Opening Bell: Dollar, Yields Drop on Renewed Sino-U.S. Tension; Futures Slip

 | Oct 16, 2019 07:16

  • China warned it would take 'strong measures' after U.S. Congressional lawmakers expressed support for Hong Kong protestors
  • Yesterday, U.S. stocks climbed to four-week high on earnings optimism, with the S&P 500 topping 3,000 intraday
  • Gold falls despite U.S. asset risk-off

h2 Key Events/h2

With tensions increasing between the U.S. and China over ongoing events in Hong Kong, U.S. futures contracts are slumping. Asian stocks ignored geopolitics during this morning's trade and instead followed yesterday’s U.S. session higher, focusing on optimism regarding corporate earnings results and a potential Brexit deal.

Contracts on the S&P 500, Dow Jones and NASDAQ have recouped some of their losses, but remain lower nonetheless. The unease ahead of the U.S. open comes after China threatened countermeasures in response to a U.S. House bill supporting Hong Kong protestors.

h2 Global Financial Affairs/h2

European futures were flat today, as if traders were clinging to a middle ground, unable to decide between the rallies in Asia or the losses in U.S. futures.

Except for China’s Shanghai Composite (-0.4%), all Asia-Pacific benchmarks were in the green. Australia, (+1.27%), beat regional indices. South Korea's KOSPI advanced 0.71%, maintaining gains after the country's central bank cut interest rates for the second time in three months, matching a record low in order to combat increasing deflationary pressures.

During yesterday’s U.S. session, stocks hit a four weak high on earnings beats. Health Care and Financial shares tracked the broader equity activity. The NASDAQ Composite jumped more than 1.2%, while the S&P 500 topped 3,000 on an intraday basis for the first time in three weeks.

U.S. yields, including for the 10-year Treasury note, dropped along with global rates, as Brexit deal optimism increased.