European equities rebound
European stock indices were a touch weaker first thing. As across the Asian-Pacific regions, investors have been spooked by rising global bond yields on inflation worries and ongoing geopolitical uncertainty. But all the European majors began to rally soon after the open as traders noted some early strength across US stock index futures.
In fact, the Euro Stoxx 50 and German DAX soon recouped all their losses from yesterday, although the gains for the French CAC and UK’s FTSE 100 were far more modest.

Source: TN Trader
The US/Iran war remains a concern, as it is now approaching the three-month stage. Oil prices remain elevated, and this is feeding into fears that inflation is taking off around the world.
Last week saw the release of hotter-than-expected US inflation numbers, particularly wholesale inflation, which analysts expect to feed back into consumer prices. This has seen US Treasury yields climb sharply. Yesterday, the yield on the 30-year Treasury Bond hit 5.19% - its highest level since 2007, just before the Great Financial Crisis. European government bond yields have also risen sharply.
This reflects growing expectations that global interest rates will have to stay higher for longer, thanks to the surge in energy prices due to the Middle East conflict, and particularly the closure of the Strait of Hormuz.
Meanwhile, the UK’s inflation data surprised in a good way. The CPI rose 2.8% year-on-year in April, below the 3% anticipated, and down from 3.3% previously. But the fall was largely attributed to the impact of an energy price cap introduced by regulator Ofgem earlier this year, and inflation is expected to rebound later this year.



















