Futures Rebound As Hopes Of Imminent Recession Spark "Bad News Is Good News" Reversal
Futures Rebound As Hopes Of Imminent Recession Spark "Bad News Is Good News" Reversal In a world where bad news is good news, and where the looming recession means an end to rate hikes and a start to easing, it didn''t take algos long to bid stocks up as treasury yields tumbled after comments by Jerome Powell and dismal PMI data in Europe justified fears that a global downturn is now just a matter of when, not if. After initially sliding more than 1% late on Wednesday, futures rebounded and recovered all losses and were last trading near Wednesday''s session highs, up 0.7% or 27 point to 3,790, while Nasdaq futs were up 0.9% at 11,375 as of 715am ET. 10Y yield initially dumped below 3.10% - near a two week low, after trading at 3.50% one week ago - before bouncing modestly, while the Dollar pushed higher as the euro tumbled after after a series of very poor European PMI prints confirmed that Europe''s runaway inflation is pushing the continent into a stagflationary recession, which in turn sent the yield on German 10-year bonds slumping as much as 21 basis points, poised for the biggest two-day decline since November 2011.
Futures Rebound As Hopes Of Imminent Recession Spark "Bad News Is Good News" Reversal
Futures Rebound As Hopes Of Imminent Recession Spark "Bad News Is Good News" Reversal In a world where bad news is good news, and where the looming recession means an end to rate hikes and a start to easing, it didn''t take algos long to bid stocks up as treasury yields tumbled after comments by Jerome Powell and dismal PMI data in Europe justified fears that a global downturn is now just a matter of when, not if. After initially sliding more than 1% late on Wednesday, futures rebounded and recovered all losses and were last trading near Wednesday''s session highs, up 0.7% or 27 point to 3,790, while Nasdaq futs were up 0.9% at 11,375 as of 715am ET. 10Y yield initially dumped below 3.10% - near a two week low, after trading at 3.50% one week ago - before bouncing modestly, while the Dollar pushed higher as the euro tumbled after after a series of very poor European PMI prints confirmed that Europe''s runaway inflation is pushing the continent into a stagflationary recession, which in turn sent the yield on German 10-year bonds slumping as much as 21 basis points, poised for the biggest two-day decline since November 2011.