By Daniela Hathorn, senior market analyst at Capital.com
Markets remain under pressure as investors contend with rising rate expectations and lingering geopolitical concerns. Equities have extended their pullback after Friday’s sharp selloff, while oil prices remain supported as traders rebuild some geopolitical premium into energy markets. The renewed tensions come at an uncomfortable moment for investors, with sentiment already weakened by rising rate expectations and stretched positioning following months of strong gains.
The market’s focus is now firmly on US inflation data due later today. Following last week’s stronger-than-expected jobs report, investors have become increasingly concerned that inflation may remain too persistent for the Fed to maintain a neutral stance. The labour market continues to show resilience, reducing the urgency for policymakers to support growth and instead shifting attention back toward inflation control. As a result, expectations for a rate hike later this year have risen sharply, helping push yields and the dollar higher while weighing on growth-sensitive assets such as technology stocks. That leaves today’s CPI report as a potentially pivotal event. A hotter-than-expected reading would reinforce the narrative that inflation pressures remain embedded in the economy, particularly at a time when higher energy prices are adding to broader cost pressures. Such an outcome could deepen the recent pullback by strengthening expectations that the Fed may ultimately need to tighten policy further. Conversely, a softer reading could help stabilise markets by easing concerns that policymakers are falling behind the inflation curve.
More broadly, the recent volatility reflects a market transitioning away from the one-way optimism that characterised much of April and May. Strong earnings and AI-driven growth remain powerful supports for equities, but investors are now being forced to balance those positives against higher yields, inflation risks and geopolitical uncertainty. Whether this develops into a deeper correction or simply a period of consolidation will likely depend on the interaction between inflation data, central-bank expectations and events in the Middle East over the coming weeks.
S&P 500 Index
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