rupee as the nation’s central bank meets to decide interest rates, with economists seeing borrowing rates unchanged.  The RBI can’t ignore the market’s negative reaction after Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s narrow election victory, but it’s unlikely to cut its rate on Friday, Bloomberg Economics’ Abhishek Gupta wrote in a note. “Cutting rates now – ahead of any reductions by the Federal Reserve — risks triggering capital outflows, which the RBI wants to avoid.” Elsewhere in Asia, more than a half of surveyed Bank of Japan watchers have forecast that the central bank will trim its government bond buying when authorities meet next week, with a growing number also looking ahead to a rate hike in July.  Attention will then turn to the looming US jobs print, which is expected to show the US added 180,000 jobs in May while the unemployment rate held steady. In the run-up to the reading, US data included jobless claims that topped estimates and labor costs which increased by less than previously reported. Swap markets continued to pencil in the start of the Fed rating cut in November, with a strong likelihood it begins in September.  Oil rose Friday, set for a third straight gain, as expectations waned that OPEC and its allies will allow the market to become oversupplied. Gold rose. US After Hours IOT -6.4%, DOCU -5.8%, MTN -5.7% lower on earnings; BMEA -59.6% lowers as FDA places clinical hold; EMR +1.7% to sell its remaining interests in Copeland JV.

Nikkei -0.11% Hang Seng -0.50% CSI -0.72% Shanghai -0.23% Shenzen -0.43%

Eur$ 1.086 CNH 7.2558 CNY 7.2453 JPY 155.77 GBP 1.2790 CHF 0.8902 RUB 89.0823 TRY 32.2784 WTI$ 75.65 Gold 2,382 BTC 70,961 +0.30% ETH 3,805 +0.16%

S&P +0.06% Nasdaq +0.12% EuroStoxx +0.02% FTSE +0.02% Dax -0.06% SMI

Macro :
- Morgan Stanley’s Shalett Sees Further Gains Ahead for US Stocks
- Ultra-Rich Families Fuel $20 Billion Private Equity Buyout Wave
- Waystar Said to Price IPO at Midpoint to Raise $968 Million
- SPAC Backers Prepare $1 Billion in New Vehicles: ECM Watch

Keep an eye on :
- AAPL US : Apple to Debut Passwords App in Challenge to 1Password, LastPass
- ARAMCO B : Aramco Sale Set to Raise at Least $11.2 Billion for Saudi Arabia
- BATS LN : BAT Shares Rise as FDA Rescinds Juul Marketing Denial Orders
- DISH US : Dish Network Is in Talks With Some Bondholders for New Financing
- DOV IM : DoValue Agrees to Buy Gardant in Cash, Share Deal
- EQT SS : EQT-Backed Waystar Is Said to Weigh Pricing IPO Around Mid-Range
- HTZ US : Hertz Weighs $700 Million Sale of Secured Debt Plus Convertibles
- KER FP : Kering Names Laurent Claquin Group Chief Brand Officer
- Kraken IPO : Kraken Said to Be in Talks for Pre-IPO Fund Raising Round
- NEM GY : Nemetschek’s GoCanvas Deal Expands Market, Buoys Position: React
- NIO US : Nio Shares Fall in Hong Kong After 1Q Revenue Misses Estimates
- QIA GY : Qiagen Boosts FY Adj. EPS View, to Discontinue NeuMoDx System
- SAN SM : Santander to Close German Payments Unit, Handelsblatt Reports
- 9984 JP : SoftBank’s Yanolja Said to Plan $400 Million IPO as Soon as July
- STLA US : Fiat Says $32,500 Electric 500s Already Available at US Dealers
- UNI IM : Unipol Gruppo: Reached 95% of Share Capital of UnipolSai
- DG FP : Hungary and Vinci Buy Budapest Airport in $4.7 Billion Deal

FT : Private equity bosses warn of lower returns

Private equity bosses warn of lower returns
Buyout groups assess challenge of selling trillions of dollars worth of companies so they can return cash to investors

Private equity executives have warned that their industry faces the prospect of years of lower returns as they seek to sell assets following a frenzy of investments during the coronavirus pandemic.

After booming in recent years and raising record hauls of cash, buyout groups face a challenge in exiting from trillions of dollars worth of unsold companies. Many of those deals were agreed during the 2021 to 2022 window of low interest rates and buoyant markets.

“During that period of time rates were low and valuations were high,” Pete Stavros, KKR’s co-head of global private equity, told the SuperReturn industry conference in Berlin, echoing many other executives at the event.

“These are going to be tough vintages . . . they’re probably going to underperform.”

Funds face a challenge to sell off more than $3tn worth of companies they own in order to return capital to their institutional backers, which include the likes of pension, sovereign wealth and endowment funds

Apollo co-president Scott Kleinman likened the issue facing the industry to a “pig” in a “python” and warned that buyout groups would need to endure a few years of lower returns.

A further challenge is that alongside their existing investment portfolios, fund managers have $3.9tn of so-called dry powder or unspent capital to invest in new deals, according to a mid-year industry report from consultancy Bain & Co.

Executives said the industry would have to adapt, with a greater emphasis on finding deals where funds can make operational or strategic improvements to produce profits.

That includes focusing on deals such as carving out divisions from companies or investing in businesses still owned by their founders.

“For the past 10 it was too easy, almost, to generate returns,” Marc Nachmann, global head of asset and wealth management at Goldman Sachs, told the conference.

The industry’s model of paying high prices for companies using cheap debt before selling them just a few years later at a higher price ratio “won’t work in the following 10 years”, he said.

The slow pace of a nascent rebound in deals has also delayed returns. Dealmakers have had difficulty reaching agreement on valuations for their assets, an issue beginning to ease as inflation and the economic outlook stabilise.

While private equity-backed sales are on track to rise 17 per cent this year to $361bn, that would still be the second-worst year for such exits since 2016.

“There has been a bottoming out. What there hasn’t yet been is what we’d call a massive recovery,” said Rebecca Burack, global head of Bain & Co’s private equity practice.

Although investors cautioned on the performance of recent funds, they said there were still opportunities in the market.

Harvey Schwartz, chief executive of Carlyle, said that while rising borrowing costs “might create some challenges for people during the transition, it is a much healthier environment”.

Schwartz said he saw potential for investment outside the US in markets such as Japan — where his group is seeking to buy the local operations of KFC — and in Europe.

“Over the next five or 10 years we’ll be able to see extraordinary opportunities in Europe. But that would be an out of consensus opinion,” he said.

>>> US After Hours Summary: IOT -6.4%, DOCU -5.8%, MTN -5.7% lower on earnings;

After Hours Summary: IOT -6.4%, DOCU -5.8%, MTN -5.7% lower on earnings; BMEA -59.6% lowers as FDA places clinical hold; EMR +1.7% to sell its remaining interests in Copeland JV

After Hours Gainers:

Companies trading higher in after hours in reaction to earnings/guidance: BRZE +14.3%, NX +6.3%, AVO +6%, AGX +3.8%, PL +3.8%

Companies trading higher in after hours in reaction to news: EMR +1.7% (to sell its remaining interests in Copeland JV for $3.5 bln)

After Hours Losers:

Companies trading lower in after hours in reaction to earnings/guidance: IOT -6.4%, DOCU -5.8% (also authorizes $1 bln increase to share repurchase program), MTN -5.7%, ZUMZ -2.6% (also authorizes new $25 mln share repurchase program), BBCP -1.7%, NAPA -0.1%

Companies trading lower in after hours in reaction to news: BMEA -59.6% (FDA places full clinical hold Phase I/II clinical trials of BMF-219), NGL -10.9% (authorizes new $50 mln common unit repurchase program), XPO -2.8% (reports May operating metrics), JFIN -2.6% (files $200 mln mixed shelf securities offering), HFFG -2.5% (former execs charged by SEC for role in fraudulent schemes), ROG -2.2% (to wind down manufacturing of advanced circuit materials at Belgium factory), GVA -1.2% ($325 mln convertible notes offering), QGEN -1.1% (to discontinue NeuMoDx 96 and 288 Molecular Systems; also reaffirms Q2 guidance), SMLR -0.5% (files $150 mln mixed shelf securities offering; also purchases an additional 247 bitcoin), SHAK -0.2% (files mixed shelf securities offering), CHRW -0.1% (names new CFO), ASR -0.1% (reports May passenger traffic)

>>> US Close Dow +0.20% S&P -0.02% Nasdaq -0.09% Russell -0.70%

Closing Stock Market Summary
The major indices closed either slightly above or slightly below yesterday's closing levels. The market-cap weighted S&P 500 closed about one point lower and the equal-weighted S&P 500 logged a 0.2% decline.

There was not a lot of conviction today following fresh all-time closing highs for the S&P 500 and Nasdaq Composite on Wednesday, and in front of Friday's release of the May Employment Report. The market continues to show nice resilience to selling efforts, though, which has acted as an upside driver in recent sessions.

Some stocks exhibited larger moves on specific catalysts. lululemon athletica (LULU 323.03, +14.76, +4.8%) and J.M. Smucker (SJM 115.37, +5.04, +4.6%) were standouts in that respect, jumping on pleasing earnings and/or guidance.
LULU and SJM were among the top performing S&P 500 components and contributed to the outperformance of their respective sectors. The consumer discretionary sector jumped 1.0% and the consumer staples sector logged a 0.4% gain.
NVIDIA (NVDA 1210.45, -13.95, -1.1%) dropped under some profit-taking pressure after its record close yesterday. This loss, along with declines in Apple (AAPL 194.50, -1.37, -0.7%), Broadcom (AVGO 1400.74, -12.34, -0.9%), and other semiconductor-related names, contributed to the weakness in the information technology sector (-0.5%).

Treasury yields settled little changed from yesterday following some volatile action in response to the first rate cut by the ECB since September 2019 and a mixed batch of economic data that included higher-than-expected initial jobless claims, a soothing downward revision to Q1 unit labor costs, and a widening in the April trade deficit.

The 10-yr note yield settle one basis point lower at 4.28% and the 2-yr note yield fell one basis point to 4.72%.
  • Nasdaq Composite: +14.4% YTD
  • S&P 500:+12.2% YTD
  • S&P Midcap 400: +5.8% YTD
  • Dow Jones Industrial Average: +3.2% YTD
  • Russell 2000: +1.1% YTD

Reviewing today's economic data:
  • Weekly Initial Claims 229K (consensus 216K); Prior was revised to 221K from 219K; Weekly Continuing Claims 1.792 mln; Prior was revised to 1.790 mln from 1.791 mln
    • The key takeaway from the report is the uptick in initial jobless claims, which will be seen as a sign of some loosening in the labor market.
  • Q1 Productivity-Rev. 0.2% (consensus 0.3%); Prior 0.3%; Q1 Unit Labor Costs-Rev. 4.0% (consensus 4.7%); Prior 4.7%
    • The key takeaway from the report is the downward revision to unit labor costs. Although a backward-looking report (we're two-thirds done with Q2), that revision will take out some of the labor cost inflation sting seen in the advance report.
  • April Trade Balance -$74.6 bln (consensus -$76.5 bln); Prior was revised to -$68.6 bln from -$69.4 bln
    • The key takeaway from the report is that there was an uptick in both exports and imports in April, which is a reflection of increased global trade activity; however, with imports exceeding exports, that will create a drag on Q2 GDP.

Looking ahead, Friday's economic calendar features:
  • 8:30 ET: May Nonfarm Payrolls (consensus 185,000; prior 175,000), Nonfarm Private Payrolls (consensus 168,000; prior 167,000), Average Hourly Earnings (consensus 0.3%; prior 0.2%), Unemployment Rate (Briefing.com consensus 3.9%; prior 3.9%), and Average Workweek consensus 34.3; prior 34.3)
  • 10:00 ET: April Wholesale Inventories (consensus 0.2%; prior -0.4%)
  • 15:00 ET: April Consumer Credit (consensus $11.0 bln; prior $6.3 bln)