Opening Bell: Futures Buck Global Selloff As Inflation Concerns Fade (For Now)

 | May 02, 2022 07:33

  • China factory growth unexpectedly slumps
  • German retail data surprises to the downside
  • Markets await Fed interest rate decision
  • h2 Key Events/h2

    Despite European and Asian shares selling off on Monday—after a slump in US markets on Friday—futures on the Dow Jones, S&P 500, NASDAQ and Russell 2000 all advanced this morning. It seems inflation is no longer a major concern for traders. Markets are now focusing on Wednesday's interest rate decision from the US Federal Reserve as investors are keen to get insight into the pace of upcoming interest rate hikes.

    Oil slipped as markets await the US central bank, plus additional EU sanctions on imports of Russian oil.

    h2 Global Financial Affairs/h2

    On Friday, US stocks suffered some of their worst selloffs in quite some time. The S&P 500 fell the most in a single day since June 2020. The broad benchmark posted its poorest monthly performance in April since the outbreak of the coronavirus in March of 2020. The NASDAQ also lost the most in a single month since 2008.

    On Monday, contracts on the NASDAQ 100 and S&P are leading the move higher while those on the Dow Jones are lagging slightly. This may support the view that inflation is slowing as an outlook for higher interest rates tends to cause a sell-off in growth stocks and a move into value.

    After a miserable April, the NASDAQ 100 is now over 22% below its Nov. 19 record while the Dow is only 10% below its Jan. 4 record, making the tech index a relative bargain. However, comparing one index to another within a vacuum does not provide the full picture. As long as inflation and interest rates are rising, investors are likely to continue selling technology stocks, regardless of the fact the NASDAQ index has already entered bear market territory. The Dow meanwhile is merely in correction mode.

    Ironically, while US futures rise, European stocks are sliding after Friday's Wall Street rout. Still, perhaps the reason for this is that bulls think US shares are now at better price points whereas European stocks need to become cheaper before risking a long position.

    The STOXX 600 Index opened lower after weak data from China confirmed the world's second-largest economy is slowing. In April, the Asian nation's powerful factory activity shrunk more than expected as Beijing's ongoing coronavirus lockdowns disrupted supply chains which exacerbated spiking inflation.

    Also, German retail sales demonstrated a surprise decline in March.

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    However, the European benchmark rebounded, paring more than half of its fall.