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A look at the day ahead in U.S. and global markets from Mike Dolan
Wall Street seems to have lost direction in another shaky start to the week for some of its megacap stocks and now needs some clearance from Tuesday's U.S. inflation update to steady the ship.
In an illustration of just how quickly this year's slightly hotter inflation readings so far can feed consumer expectations, the New York Federal Reserve's latest household survey might be another red flag at the central bank.
Longer-run household inflation expectations deteriorated in February, the Fed survey showed. Although the outlook one year out was steady at 3%, respondents' view of inflation three years from now climbed to 2.7% from 2.4% - the first rise since September.
Even though the Fed is no longer expected to execute its first interest rate cut later this month - futures have shifted to an 80% chance of a June move instead - a lot rides on today's consumer price inflation readout for February.
Headline annual CPI inflation is expected to be steady at 3.1% - with the "core" rate ebbing to 3.7% from 3.9% the prior month.
Led by another 2% drop in artificial intelligence bellwether Nvidia - which has now recoiled more than 7% since Thursday - the S&P500 and Nasdaq fell back again on Monday ahead of the inflation report. S&P500 futures firmed up slightly overnight, as has Nvidia itself.
Three of the so-called Magnificent Seven megacaps - Apple, Alphabet and Tesla - are still in negative territory for the year to date.
Dragging on sentiment yesterday were disappointing earnings updates from the likes of Broadcom and Marvell Technology, but shares in database giant Oracle surged more than 13% overnight after it beat estimates on demand for cloud-computing services due to the AI boom.
Boeing, however, has been a saga of its own.
Its underperforming stock was hit by another 3% drop on Monday after at least 50 people were hurt when a Boeing 787 operated by LATAM Airlines dropped abruptly mid-flight from Sydney to Auckland.
And its shares fell another 1% overnight on a New York Times report that the Federal Aviation Administration's audit of its 737 MAX production process - conducted after a panel blew off on an Alaska Airlines jet in January - failed 33 of 89 tests.
But perhaps the biggest impact of today's inflation news will be on Tuesday's latest $39 billion auction of 10-year Treasury notes.
Ten-year yields backed up to about 4.10% on Monday and held there overnight.
Fiscal policy twists were also in the background for Treasuries. U.S. President Joe Biden sketched his policy vision for a potential second four-year term on Monday, unveiling a $7.3 trillion election-year budget aimed at convincing sceptical Americans that he can run the economy better than Donald Trump.