Opening Bell: Dollar Surges, Bitcoin Plunges As Global Equities Sell Off

 | Jan 11, 2021 06:52

  • Markets turn risk-off on worries of overheating as virus continues to spread
  • Germany sees coronavirus 40,000 deaths despite harshest restrictions
  • COVID-19 cases resurge in China
  • Key Events/h2

    The dollar surged and Bitcoin plunged on Monday as US futures contracts, including on the Dow, S&P, NASDAQ and Russell 2000 slipped from records posted by underlying benchmarks, while European stocks retreated from 10-month highs.

    Traders attribute the selloff to profit-taking amid spiking coronavirus cases in Europe, as well as China reporting}} its biggest daily increase in cases in five months, which hit energy and mining shares.

    Global Financial Affairs/h2

    The seesawing market narrative once again swung from optimism on COVID-19 vaccines and US fiscal stimulus to pessimism of unsustainable valuations amid a global pandemic that seems to only get worse with time.

    In Europe this morning, the STOXX 600 Index dropped 0.4% but was off earlier 0.6% lows, after Germany—the continent’s economic steam engine—suffered 40,000 deaths despite imposing some of the harshest pandemic restrictions. Oil producers BP (LON:BP), Royal Dutch Shell (AS:RDSa) and Total (PA:TOTF) sold off after China—the world’s biggest oil importer—announced a lockdown in Shijiazhuang, the Hebei province's capital and the epicenter of the new outbreak.

    The dollar rallied after US yields, including on the 10-year Treasury note, jumped, rewarding savers, but weighing on dollar-denominated commodities and mining stocks.

    Bitcoin suffered a free-fall of nearly 16% from Friday’s close.