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Michael Reinking: Markets in Consolidation, What Oil, Yields, and Earnings Season Mean for Investors

Michael Reinking, senior market strategist at the New York Stock Exchange, joins Johny Fernandez live from the NYSE floor to break down a split morning in markets, Nasdaq climbing on a chip stock rebound while the Dow struggles to recover from the previous day’s selloff.

He puts the Iran re-escalation in context: markets are largely discounting a major escalation, oil prices have stabilised near their 200-day moving average, and the overnight strikes appear to be moving toward negotiation rather than further conflict. The wildcard, as always, is whether it holds.

On the ten-year yield pushing toward 4.6%, he points squarely at next week’s inflation data as the real driver to watch, not the geopolitics. The re-escalation has put a bid back under oil prices, complicating the path to moderating inflation and prompting markets to price in one to two rate hikes. Reinking himself doesn’t see the Fed moving, he thinks they’re on hold and have no incentive to act.

His overall read: we’re in a consolidation phase, and the real catalyst is earnings season. The numbers will likely be strong, but as Samsung showed this week with an 18x earnings beat that still saw the stock fall, strong numbers don’t automatically mean strong returns. The question is whether tech companies signal any demand slowdown in the back half of the year.

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