Oil Briefly Tops $115, Stock Futures Wobble - WSJ
By: Caitlin Ostroff (WSJ)
U.S. stock futures crept down while oil prices continued to surge, as investors monitored Russia's invasion of Ukraine and how a jump in commodities prices is likely to impact inflation and the Federal Reserve's monetary policy.
Futures for the S&P 500 edged down 0.2% Thursday. The broad-market index shot up Wednesday. Contracts for the tech-focused Nasdaq-100 declined 0.4% and futures for the Dow Jones Industrial Average fell 0.2% Thursday.
U.S. crude prices briefly surged over $115 a barrel for the first time since 2008, before trading at $113.78 a barrel, as refiners balked at buying Russian oil , reducing the global energy supply. Brent-crude futures, the international benchmark, rose 1.6% to $114.68 a barrel. Investors are worried that a prolonged elevation in oil prices could herald a combination of slowing growth and higher inflation, known as stagflation.
“The inflationary impact of oil and natural gas surges is clear. Inflation is going to be stickier. Interests rates will be pushed up by central banks worried about inflation and that will be bad for growth,” said Edward Park, chief investment officer at U.K. investment firm Brooks Macdonald . “Stagflation is the big concern for 2023.”
European natural-gas prices edged down 5% after surging this week. Investors are worried that supply of natural gas could be disrupted to Europe as a result of the war. About a third of Russian gas exports to Europe flow through Ukraine, according to analysts.
Moscow’s invasion of Ukraine has injected volatility into broader markets. Investors are trying to assess how a shunning of Russian commodities, including oil, will feed into already elevated inflation and how aggressively central banks will raise interest rates when faced with additional price pressures and an uncertain economic outlook. Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell said Wednesday he would propose a quarter-percentage point rate increase at the central bank’s meeting in two weeks.
Shares of energy companies that are likely to benefit from higher oil prices gained premarket . ConocoPhillips and Occidental Petroleum each rose about 1%. Snowflake shares dropped more than 20% premarket after the company issued weaker-than-expected sales guidance . Okta shares fell almost 5% after the software business provided guidance that suggested aggressive investment would spur greater-than-expected near-term losses to the bottom line.
The pan-continental Stoxx Europe 600 fell 0.6% Thursday. Russian stock markets remained closed for the fourth consecutive day as the government seeks to limit a firesale, having also imposed capital controls on the ruble.
The London Stock Exchange Group has suspended trading in more than 50 Russian stocks . Index providers MSCI Inc . and FTSE Russell have said they will cut Russian equities from their benchmarks next week and S&P Dow Jones Indices is considering doing the same.
The ruble dropped 13.1% Thursday against the greenback to 118 rubles to the dollar, according to FactSet . Traders say investors’ and brokers’ unwillingness to touch the currency has limited the ease with which they can trade it. Currencies of nearby countries have fallen against the dollar as well, as investors worry about economic spillover. The Polish zloty fell 1.4%, and the Hungarian forint declined 0.6%.
In U.S. bond markets, the yield on the benchmark 10-year Treasury note ticked up to 1.866% from 1.862% Wednesday. Yields and prices move inversely.
Major stock indexes in Asia largely gained. South Korea’s Kospi jumped 1.6% and Japan’s Nikkei 225 rose 0.7%. China’s Shanghai Composite fell 0.1%.
A quarter percent interest rate increase? They really hate increasing the interest rate. Who are these people? Are there any Paul Volker's on the horizon?
It sounds like things are going from bad to worse.
Gas rose 10 cents a gallon at the Kroger pumps yesterday. Large increases on multiple items inside the store. The worst is yet to come because of Biden
And $7 a barrel in a day's time.
Up 40 cents here since two weeks ago. Was $3.09 back two weeks. Now $3.49