Opening Bell: Surging Oil Prices Send Stocks, Bonds Lower; U.S. Dollar Rallies

 | May 31, 2022 07:54AM ET

  • Oil prices rally as EU cuts Russian oil imports
  • Unclear market narrative benefits bears
  • Additional rate hikes expected
  • h2 Key Events/h2

    As Europe vowed to ban the purchase of most Russian oil supplies, rising prices of the commodity sent shockwaves across global financial markets on Tuesday.

    Treasury yields surged as traders sold off bonds. Futures on the Dow Jones, S&P 500, NASDAQ 100, and Russell 2000 as well as European equities slumped.

    Odds increased that the oil price rally would send inflation even higher thus forcing the US Federal Reserve to be more aggressive with its upcoming rate hikes. Gold fell slightly.

    h2 Global Financial Affairs/h2

    Following Europe's ban on Russian oil, which aims to cut 90% of imports from there into the bloc by the end of the year, the price of crude jumped, disrupting the recent stock market rally which saw the S&P 500, Dow Jones and NASDAQ move higher at the end of last week.

    There seem to be two explanations for the reaction:

    1. The economy is good, and
    2. The economy is bad.

    Positive economic developments naturally boost risk assets but it seems that negative data, which would allow the Fed to ease its planned monetary tightening, is also lifting risk assets.

    We previously warned against a presumption that the bear market has bottomed just because of a single week's equity rally, irrespective of how robust the rebound was. In addition, we remind investors that bear markets are notorious for having some of the most substantial upside moves before slumping further.

    The relationship paradigm between contracts on the major US indices resumed amid today's selloff. The tech-heavy NASDAQ 100, which represents growth stocks, outperformed, slipping the least, while the Dow Jones, standing for cyclicals and value, underperformed. While the S&P 500 was below the February/March lows.