Opening Bell: Stocks Retreat From Records On New Inflation Worries; USD Gains

 | Apr 12, 2021 08:04AM ET

  • WHO warns of inequality between rich and poor nations in vaccine distribution
  • An uneven global recovery would exacerbate inflation
  • Key Events/h2

    Investor cashed out of futures on the Dow, S&P, NASDAQ and Russell 2000 as well as European stocks on Monday as inflation worries resurfaced amid concerns about an uneven global recovery.

    The dollar continued to move higher while gold slipped.

    Global Financial Affairs/h2

    Today’s market narrative demonstrates the fickle nature of markets. On Friday, US stocks posted fresh records because traders were no longer concerned about inflation after a fresh dose of Fed coaxing, but were instead—due to the explicit direction of Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell—focusing on robust US economic growth.

    However, after the weekend, traders are nervous that there will be a lopsided economic recovery, since richer countries have received the lion’s share of vaccines which the World Health Organization has said is a "shocking imbalance." More than three quarters of the half a billion vaccines that have been nothing new . But, an economic recovery could also bring inflation, and inflationary pressures may be exacerbated further if investors also reroute their capital to the countries with the fastest rate of recovery, thus putting additional upward pressure on prices. Despite investors' concerns, we think the current uptrend is bullish until proven bearish.

    On Monday, as all four US contracts were trading in the red, futures on the Russell 2000 were underperforming at almost three times the rate of NASDAQ contracts, showing that even in retreat, the reflation trade resumed its reversal.

    This rotation back from value into growth was also seen in European shares this morning. The STOXX 600 Index fell with banks and miners—two sectors that do well amid a recovery. In line with US futures, the retreat in European stocks followed three straight weeks of gains, including records.

    Stocks have held a close negative correlation with Treasuries this year, including the 10-year note.