Opening Bell: After Global Tech Stock Selloff, Value Shares, Indices Gain; Oil Up

 | Dec 29, 2021 07:11

  • Tech shares sell off
  • Cyclical rotation seen in Asia, Europe
  • China, Hong Kong underperform
  • h2 Key Events/h2

    Following Tuesday's declines during the Wall St. session, which included a selloff of both tech stocks and small caps, on Wednesday, futures contracts on the S&P 500, Dow Jones, NASDAQ and Russell 2000 all moved higher while European stocks extended their rally. Earlier Wednesday, Asian shares retreated, mirroring yesterday's New York trading.

    Yields rose and the dollar crawled higher.

    h2 Global Financial Affairs/h2

    All four major US benchmark contracts were in positive territory on Wednesday morning with both the tech-heavy, NASDAQ 100 futures and small cap value Russell 2000 futures outperforming for the second day in a row.

    As we noted previously, this is an unusual paring considering the two indices represent opposing types of equities. Technology stocks benefit from a stay-at-home environment, while small caps thrive in an open economy. The tandem pairing could be a sign investors are trying to figure out, as another rocky pandemic year comes to a close, where things may be headed next as the word endures another coronavirus wave thanks to the Omicron variant.

    Also noteworthy, the divergent valuations of the two indices. While the NASDAQ 100 is up 26.85% for the year with just two more trading day sin 2021, outperforming its peers, the Russell 2000 gained 'just' 13.75%, lagging the other major US benchmarks. In other words, there is no specific rhyme or reason for the joint performance during thin trading over the holiday week. Perhaps too it's simply investors readjusting portfolios before the end of 2021 based on personal needs.

    Banks and retail companies led the STOXX Europe 600 higher, extending the benchmark's gains to the third day in a row. The tech stock selloff that started in the US yesterday and continued in Asia earlier today has acted as a drag on the pan-European index, signaling a clear cyclical rotation on the continent.

    Asian benchmarks broadly declined after a similar picture on Wall Street. MSCI's broadest measure of Asia-Pacific stocks excluding Japan fell 0.3%, ending a six-day winning streak. China's Shanghai Composite lost 0.91% of value, and Hong Kong's Hang Seng dropped 0.83% on China's crackdown on overseas IPOs.

    Australia's ASX 200 was the region's bright spot, rising for the fifth straight session, gaining 1.21% to close at a 3-1/2 month high even as the land down under's most populous state, New South Wales, reported 11,201 new COVID cases.

    On Tuesday, US shares slumped, ending a four-day winning run for the longest streak in close to two months. The S&P 500 dipped 0.1% from its 69th record close for the year.

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    The 30-component, mega cap Dow Jones Industrial Average, was the only index that actually gained, up 0.26%. Its value shares were led by aerospace and defense giant Boeing (NYSE:BA) whose stock climbed almost 1.5% after Indonesia lifted its ban on the company's MAX 737 jet.