Opening Bell: U.S. Futures Recover As Powell Admits Economic Challenges; BTC Up

 | Jun 23, 2022 06:56

  • Powell admits recession is "certainly a possibility"
  • But Fed boss said economy is strong
  • Bitcoin rebounds
  • h2 Key Events/h2

    On Thursday futures on the Dow Jones, S&P 500, NASDAQ 100, and Russell 2000 were marginally up while European stocks traded lower ahead of US Federal Reserve Chair, Jerome Powell's second day of testimony to Congress. Yesterday he conceded, in his semiannual monetary policy report that higher interest rates could cause a recession.

    Oil fluctuated but remains above $105 as CEOs of seven oil majors are due to meet US President Biden at the White House.

    h2 Global Financial Affairs/h2

    NASDAQ 100 contracts rebounded into clear gains after the underlying index closed in the red yesterday. Futures on the S&P 500 Index also traded higher followed by Dow and Russell 2000 futures. We suspect today may see some volatility in markets as earlier all four contracts were trading in the red.

    The European session opened lower, with the STOXX 600 Index falling to its lowest level since Feb 1, 2021. Energy and mining stocks underperformed as ongoing concerns of an economic downturn dented commodities. Investor sentiment was dented by the Fed Chair's comments, lower than expected PMI data and an S&P Global survey which showed euro zone business growth slowed significantly in June.

    Asian markets were mixed, with inflation concerns dominating headlines. China's Shanghai Composite closed up 1.62%, outperforming while South Korea's KOSPI dropped 1.22% to its lowest level since Nov 2, 2020.

    Powell's admission that the US central bank found it challenging to walk the fine line between taming inflation while maintaining a solid job market and avoiding a recession ended a two-day rally in US markets. However, the selloff was tempered by his reassuring remarks about the economy's strength.

    Treasury yields on the 10-year note extended an advance, moving towards 3.1%.