S&P 500 Retreats as Oil Eyes $80 and June CPI Tests Inflation Fears
Updated
Updated · tastylive · Jul 14
S&P 500 Retreats as Oil Eyes $80 and June CPI Tests Inflation Fears
3 articles · Updated · tastylive · Jul 14
Summary
The S&P 500 pulled back from the top of its mid-May trading range after a failed breakout, with equities falling alongside Treasuries and gold as the market revived its broad “war trade.”
Crude drove the turn lower: renewed fighting near the Strait of Hormuz and President Donald Trump’s move to reimpose an Iranian oil blockade pushed prices back above resistance and toward a retest above $80 a barrel.
June CPI is expected to show headline inflation easing to 3.8% from 4.2%, but that relief largely reflects May-June energy declines that have already reversed with oil’s latest surge.
Core services inflation is the deeper concern, having accelerated before the war; Fed minutes tied sticky price pressure to AI-led demand, while futures now imply 39 basis points of tightening this year.
That mix raises the risk that the Fed stays hawkish as consumers weaken, leaving a stock market already struggling near record highs vulnerable to a broader growth slowdown.