Opening Bell: Markets Waver Ahead Of U.S. CPI, Earnings; Gold Advances

 | Feb 07, 2022 08:52AM ET

  • Traders watching earnings and upcoming US inflation data
  • Yields retreat from highs
  • Bitcoin advances
  • h2 Key Events/h2

    After last week's volatile market activity, all four US futures contracts were trading in the red early Monday, though at time of publication some were fluctuating. Contracts on the Dow Jones, S&P 500, NASDAQ and Russell 2000 were lower to start the trading week with European markets slightly higher as investors continue to monitor the ongoing corporate earnings season for any indication on future performance, while awaiting US inflation data due to be released on Thursday and consumer sentiment figures on Friday.

    Gold rallied as investors sought refuge via safe havens.

    h2 Global Financial Affairs/h2

    Friday's astonishingly positive US employment data threatened to end the concerted effort from US Federal Reserve members to soothe nervous investors. After the Fed Chair, Jerome Powell, indicated a much more hawkish stance at the last press conference markets were concerned that a 0.5% interest rate hike is likely at the next FOMC meeting.

    Last week's Treasury yield surge pointed to higher US rates, suggesting investors were not buying the backpedaling by Fed members who were urging a gradual shift in policy rather than aggressive tightening. They pointed to ongoing risks to the global economy, including the coronavirus pandemic and the 100,000 Russian troops near the border with Ukraine. 

    The ECB and the BOE have joined the Fed in its tightening policy stance. Last week's announcement by the Bank of England raising rates by 0.25% for the second time means it is currently the most aggressive central bank and the ECB is at the rear of the queue.

    Though US futures contracts continue to waver this morning, futures on the Russell 2000 were consistently leading the slump, down as much as 0.8% at one point. 

    The STOXX 600 Index was slightly higher with retail and basic-resources equities while energy and real-estate-related stocks are declining.

    Earlier this morning, most Asian indices ended lower with the Nikkei 225 down 0.7% and Korea's KOSPI 50 down 1.1%. However, China's Shanghai Composite rallied more than 2% as local traders attempted to catch up after last week's Lunar New Year holiday there.

    While yields on the 10-year Treasury note eased, they remained above 1.9%—the level a Treasury selloff pushed yields to for the first time since 2019.