Opening Bell: Markets Hold Their Breath Ahead Of U.S. Inflation Data

 | Jul 13, 2022 18:44

  • Europe stocks suffer more ahead of US inflation due to energy shortage, parity, technicals
  • Confluence of headwinds weighs on stocks
  • Oil's fall below $100 paves the way to a $60 target
  • US futures were flat this morning, with European stocks mostly down. Traders braced themselves ahead of US inflation data, expected to reach a 4-decade high. If the numbers come in as feared, they should serve a blow to bulls hoping for peaking inflation. Bears would win the argument for further sharp Fed hikes, probably the final nail in the coffin for a euro parity with the US dollar.

    Since the Fed pivoted hawkishly, the Nasdaq 100 and the Russell 2000 have been possessing a significantly positive correlation. As such, large techs and small caps have led the market's moves up and down this year, as they are highly susceptible to rising borrowing costs.

    However, at the time of writing, the Nasdaq futures was outperforming, gaining 0.3%, while the Russell futures was up only a mere 0.1%.

    European shares, by the way of STOXX 600, slid as much as 1%. However, if US inflation is the purported culprit, why would European shares be more affected? Fundamentally, Europe is facing an energy crisis, which helped push the euro to parity, and there may also be a technical cause (see chart below).