Opening Bell: U.S. Futures Slip As Bulls Draw Breath Ahead Of GDP Data

 | Jul 28, 2022 13:04

  • Futures slide suggests bulls bit off more than they can chew
  • Odds are against Fed's ability to lower inflation without recession
  • Dollar drops
  • European stocks opened higher on Thursday in an attempt to catch up with yesterday's exuberant Wall Street rally after comments from the US Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell suggested the central bank will temper its pace of tightening from here on out.

    However, US futures on the Dow, S&P, NASDAQ, and Russell 2000 ran out of steam and were trading in the red today led by NASDAQ 100 contracts. The NASDAQ led yesterday's rally in the US market and closed twice as high as the Dow and about 1.5% higher than the S&P 500.

    So, what's going on? I was taken aback by the market's risk-on reaction. After all, the Fed is hiking interest rates at the fastest pace in a generation. Furthermore, Powell put another jumbo increase on the table. However, yesterday traders preferred to focus on the Fed boss's comments that hikes will slow down, eventually.

    However, traders may be focusing on what they want to hear. Powell himself said in June that policymakers expect to raise rates to roughly 3.4% this year and 3.8% by the end of 2023. These official Fed projections are above current market expectations. Why? I am not sure.

    Traders will be keenly watching today's US GDP data in the hope that it shows that the economy did not post two consecutive quarters of negative growth which is an established indicator of a recession.

    Furthermore, bulls seemed to have forgotten about the inverted yield curve yesterday, which is a leading indicator of a recession.