US stock futures are rising weakly amid choppy trading as investors analyze a series of high-profile second-quarter earnings, looking for clues about the impact of high inflation on companies. Bonds have also surged.
Contracts on the tech-heavy Nasdaq 100 slumped by about 0.3% under pressure from Snap Inc.'s poor results. Futures on the S&P 500 fell from session lows after American Express Co. reported record earnings and raised full-year forecasts.
The Stoxx50 index added 0.6%, closing the week in positive territory.
Global stocks remain on course for their best week in a month, paring this year's equity market rout to about 18%. Speculation that the worst of the selloff has passed is partly behind the move. Angst about the damage from inflation and rapidly rising interest rates is proving hard to shake, despite a tempering in expectations of just how aggressive the Federal Reserve will be.
"It's still very early days but we've seen numerous cases now of earnings surprises driven by the 'it's not as bad as we feared' argument," Craig Erlam, a senior market analyst at Oanda, said. "That's a relief of course, but surely not a case for a sustainable rebound."
Underscoring recession fears, Treasuries extended an advance, pushing the 10-year yield to around 2.8%. Meanwhile, German short-term bonds soared as investors trimmed bets on European Central Bank rate hikes after weaker-than-expected PMI data in the region fanned fears of a recession. US PMIs are due at 9:45 a.m.
The focus will now be on next week's Fed meeting. The central bank is expected to raise interest rates again to curb soaring inflation.