Opening Bell: Markets Wobble Ahead Of Inflation Data, Earnings; Oil Advances

 | Jul 13, 2021 07:34

  • Bank earnings releases could increase market volatility
  • Changing views on inflation moving markets
  • Oil trades higher
  • h2 Key Events/h2

    US futures contracts on the Dow, S&P, NASDAQ and Russell 2000, along with European shares, were all in a holding pattern on Tuesday as trade was muted ahead of key economic US data releases and the start of US earnings season.

    Having pushed higher over the last two weeks, gold slipped lower.

    Global Financial Affairs/h2

    Contracts on the Russell 2000—whose listed small cap firms would perhaps gain the most in a post-pandemic world and are therefore the focus of the reflation trade—underperformed, falling 0.2% into negative territory. On the other side of the cyclical spectrum, NASDAQ 100 futures, whose mega tech companies gained the most during the coronavirus lockdowns, outperformed and are 0.3% in the green.

    All eyes are firmly fixed on second-quarter earnings season which starts with reports from the banks and PepsiCo (NASDAQ:PEP) today, an apt pairing as investors will likely work up a sweat in an overactive market.

    The start of earnings season could be a catalyst for considerable volatility with the backdrop of rising inflation and a resurgence of the coronavirus. Traders will be looking for indications that companies can continue to profit in this environment as well as whether to buy into the Fed’s recurring promise, since the start of the year, that the current level of inflation is transitory.

    Banks are sensitive to inflation and may provide an indication on inflation’s trajectory. CPI figures are released later today and core CPI is expected to surge to 4%, its highest level since 1991.

    Nevertheless, investors, it seems, are choosing to follow the Fed’s lead as is manifested in their trading of Treasuries, including the 10-year benchmark note.