Summary
U.S. stock index futures showed limited movement on Friday as market participants awaited a key inflation reading and monitored developments around a fragile Middle East truce. A two-week ceasefire agreed earlier this week between the United States and Iran has supported gains on Wall Street this week, yet analysts and traders remained cautious ahead of a March Consumer Price Index (CPI) report that could influence expectations about Federal Reserve policy.
Market backdrop
Major U.S. indexes were positioned for weekly advances after the ceasefire news, with the S&P 500 on track for its largest weekly rise since November and the Dow set for its most pronounced weekly gain since June. Despite that momentum, futures were muted as investors awaited the CPI data due at 8:30 a.m. ET, a report expected to reflect the influence of elevated energy prices tied to the Iran conflict.
Inflation expectations and policy implications
Economists polled by Reuters expected the March CPI to show headline consumer prices rising 3.3% year-on-year, which would mark the largest annual increase in nearly four years. Such a print could weaken hopes for early easing from the Federal Reserve this year. Money market pricing has shifted materially since the conflict began: participants are no longer pricing in any policy easing in 2026. Prior to the outbreak of hostilities, markets had anticipated two interest-rate reductions next year, according to CME Group's FedWatch Tool. There were even periods during the conflict when traders raised the odds of a December rate increase.
UBS Global Wealth Management noted the interplay between oil prices and inflation, saying: "While Fed officials expected higher oil prices to delay the anticipated decline in US inflation toward their 2% target, we continue to believe that the central bank remains on track to cut rates later this year." The firm added that it expects "sequential core inflation to cool" in coming months as tariff influences fade and falling labor demand potentially pushes up the unemployment rate, which could reinforce the case for eventual cuts.
Futures and intraday moves
At 04:45 a.m. ET, equity futures showed modest declines: Dow E-minis were down 72 points, or 0.15%; S&P 500 E-minis were down 5.75 points, or 0.08%; and Nasdaq 100 E-minis were down 21.25 points, or 0.08%. The tepid activity reflected a risk-off stance as investors awaited the CPI release and additional gauges of consumer confidence.
Geopolitical developments
Markets also tracked signs of strain in the two-week U.S.-Iran ceasefire ahead of the first round of talks scheduled for Saturday. While the truce has supported equity gains this week, its apparent fragility kept traders cautious. Investors found some reassurance from Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's remarks that he is seeking direct talks with Beirut, a comment that helped push U.S. indexes higher at the previous session's close.
Other data to watch
Following the CPI release, market participants will also look to a preliminary April reading of the University of Michigan's consumer sentiment survey after markets open on Friday for additional insight into household attitudes and spending intentions.
Key points
- Futures were muted ahead of the March CPI release expected at 8:30 a.m. ET, with the report anticipated to show a 3.3% year-on-year rise in consumer prices.
- A fragile two-week ceasefire between the U.S. and Iran has supported weekly gains for major indexes, but signs of strain ahead of talks kept traders cautious.
- Money market participants have pulled forward expectations on Fed policy - no easing is currently priced in for 2026, reflecting a shift since the conflict began.
Risks and uncertainties
- Higher energy prices tied to the Iran conflict could push inflation readings upward, complicating the Fed's path to 2% inflation - this impacts interest-rate sensitive sectors such as financials and real estate.
- The ceasefire shows signs of strain ahead of scheduled talks, creating geopolitical risk that could affect commodity markets and investor risk sentiment across equities.
- Shifting money market expectations on rate cuts and the potential for further rate adjustments could increase volatility in interest-rate sensitive assets and sectors.