Opening Bell: Asia Soars But U.S. Futures Reverse; Gold, Yen Climb

 | Jan 07, 2019 05:30

  • European shares, US futures slip after Asian rally
  • Gold, Treasurys, yen rise confirming risk off
  • Dollar posts further signs of topping out
  • Trade talks, upbeat jobs data, Fed's dovish shift help US majors soar
  • h2 Key Events/h2

    Futures on the S&P 500, Dow and NASDAQ 100 and European shares slipped into negative territory this morning, reversing the upbeat trend seen in Asia earlier today as well as in the US on Friday. US equities wrapped up last week by posting their best daily session since June 2016 on signs that the US and China are finally making progress on trade talks as well as on an employment report that beat analysts' expectations.

    Europe's STOXX 600 gave up early gains, led by Germany’s DAX—whose listed companies are particularly sensitive to exports amid a global trade war. Similarly, basic resources, also sensitive to tariff headwinds, ranked among the biggest gainers in the early European morning, climbing 1.2 percent, along with other trade sensitive sectors.

    Chipmakers were also recovering from last week's heavy losses, sparked by Apple's (NASDAQ:AAPL) shock revenue warning on Wednesday. AMS (SIX:AMS), which supplies the iPhone maker, was up more than 8 percent.

    During the Asian session, regional equities started the week on the right foot with an exuberant rally, following last week's upbeat US jobs data, signs of policy easing from China and hints by the Fed that it will keep market conditions under consideration when fine-tuning interest rate hikes.

    China’s Shanghai Composite advanced 0.72 percent, as the PBoC cut reserve requirements for banks and high-level representatives from the US and China begin talks in Beijing today.

    Hong Kong’s Hang Seng climbed 0.82 percent. Shares of China Mobile (HK:0941) gained 1.11 percent after Nomura upgraded the phone company's rating to "buy" from "neutral," citing its strong position for the "imminent" next-generation 5G wireless standard.

    Japan’s Nikkei outperformed regional peers, edging 2.44 percent higher. Automaker Toyota (T:8015) surged 3.15 percent.

    South Korea’s KOSPI ticked 1.34 percent higher, helped by steelmaker Dongbu Steel (KS:016380), which leaped 2.34 percent after the firm announced it will issue new shares to raise funding. Samsung (KS:005930) advanced 3.47 percent.

    Australia’s S&P/ASX 200 closed 1.14 percent higher, with most sectors in the green. The materials sub-index benefited from trade negotiation optimism, climbing 2.22 percent as shares of major miners gained ground; Rio Tinto (AX:RIO) was up 2.69 percent, Fortescue Metals Group (AX:FMG) gained 3.26 percent and BHP Billiton (AX:BHP) jumped 3.03 percent.

    h2 Global Financial Affairs/h2
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    On Friday, US shares soared on robust employment data, rising participation rate and robust wage growth. All major indices advanced at least 3 percent, with the NASDAQ Composite gaining as much as 4.26 percent. Overall, the gains marked one of the steepest daily ascents of the current bull market. The question is whether they underscored persistent strength or just additional volatility within a downward trend.