US STOCKS-Wall St futures slip as oil jump fuels inflation worries before Fed meet
BY Reuters | ECONOMIC | 07:42 AM EDT* Futures off: Dow 0.18%, S&P 500 0.20%, Nasdaq 0.32%
* Honeywell International
* Delta Air Lines
* Fed to meet on Tuesday and Wednesday (Updates prices throughout, adds Delta news)
By Johann M Cherian and Utkarsh Hathi
March 17 (Reuters) - U.S. stock index futures slipped on
Tuesday as the Middle East conflict kept oil prices pinned
near $100 a barrel, putting inflation risks back in focus ahead
of the Federal Reserve's two-day meeting starting later in the
day.
Wall Street was also cooling from a tech-driven rebound in the
previous session that saw the benchmark S&P 500 log its
biggest one-day jump in over a month. Nvidia's
Shares of the company were slightly up in premarket trading
after Monday's 1.6% rise, while peers Advanced Micro Devices
On the flipside, cruise operators Carnival and Royal Caribbean were down 1%.
Brokerages lifted their outlooks for energy prices that are likely to dampen economic growth, a factor that the Australian central bank also flagged when it hiked interest rates earlier in the day.
The U.S. Fed is likely to leave borrowing costs unchanged at the end of its two-day meeting on Wednesday. But investors are pricing in a hawkish outlook as short-term Treasury yields edge up and rate futures suggest just one 25-basis-point cut towards the end of the year, according to LSEG-compiled data, down from around two before the war.
"While we do not expect central banks to make knee-jerk policy moves, policymakers are likely to stress vigilance over inflation risks amid elevated oil prices and uncertainty over the length of the war," said analysts at UBS on central bank decisions globally this week.
"Comments that are more hawkish than expected could inject further volatility into a market that is vulnerable to shifts in sentiment." At 06:52 a.m. ET, U.S. S&P 500 E-minis were down 13.5 points, or 0.2%, Nasdaq 100 E-minis were down 77.75 points, or 0.32%, and Dow E-minis were down 84 points, or 0.18% Futures tracking the rate-sensitive Russell 2000 index lost 0.5%, while Wall Street's fear gauge, the CBOE volatility index, edged up 0.22 points to 23.73.
Despite the global turmoil in markets due to the war, U.S. stocks have held up better than those in Europe and Asia on expectations that the repercussions on the economy will be less severe.
However, analysts have underscored that investors are yet to fully consider the effects of the war on the global economy.
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