Russia Gas Supplies, Big Tech Divergence, Home Sales - What's Moving Markets

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By Geoffrey Smith

Investing.com -- Microsoft and Alphabet have differing fortunes in the first quarter, as TikTok takes a bigger bite out of YouTube's advertising revenue. The earnings flood continues with Meta, T-Mobile, Qualcomm, Ford and others later. Russia turns off the gas to Poland and Bulgaria as an EU embargo on Russian oil moves closer. Pending home sales and mortgage data are due. Here's what you need to know in financial markets on Wednesday, 27th April.

1. Big Tech's big divergence may spell trouble for Meta

Tech giants Microsoft (NASDAQ:MSFT) and Alphabet (NASDAQ:GOOGL) reported a sharp divergence in their fortunes for the first quarter, with Microsoft beating expectations thanks to a booming cloud-hosting business and a strong performance from LinkedIn (a reflection of trends in the labor market).

Alphabet, by contrast, fell well short of expectations as advertising revenue suffered both from increased competition from the likes of TikTok and from the increased willingness of consumers to get off YouTube now that they are no longer locked down.

Microsoft stock rose 5.3% in premarket trading while Alphabet fell 3.0% to what would be an 11-month low.

The relatively weak performance by Alphabet’s ad business looks likely to weigh on Facebook owner Meta Platforms (NASDAQ:FB) in the runup to its earnings after the close Wednesday.

2. Russia weaponizes energy supplies as oil embargo nears

Russia cut off gas supplies to Poland and Bulgaria, after the two former Soviet satellites, refused to pay for their gas in rubles rather than euros or dollars.

The weaponization of energy breaks with over 40 years of Russian and Soviet reliability in fulfilling its contracts and pushed European gas futures sharply higher for a second day.

The move should be seen as a warning shot to Russia’s biggest customers, Germany and Italy, coming a day after Germany sealed a deal with Poland that will greatly reduce its dependence on Russian oil, and thus make it easier for Germany to drop its opposition to an embargo. Under that deal, Germany will be able to source crude for its refineries from Poland’s import terminal at Gdansk.

The escalation of the Ukraine conflict’s economic dimension nonetheless weighed heavily on the euro, which fell to a five-year low against the dollar, and European stocks.

3. Stocks set to bounce - a bit - after positive late earnings burst

U.S. stocks are expected to bounce back from Tuesday’s drubbing, although they look far from recouping all of their losses – Tesla (NASDAQ:TSLA), for one, bouncing less than 3% premarket after its 12.8% slump in the previous session.