U.S. Opening Bell: Futures, European Stocks Diverge As Opinion Differs On U.S. CPI

 | Apr 13, 2022 07:35

  • US inflation figures elicit a mixed response
  • Oil prices surge
  • Putin threatens to continue the war in Ukraine
  • h2 Key Events/h2

    On Wednesday, Dow Jones, S&P 500, NASDAQ 100 and Russell 2000 futures rose ahead of the start of earnings season in the US with results from Delta Air Lines (NYSE:DAL), JPMorgan Chase & Co (NYSE:JPM) and BlackRock (NYSE:BLK), among others, due before the open in New York.

    US CPI figures, released yesterday, did not seem to concern traders during Tuesday's Wall Street session whereas European stocks slipped this morning as investors there seemed to be unnerved by the inflation data

    Gold recovered from its recent selloff.

    h2 Global Financial Affairs/h2

    NASDAQ and Russell 2000 futures were slightly outperforming on Wednesday which is totally at odds with the narrative emerging from Europe. The tech-heavy index and small-cap gauge have been positively correlated since US inflation became the primary market headwind.

    However, in a tightening interest rate environment, growth stocks tend to slide as their high valuations come under pressure and shares in smaller cap domestic firms usually slip as they don't have the flexibility of larger multinationals to navigate a high-interest rate environment.

    The STOXX 600 Index pared its opening drop with miners leading the charge. Comments from Russian President Vladimir Putin that he "will not stop military actions until Russia succeeds" may have been the catalyst as Russia is a major commodity exporter, and ongoing sanctions will drastically reduce available supply on the global market.

    Already, Vitol Group, the world's largest independent oil trading company, said it would stop dealing with Russian oil despite the fact that Russia is the world's second-largest exporter of crude, after Saudi Arabia.

    Personal care stocks also sold off, dragged lower after U.K. supermarket chain, Tesco (LON:TSCO) warned that its profits may be flat or even lower this year due to rising inflation.

    However, earlier, in Asia most stocks were green as traders there focused on the core CPI figures from the US which were better than expected and which resulted in a rally in Treasuries, easing yields. Nevertheless, the advance was tempered by a jump in oil prices after the Russian President said that the peace talks "have returned to a dead-end situation for us."

    Yesterday, during the New York session, most US stocks closed in negative territory following another spike in oil prices and a selloff in the shares of large banks ahead of upcoming earnings announcements.

    JPMorgan Chase will be the first of the big six banks to release its corporate report card. Investors are waiting to hear how the war in Ukraine impacted investment banking and trading operations.

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    The only primary US benchmark that finished green on Tuesday was the Russell 2000, which added 0.32%. Small caps are sensitive to higher inflation but when the core figures released yesterday were not as bad as expected, short-sellers probably covered bets; some may also have considered the not-so-bad news as a buying opportunity for the downtrodden sector.