Global markets move on a combination of easing Middle East tensions and upcoming US inflation data that is expected to shape Federal Reserve expectations. After a sharp US sell-off on Friday, driven by a “hawkish” market repricing following strong payrolls, futures extend gains as tech and small caps rebound. Oil prices ease as reporting indicates Iran and Israel halt further tit-for-tat strikes, alongside comments from President Trump that a US-Iran framework for a nuclear deal is progressing and that Israel should avoid escalation. Brent and WTI fall from earlier spikes, and this supports risk sentiment and modestly firmer fixed income performance.

The main macro focus is Wednesday’s US May CPI release and Thursday’s PPI, which feed into the Fed’s preferred PCE measure. Forecasts cited across sources expect headline CPI to rise back above 4% year over year, with core inflation edging higher. Energy prices are expected to be a key driver for headline inflation, while markets also scrutinize shelter and broader pass-through into services. Economists also monitor ADP, NFIB, trade data, jobless claims, and the University of Michigan survey.

Internationally, attention remains on central bank decisions and inflation releases, including the ECB’s expected rate hike and policy developments in Canada, the UK, Japan, and China data ahead of the US inflation prints.