By Jamie McGeever
ORLANDO, Florida (Reuters) -TRADING DAY
Making sense of the forces driving global markets
By Jamie McGeever, Markets Columnist
Wall Street bucked the positive global equity trend and closed mostly lower on Tuesday, as U.S. service sector data rekindled stagflation fears and shined a light on the difficult position the Federal Reserve may find itself in next month.
More on that below. In my column today I look at the tumult of the last few days that has seen the worlds of U.S. politics, policy, and company earnings collide, exposing the big divergences that run through the country’s equity and bond markets.
If you have more time to read, here are a few articles I recommend to help you make sense of what happened in markets today.
1. Trump rules out Bessent for Fed chair 2. Easy to lose, hard to restore: US data trust on the line 3. EU still expects turbulence in trade relations with US 4. Markets struggle to price smoke and mirrors: Mike Dolan 5. Brazil’s economy ready to ride out Trump’s 50% tariff
Today’s Key Market Moves
* FX: Dollar index is flat. The yen is the big mover inG10 FX, slipping around 0.3% vs dollar and euro. * STOCKS: S&P 500, Nasdaq and Dow fall, Russell 2000rises. Benchmark Asian, Chinese, European, emerging indexes allrise. * SHARES/SECTORS: Seven S&P 500 sectors fall, led byutilities -1%; materials index +0.8%. Palantir shares +7.8%. * BONDS: U.S. yields creep higher, up 4 bps at the shortend, flattening the curve. 3-year auction is on the weak side. * COMMODITIES: Oil falls 1.7%, Brent crude futures hit afive-week low of $67.52/bbl. WTI nudges $65/bbl.
Stagflation-ISM
The stagflation red flags raised by U.S. service sector activity figures on Tuesday are a reminder that the world’s largest economy and most important central bank face significant challenges in the months ahead.
Investors took their cue more from the bubbling price pressures in the ISM services report than the signs of softening activity. Treasury yields crept up and rate cut expectations were trimmed as a result.
Still, it’s a curious one. Wall Street’s slump on Friday went hand in glove with plunging yields and a dramatic surge in rate cut bets. Today, a hawkish tilt in the bond and rates futures markets was accompanied by a broad-based equity selloff.
There are other factors at play, not least the barrage of Q2 earnings, tariff headlines, and a renewed spike in policy uncertainty. But these moves are a reminder that there can be good and bad reasons driving yields up or down, and that the correlation with stocks can flip from one day to the next.