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Premarket: U.S. stock futures fall over shaky Mideast truce; inflation in focus

U.S. stock futures fell on Thursday after the indexes rallied in the previous session, as cracks emerged in the fragile Middle East ceasefire, while investors awaited a key ⁠domestic inflation ​reading later in the day.

President Donald Trump vowed to retain military assets in the Middle East until a peace deal was reached with Iran and warned of a major escalation if it failed to comply, a day after fighting in the region continued despite Tuesday’s ceasefire.

Tehran ​warned that there would be no deal unless Israel ceases bombing ‌Lebanon.

Few signs of traffic moving through the Strait of Hormuz heightened uncertainty around energy shipments, leading to a rebound in oil prices, though they remained below US$100 a barrel. U.S. energy stocks inched slightly higher in premarket trading.

The S&P 500 and the Nasdaq posted their biggest one-day jumps in over a week on Wednesday, as ‌global markets ​cheered the two-week ceasefire, while the ‌Dow marked its steepest rise in a year.

“While the crisis’ peak is likely behind us, and ​markets appear to think that is the case, it may ⁠still be too early to aggressively extend risk,” said analysts at BCA Research.

“With ⁠volatile headlines and rhetoric shifting… Hormuz flows will determine whether any truce is truly working. Risk assets could still rally ​even if kinetic attacks continue, provided Hormuz shows credible signs of reopening.”

At 07:10 a.m. ET, Dow E-minis were down 226 points, or 0.47 per cent, S&P 500 E-minis were down 28 points, or 0.41 per cent, and Nasdaq 100 E-minis were down 88 points, or 0.35 per cent.

On Thursday, investors will parse the personal consumption expenditure figures for February – the Federal Reserve’s preferred inflation ⁠gauge – with economists polled by Reuters expecting the PCE index to hold steady at 2.8 per cent, unchanged from January.

A final reading of economic growth in the fourth quarter will also be watched.

Friday’s consumer prices index number for March will grab the spotlight as investors wait to see the economic impact of elevated oil prices stemming from the conflict.

Money market participants are expecting only about 30 per cent chances ⁠of a 25 basis-point interest rate cut by end-2026, compared ​with a 56 per cent chance a day ago, per LSEG-compiled data.

They expected two cuts this year before ⁠the war broke out, while bets for a rate hike in December had also risen during the conflict.

Minutes from the central bank’s ‌March meeting showed on Wednesday a growing group of policymakers felt last month that rate hikes might be ​needed to counter inflation that continued to exceed the central bank’s 2 per cent target, especially as the war drove up prices.

Among premarket movers, Applied Digital shares dropped 3.8 per cent after the data center operator’s third-quarter net loss widened from a year earlier.

Coreweave jumped 7 per cent after the cloud ​infrastructure firm announced an expanded US$21 billion cloud deal with Meta Platforms.

Reuters

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