Forex

investingLive Americas FX news wrap 27 Feb: Inflation, credit stress, & geopolitics weigh


2026-02-27 21:51:00

The North American session evolved into a steady shift toward caution as markets moved away from early stability and into a broader risk-off tone. What began as a data-driven session ultimately turned into a reassessment of risk across multiple fronts —

  • inflation persistence,
  • emerging credit concerns, and
  • rising geopolitical uncertainty.

Equity markets struggled to gain traction throughout the day, with sellers gradually taking control as investors digested stronger-than-expected inflation data and signs of stress building beneath the surface of financial markets. By the close, the major US indices finished lower, capping a difficult February for growth-oriented stocks.

The NASDAQ led declines for the month with a decline of -3.3%, highlighting continued pressure on valuation-sensitive sectors, while the Dow showed relative resilience as capital rotated toward more defensive and cyclically stable names. The broader message from equities was clear: investors are becoming less comfortable with the assumption of imminent Federal Reserve easing, and the concerns about AI pace continuing.

Inflation back in focus

The catalyst reinforcing caution for inflation came from the latest US producer price data. January PPI surprised to the upside (2.9% versus 2.6% expected), reminding markets that inflation pressures remain sticky even as growth stays firm.

This combination is particularly challenging for risk assets. Strong growth normally supports equities, but when accompanied by persistent inflation, it instead implies policy may remain restrictive longer than investors had anticipated.

Supporting data painted a picture of an economy that is slowing only modestly:

The takeaway was not economic weakness — but rather economic resilience that delays rate cuts, a dynamic markets increasingly view as unfavorable for equities.

Credit concerns emerge beneath the surface

While macro data shaped the backdrop, the most notable equity theme came from sharp selling in private-equity-linked firms. Shares across the sector fell aggressively, signaling rising investor concern about leveraged finance exposure and private credit valuations.

Key declines included:

  • Jefferies −10.3%

  • Apollo −8.4%

  • KKR −7.3%

  • Ares −7.1%

  • Goldman Sachs −7%

The selling followed warnings tied to collateral shortfalls and leveraged loan exposure, reviving fears that higher interest rates are beginning to pressure financing structures built during the ultra-low-rate era.

Importantly, markets reacted not just to one event, but to what it potentially represents — hidden fragility within private credit markets.

Geopolitics adds another layer of uncertainty

At the same time, geopolitical risks intensified as headlines surrounding potential Iran-related strikes circulated through the session. The uncertainty helped keep risk appetite contained and added an additional inflation premium through energy-market sensitivity.

The geopolitical backdrop reinforced defensive positioning rather than triggering panic, but it contributed to the steady erosion of equity momentum as the day progressed.

Commodities respond: silver surges

One of the clearest expressions of the day’s macro shift appeared in commodities markets.

Silver surged more than 6%, benefiting from a combination of forces:

  • renewed inflation concerns after PPI,

  • safe-haven demand amid geopolitical tensions,

  • continued structural industrial demand tied to electrification themes.

Gold also remained firmly supported, reflecting growing demand for real assets as investors hedge both inflation and macro uncertainty.

Cross-market message

Across asset classes, markets appeared to be transitioning away from the early-year “soft landing with rapid easing” narrative toward a more complex late-cycle environment.

The session revealed several emerging themes:

  • Higher-for-longer rate expectations returning

  • Credit sensitivity becoming a market focus

  • Rotation away from leverage and duration risk

  • Demand increasing for inflation hedges and real assets

Rather than a single catalyst driving markets, the day reflected a convergence of pressures — inflation persistence, financial-system stress signals, and geopolitical risk — each reinforcing the others.

Bottom line

The North American session marked a subtle but important shift in tone. Economic data continues to show resilience, but that strength is now working against risk assets by keeping monetary policy restrictive. At the same time, cracks appearing in leveraged finance and rising geopolitical tensions are encouraging investors to reduce exposure to riskier segments of the market.

In short, markets are beginning to trade less on optimism about growth and more on risk management and capital preservation — a transition that often defines the later stages of a cycle.

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