Opening Bell: Contradictory Themes Lift Futures, Global Shares; Gold Gains

 | Jul 21, 2020 06:56

  • Vaccine hopes instilled confidence, while “pandemic stocks” led the rally
  • Italian-German yield spread narrows, but German bonds also advance
  • NASDAQ indices score new records
  • h2 Key Events/h2

    After EU negotiations on an economic recovery spending plan were finalized on Tuesday, US futures for the S&P 500, Dow Jones, NASDAQ and Russell 2000 all pushed higher, along with global stocks. The boost extended yesterday’s rally which was triggered by AstraZeneca's promising results for a COVID-19 vaccine in early human trials.

    Nevertheless, the euro was flat and German Bunds rose for a second day.

    h2 Global Financial Affairs/h2

    We've frequently noted the contradictory narratives driving markets. Today’s dichotomy: risk sentiment has been buoyed by hopes for a vaccine, even though this rally is being led by tech stocks, which benefit from the stay-at-home environment generated by the coronavirus pandemic.

    If investors were to actually think it through, rather than betting on tech shares while banking on an end to the virus, they'd be better served by snapping up downtrodden value stocks. But then how often are markets—and their participants—actually rational?

    This morning, contracts on the four major US indices were up at least half-a-percent, with those on the Russell up more than 1.2% at time of writing.

    S&P 500 futures climbed after the benchmark index turned positive for the year. It was the contract’s third day of gains, bringing it to the highest point since Feb. 21, the Friday before the panicked coronavirus selloff occurred.

    Futures on the NASDAQ built on the record high hit yesterday by the underlying index, spurred by the return of investor appetite for companies that will profit during a pandemic.

    Tech shares were also responsible for today's rally of Europe's STOXX 600. The pan-European index hit a four-and-a-half month high, helped by auto shares as well, which pushed the benchmark to a higher open.