Weekly Recap: Retailer Results Show Diverging Impacts of Inflation -- Market Insight
August 22 2022 - 4:35AM
Dow Jones News
Commentary by Adam Clark and Adria Calatayud
Results from big U.S. retailers were in focus last week as
investors assessed the impact of inflation on consumer spending and
parsed the latest signals from the Federal Reserve. With the
earnings season nearing its close, companies including Walmart
Inc., Target Corp., Home Depot Inc., Lowe's Cos. and Kohl's Corp.
posted results that highlighted their diverging fortunes in dealing
with inflation. Higher prices boosted revenue at Walmart and Home
Depot, while Target took a profit hit as it unloaded excess
inventory. Data released by the Commerce Department last Wednesday
showed retail spending was flat in July compared with the prior
month. Below is a summary of some key market movements in the past
seven days:
Central Banks: The global hiking cycle largely continued last
week as the Norwegian, New Zealand and Philippines central banks
all raised their benchmark interest rates. Signals from the Fed
continued to be hawkish as James Bullard, the president of the
Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis, said he backed another 75
basis-point rate increase at the September meeting of the
rate-setting Federal Open Market Committee. Fed Chairman Jerome
Powell's speech at the central banking Jackson Hole summit this
week will be closely watched. The Bank of England looks likely to
be forced to press ahead with aggressive tightening despite growth
worries, as data Wednesday showed U.K. inflation rose more than
expected to 10.1% in July. Meanwhile, the Turkish central bank
continued to depart from economic consensus, cutting its interest
rate to 13% from 14% on Thursday despite the annual inflation rate
climbing to 79.6% in July.
Currencies: Fed officials' hawkish signals left the WSJ Dollar
Index up 2.25% for the week, its largest one-week percentage
increase since March 2020, according to Dow Jones Market Data. The
pound was one of the most significant losers against the dollar,
with GBP/USD sinking to 1.1810 on Friday, retesting levels reached
last month when the rate hit a two-year low. Bitcoin sank to below
$22,000 on Friday, following global stocks and other risk-sensitive
assets and pulling down cryptocurrency-related equities.
Corporates: Last week was a big one in the earnings season for
consumer-focused companies, but investors came away with mixed
signals. Home Depot's second-quarter sales came in better than
expected and could put a stop to its share slump in the short term
but worries over a potential spending pullback won't go away. A
potential severe U.S. housing downturn would still spell trouble
for Home Depot and home-improvement peers such as Lowe's.
Home-improvement spending depends on consumer confidence and
especially that of homeowners. The National Association of
Realtors' housing-affordability index in June fell to its lowest
level since 1989, as interest rates and home prices continued to
rise. On the minus side, Kohl's latest downgrade to its outlook has
left the stock far below its mooted selling price earlier in the
year. While the department-store operator's property portfolio
might offer value for a possible buyer, the tough economic backdrop
overshadows any possible deal and turning around declining sales
will be even harder if rival retailers are also seeking to offload
excess inventory at the same time, as Target and Walmart warned of
hefty markdowns.
Commodities: High power prices are forcing European metals
producers to scale back or shut some operations, tightening supply
of zinc and aluminum and pushing up prices. Copper and lead could
be next. Norsk Hydro ASA said last Wednesday that it would stop
primary aluminum production by the end of September at a plant in
Slovakia as high electricity prices threatened its financial
viability, a day after Nyrstar NV said it would close a zinc
smelting plant in the Netherlands from Sept. 1 until further
notice. Aurubis AG and Boliden AB have flagged increases in energy
costs in their latest updates, while Glencore Chief Financial
Officer Steven Kalmin recently said the company's zinc business in
Europe is barely covering itself. Analysts at Liberum said in a
research note Tuesday the biggest supply-side risk to global
markets would be the closure of European zinc, lead and copper
assets, as they could put at risk 8% to 13% of global output.
Energy: Concerns over future demand weighed on oil prices last
week, after economic indicators published Monday unexpectedly
pointed to slower activity in China last month. International
benchmark Brent crude fell to $92.34 on Tuesday, its lowest
settlement since Feb. 10, before the invasion of Ukraine began, but
recovered slightly to end the week down 1.5% at $96.72, according
to Dow Jones Market Data. This marked a sharp contrast to
natural-gas prices in Europe, which climbed to a new record Tuesday
amid a heat wave that intensified the region's energy crisis.
Natural-gas futures surged Tuesday to end at $9.329 per million
British thermal units, the highest price in 14 years and more than
doubling from a year earlier.
Write to Adam Clark at adam.clark@dowjones.com and Adria
Calatayud at adria.calatayud@dowjones.com
(END) Dow Jones Newswires
August 22, 2022 04:20 ET (08:20 GMT)
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