U.S. stock futures inch higher ahead of key U.S. inflation data By Investing.com


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By Scott Kanowsky

Investing.com — U.S. stock futures edged slightly higher on Tuesday, as investors awaited the release of fresh inflation data out of the world’s largest economy.

At 07:00 ET (12:00 GMT), the contract was up 44 points or 0.13%, traded 9 points or 0.24% higher, and tech-heavy gained 46 points or 0.37%.

Price growth is set to be squarely in the spotlight, with traders eager to closely study the January for clues over how many more interest rate hikes the will authorize this year.

With the data looming, the major indexes posted gains on Monday. The blue-chip closed up 377 points or 1.11%, the broad-based rose by 47 points or 1.14%, and the rallied by 174 points or 1.48%.

Shares in Europe, particularly in Germany, France, and the U.K., are providing a strong handover to U.S. dealmaking. Helping the tone has been the data that showed the U.K.’s labor market remained relatively resilient despite the country’s economic woes.

The held at 3.7% in the three months to December, while the fell almost 13,000 in January, instead of rising by nearly 18,000 as expected. That said, the pace of growth in basic pay in Britain sped up again in the last three months of 2022, adding to the Bank of England’s worries about inflationary pressures in the economy.

Meanwhile, a revised release confirmed quarterly growth of 0.1% in the currency area in the final quarter of 2022, resulting in of 1.9%. The has raised interest rates by 3 percentage points since July and is expected to continue with at least another percentage point of increases before rates peak as inflation remains elevated.

In the corporate sector, Palantir Technologies Inc (NYSE:) its first-ever quarterly profit, as well as a top- and bottom-line beat in the final three months of 2022, as a ramp-up in customers bolstered performance. Shares in the data analytics firm were up more than 18% in premarket trading.

Other earnings stateside today include Coca-Cola Co (NYSE:) and Marriott International Inc (NASDAQ:), as well as home-sharing website Airbnb Inc (NASDAQ:) after the bell.

Oil prices slipped Tuesday after the U.S. government surprised the market late Monday by saying it would release more crude from its strategic reserve.

The U.S. Department of Energy announced it would sell 26 million barrels of oil from its Strategic Petroleum Reserve, defying expectations that such a move would be delayed (or canceled) after the DoE released a record 180 million barrels from the reserve in 2022 to combat rising fuel prices.

By 07:00 ET, futures fell 1.45% to $78.98 a barrel, while the contract dipped 1.07% to $85.68 a barrel.

Additionally, traded 0.19% higher at $1,867.00/oz, while move up by 0.32% to 1.0754.

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