With the August 2 debt-ceiling deadline just days away now and the two sides still poles apart in their respective positions, the odds of a comprehensive budget deal are very low. The most likely outcome at this stage is an 11th hour kick-the-can-down-the-road solution that will provide for a temporary debt-ceiling increase, while leaving the thornier deficit reduction issue for a later date.
The rating agencies have painted themselves in a corner by threatening a rating downgrade if the debt ceiling increase was not accompanied by a credible enough deficit-reduction plan. They seem to be using this event as an opportunity to buttress their image following their negligent behavior in the sub-prime mortgage crisis.
But the credit markets appear to have called their bluff. With the 10-year Treasury bond in the 3% vicinity, there are no signs of panic in the bond market. As such, the loss of the ‘AAA’ rating may not exactly be an end-of-the-world event, after all. All we need right now is for the stock market to see the issue the same way as the bond market is doing.
Health insurers Aetna (AET) and WellPoint (WLP) posted better-than-expected results, but provided divergent outlooks, with Aetna guiding higher and WellPoint a tad lower. Autonation (AN) came out with an earnings beat, though its revenue came modestly short of expectations.
Amazon (AMZN) came out with better-than-expected top- and bottom-line results after the close on Tuesday, even as margins continued to be squeezed by the online retailer’s expansion spending. In other major after-market results on Tuesday, Las Vegas Sands (LVS) came ahead of expectations on international strength, while Juniper Networks (JNPR) came short.
Crude Inventories are scheduled to be released today at 10:30 AM EST. For the week ending July 15, crude inventories decreased by 3.7 million barrels from the previous week to 351.7 million barrels.
Get all Zacks Research Reports and be alerted to fast-breaking buy and sell opportunities every trading day.
Be the first to comment