Market mood
Technology stocks in the U.S. retreated further after a sharp intra-session selloff, with the SOX semiconductor index ending about 2% lower on Tuesday after earlier plunges that exceeded 8%. Asian equity markets opened weaker and U.S. futures were trading in negative territory ahead of a busy data day in Washington.
All eyes are on the U.S. May consumer price index, due at 8:30 a.m. EDT, which is expected to show headline inflation edging above 4% - a level not seen in roughly three years - and core inflation hovering around 3%. The CPI print will shape investor expectations as a 10-year Treasury note auction approaches at 1 p.m. EDT, with futures markets increasingly pricing in a Federal Reserve interest rate increase by year-end.
Rates and global central bank moves
Expectations for tighter policy extend beyond the United States. Market pricing points to an imminent European Central Bank rate rise as soon as tomorrow, and Japanese wholesale price inflation figures released on Wednesday have reinforced the view that the Bank of Japan may deliver its own policy move next week. Chinese producer inflation data released this week also indicated persistent price pressure in that economy last month.
Oil swings amid renewed hostilities
One source of recent market optimism briefly came from a sharp fall in crude to a seven-week low on Tuesday. That decline occurred alongside unverified U.S. claims that oil exports through the Strait of Hormuz were increasing, even as diplomatic channels between Washington and Tehran remain fragile. The calm was short-lived: overnight exchanges of missile strikes between the U.S. and Iran - the most serious direct confrontation since a tenuous ceasefire began two months ago - sent crude prices higher in early trading before those gains were unwound in volatile sessions on Wednesday morning.
Despite the recent drop in headline crude prices, market participants remain uneasy about a potential supply squeeze this month as U.S. oil inventories shrink.
Corporate calendar and market flow
Adding to the market backdrop is a high-profile initial public offering scheduled for later in the week. Some market participants suggest this marquee event is contributing to wider equity volatility as investors rebalance portfolios and free up capital to take part in the new listing.
Chart of the day
The U.S. trade deficit narrowed in April, driven by a surge in exports of petroleum products and capital goods that rose to record levels. Petroleum exports climbed to a record $37 billion in April from $28 billion in March, supported by both higher shipment volumes and elevated oil prices tied to the Middle East conflict. The U.S. is now a net oil exporter and its petroleum trade surplus expanded to a record $17.7 billion from $9.4 billion in March.
Events to watch
- U.S. May CPI released at 8:30 a.m. EDT
- U.S. 10-year Treasury note auction at 1 p.m. EDT
Context for investors
The convergence of elevated inflation expectations, prospective central bank tightening across major economies, renewed geopolitical friction in the Middle East and a busy corporate calendar is producing a noisy environment for markets. Equity traders are monitoring semiconductor sector weakness, fixed income desks are focused on auction dynamics and inflation signals, and commodity participants are watching crude inventory levels and regional tensions for potential supply disruptions.
For readers who follow daily market commentary, there are regular briefings and a weekday audio summary that discuss these developments and other major market-moving stories.