Tesla Beat, ECB Rate Hike Talk, Jobless Claims - What's Moving Markets

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By Geoffrey Smith

Investing.com -- The euro surges as officials put a July rate hike back on the agenda. Jerome Powell and Christine Lagarde both speak on the sidelines of the IMF meeting later. Tesla (NASDAQ:TSLA) beats earnings expectations, but raises a few eyebrows in the process. United Airlines (NASDAQ:UAL) forecasts good times ahead, but Equifax (NYSE:EFX) is downbeat about the outlook for the mortgage credit market. Russia declares 'victory' over a city where Ukrainian forces are still fighting, a day after it defaulted on a dollar bond payment due to the lack of cooperation from its U.S. bankers. AT&T (NYSE:T) results, jobless claims and the Philly Fed business survey are due. Here's what you need to know in financial markets on Thursday, 21st April.

1. Tesla’s earnings blow past expectations, raise eyebrows

Tesla reported another stronger-than-expected quarter in the three months through March, with a net profit of $3.32 billion. That included a $679 million contribution from regulatory emissions credits, but an operating profit of $3.6 billion indicated solid underlying momentum in its core business.

CEO Elon Musk said the group should be able to produce over 1.5 million cars this year, despite challenges from a three-week shutdown at Shanghai that only ended earlier this week.

Some cast doubt on the group’s accounting, suggesting that Tesla either wasn’t recognizing steep input price inflation or faced a big jump in costs in coming quarters. The company reported a 15% increase in operating expenditure, but an 80% rise in revenue. The disparity may lie partially in the company using up raw material inventories that were bought before prices for inputs such as battery metals went through the roof earlier this year.

Tesla stock rose over 7% in premarket trading, more than reversing Wednesday’s declines.

2. ECB officials put July rate hike in play

The euro rose to its highest in over a week after Vice President Luis de Guindos joined a chorus of European Central Bank officials acknowledging the possibility of a rate increase in July. That would be the bank’s first in 12 years, and represents a significant shift after President Christine Lagarde soft-pedaled the outlook for tightening policy at her press conference last week.

Lagarde and Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell both speak on the sidelines of the International Monetary Fund’s spring meeting later, an event that has gathered the world’s central bankers at a time when inflation is running amok globally.

By 6:15 AM ET (1015 GMT), the euro was at $1.0915, up 0.6% on the day and just off its intraday high.