Two-year Treasury yields hit a three-month high at 4.72% on Friday, with 10-year yields at 3-month peaks too - homing in on 4% for the first time since November.
Perhaps just as worrying for the Fed and investors alike is
the rise in 10-year "breakeven" inflation expectations to 2.41%
- their highest in a year.
Jarring for many indebted emerging economies around the
world, the dollar is surging again. The dollar's DXY index hit its highest since early January and is now up 3.5%
from this month's lows, with the dollar/yen pairing reaching the highest level of the year so far.
So as impressive as this week's stock market resilience had
been to the new inflation and rates environment, it appears to
be buckling again already. The S&P500's 1.4% loss on
Thursday was its biggest in a month, the Nasdaq had its
worst day of the month so far and S&P futures are deep in the
red again on Friday. Share markets around the world shivered
too.
Overseas, the UK's FTSE 100 blue-chip index and
France's CAC 40 fell back from this week's record highs
- with the earnings season still in full swing in Europe.
NatWest shares plunged 9% after it warned rising
interest rates may not deliver the long-lasting earnings bonanza
investors hope for, even though profit jumped by 33% last year.
There was some better news in UK retail and hopes of a
breakthrough in Britain's log-jammed post-Brexit trade talks
with the European Union.
Key developments that may provide direction to U.S. markets
later on Friday:
* U.S. Jan import and export prices, leading indicator. Canada
Jan producer prices.
* U.S. Federal Reserve Board Governor Michelle Bowman and
Richmond Federal Reserve President Thomas Barkin speak. Bank of
France chief François Villeroy de Galhau speaks.
* U.S. corporate earnings: Deere, PPL, Centrepoint Energy.
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Jobless claims U.S. retail stocks versus the market A mixed UK shopping bag Lenovo's sales decline ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^>
(By Mike Dolan, editing by Emelia Sithole-Matarise
mike.dolan@thomsonreuters.com. Twitter: @reutersMikeD)