Opening Bell: Futures Recover After S&P 500 Enters Bear Market; Bitcoin Collapses

 | Jun 14, 2022 08:57AM ET

  • Traders price interest rates reaching 4% 
  • Oil returns to near-2008 levels
  • US dollar slips
  • h2 Key Events/h2

    On Tuesday, futures on the Dow Jones, S&P 500, NASDAQ 100, and Russell 2000 were slightly higher after a four-day selloff, exacerbated by higher than expected US inflation figures on Friday which sparked stronger recession fears. European stocks also opened higher this morning but then slipped into negative territory.

    Ahead of an interest rate announcement from the US Federal Reserve on Wednesday, traders are continuing to move out of longer-dated US Treasuries, sending yields higher. Some are now expecting that the Fed will have to hike rates to a point that brings them closer to 4% in order to tame rising prices. 

    h2 Global Financial Affairs/h2

    All four US futures were green on Tuesday, with contracts on the tech-heavy NASDAQ 100 outperforming. The technology sector benchmark taking the lead on both green and red days continues as investors flip-flop from growth to value stocks on lingering inflation concerns.

    In Europe, the STOXX 600 Index initially rebounded along with US futures, but is now lower, down over 1%. Concerns that there may be further disruptions to trade in the Eurozone after Britain published legislation on Monday to tackle ongoing issues regarding post-Brexit trade with Northern Ireland dented sentiment.

    The UK Prime Minister, Boris Johnson wants to unilaterally change the Northern Ireland protocol, inked as part of Britain's Brexit divorce deal with the EU. The pan-European index has sold off almost 7% for the last four consecutive days.