Opening Bell: Fears Of Sputtering Economy, Tapering Pressure Dollar, Stocks

 | Sep 09, 2021 06:51

  • Economic slowdown and stimulus easing now conflicting market themes
  • Oil fluctates
  • Bitcoin recovered
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    US futures contracts on the Dow, S&P, NASDAQ and Russell 2000 as well as European shares extended a slide in trading on Thursday on fears of slowing economic recovery after US nonfarm payrolls disappointed last week and the prospect of central banks beginning to tighten monetary policy.

    Despite US Treasuries rallying, the dollar fell. 

    Global Financial Affairs/h2

    All four US futures were in the red today—Russell 2000 contracts were the deepest, 0.5% in negative territory, as of the time of writing while NASDAQ 100 contracts were outperforming, down just 0.2%. This paradigm may suggest a reversal of the reflation trade.

    Small caps underperformed in yesterday’s Wall Street session during which the S&P 500 Index suffered its longest rout in two months and the NASDAQ 100 had its worst fall in two weeks. The Russell 2000, which mainly includes small-cap, domestic firms plunged 1.13%

    Equities in Europe this morning followed Asian regional benchmarks into negative territory, on speculation the European Central Bank could be getting ready to announce when it will start to pare its bond purchasing program. The STOXX 600 Index fell 0.8% to a three week low, led by travel stocks (-1.8%), technology shares (-1%) and automakers (-1.4%). The UK's FTSE 100 dropped 1.1%, underperforming the region. Germany’s DAX declined 0.3% to a monthly low. 

    Asian stocks also headed south, tumbling the most in two weeks, on a continued regulatory clampdown in China on the tech sector and fears that global central banks will announce the removal of supports, just when the economy may be starting to sputter. The MSCI’s broadest index of Asia-Pacific stocks excluding Japan was down over 1.25% in its worst daily rout since mid-August, when markets were nervous about tapering by the Us Federal Reserve.

    The slide in US markets yesterday may be the result of conflicting market themes. On the one hand, having reached sky high valuations, tech shares are being sold off on the prospect of the long-anticipated removal of central bank safety nets. On the other hand, cyclicals are suffering from the ongoing social restrictions in place due to the global coronavirus pandemic. For now, both are falling, with value stocks underperforming, having provided superior results so far this year. 

    Treasuries rose for the second day, pushing yields on the 10-year Treasury note down, back to the possible neckline of a H&S bottom or the top of a symmetrical triangle.