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CNBC Daily Open: Projections are not promises

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This report is from today's CNBC Daily Open, our international markets newsletter. CNBC Daily Open brings investors up to speed on everything they need to know, no matter where they are. Like what you see? You can subscribe here.

What you need to know today

Tentative Tuesday
U.S. stocks extended their feeble start to the second quarter as the 10-year Treasury yield spiked to its highest since Nov. 28. Robust economic data and comments from Federal Reserve officials further tempered expectations for a rate cut in June. Oil prices also surged to highs last seen five months ago. The Dow Jones Industrial Average ended Tuesday down 1% at 39,170.24, while the S&P 500 finished down 0.7% at 5,205.81. This was their respective worst day since March 5. The Nasdaq Composite shed 0.95% to finish at 16,240.45.

Chip woes
Intel shares fell 4% in extended trading after the company reported that full-year operating losses for its semiconductor manufacturing business widened to $7 billion from the $5.2 billion loss reported in 2022. This is the first time that Intel has disclosed revenue totals for its foundry business alone. Intel has historically designed and manufactured its own chips, and only reported final chip sales to investors. Intel has been pitching investors a plan where it would also start an external business to make chips for other companies.

Competition bites
General Motors reported a 1.5% decline in first-quarter U.S. vehicle sales compared to a year ago, underperforming its rivals. The Detroit automaker said the drop was largely due to a 22.9% year-over-year decline in sales to fleet customers even as retail sales to customers climbed 6%. Meanwhile, Tesla shares fell after the company reported its first year-over-year decline in vehicle deliveries since 2020. Vehicle production slipped around 1.7% from a year earlier and 12.5% sequentially for Tesla as deliveries tumbled 8.5% from a year ago — far below even the most bearish of analysts' expectations.

Biden-Xi chat
U.S. President Joe Biden spoke with Chinese President Xi Jinping on the phone for nearly two hours Tuesday, a call the White House described as a "check in" between the two leaders to responsibly manage the strained U.S.-China relationship. On Wednesday, Biden's top economic envoy, Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen, is scheduled to depart for China to hold face-to-face meetings with her counterparts over five days in Guangzhou and Beijing. 

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The bottom line

U.S. Federal Reserve officials are dampening rate cut expectations again, and again.

In comments echoing those of the Federal Open Market Committee's two weeks ago, San Francisco Fed President Mary Daly said Tuesday she expects cuts this year — but wants to see more convincing evidence that inflation has been subdued.

"Three rate cuts is a projection, and a projection is not a promise," Daly said.

Cleveland Federal Reserve President Loretta Mester also said Tuesday she still expects interest rate cuts this year, but ruled out the next policy meeting in May.

To be sure, futures traders expect the Fed to start easing in June and to cut by three-quarters of a percentage point by the end of the year — though recent comments have diminished the odds of a June rate cut.

On Monday though, U.S. ISM manufacturing survey data pointed to a sharp price spike in the sector, inflaming investor worries that inflation may not drop to 2% soon — delaying the Fed's first rate cut.

If that happens though, the implications could be global.

Continued strength in the dollar is already adversely impacting several emerging market currencies in Asia, including the Malaysian ringgit and Indonesian rupiah.

The wide interest rate differentials between the U.S. and Japan is also at least partly responsible for the weak yen, which sank to its weakest against the dollar in more than three decades.

Japan's finance officials have repeatedly raised verbal warnings, but have so far abstained from tangible market intervention — as they did in 2022 when the yen tumbled to 152 to the dollar.

Vishnu Varathan, Mizuho's chief economist for Asia ex-Japan, expects Japanese yen intervention risks to rise. He also expects Chinese officials to up their "intimidation" of offshore Chinese yuan bears.

Volatility is the name of the game.

— CNBC's Jeff Cox contributed reporting for this story.

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