US futures slide
US stock index futures fell sharply late Wednesday as oil prices resumed their surge in extended trading. The rebound in crude exacerbated concerns over higher inflation and what that could mean for the prospect of further monetary loosening. The S&P 500 retested support around 6,700 during the Asian Pacific session. But US futures then rallied off their overnight lows, reducing their early losses as Europe opened for business.

Source: TN Trader
Yesterday, the Dow, S&P 500 and Russell 2000 all ended down, while the tech-heavy NASDAQ eked out a gain of 0.1%. So far today, it is the small cap Russell which is showing the most weakness. Investors were rattled by news of Iranian attacks on oil tankers and energy infrastructure across the region.
This saw crude oil rally despite announcements from both the International Energy Agency (EIA) and the US government that they had decided to tap key reserves to provide a supply boost. The IEA said it would release 400 million barrels of crude oil from emergency reserves to offset supply disruptions linked to the Iran conflict. This would represent its largest release in the IEA’s history.
Meanwhile, the US Energy Secretary, Chris Wright, confirmed the release of 172 million barrels from the Strategic Petroleum Reserve. But there was no clear timeline for when the additional supply would reach markets.
In addition, these are effectively ‘one and done’ decisions as strategic reserves aren’t bottomless. In some respects, the news was negative for markets as it suggested some panic as hostilities across the Middle East intensified.
Technically, US stock indices remain in limbo. Looking at the S&P 500, support at 6,700 held overnight, and the market has not yet retested Monday’s low just south of 6,600. The bears need to get the index down further to retest the November low around 6,500 to really get the ball rolling. These levels seem a long way away. Yet the index appears to be rolling over, which makes a rebound to all-time highs around 7,000 an even trickier task.


















