Opening Bell: Fed, China Calm Markets, Boosting Stocks, Gold; USD Slumps

 | May 25, 2021 06:34

  • Markets bounce as inflation concerns ease
  • Yields slide
  • Oil remains buoyant
  • h2 Key Events/h2

    Contracts on the Dow, S&P, NASDAQ and Russell 2000 advanced on Tuesday along with European shares after comments from Federal Reserve officials—that inflation was not a concern—and a warning from Chinese regulators, that it has 'zero tolerance' for speculation in commodities, eased inflation concerns.

    Falling yields caused the dollar to slide to its lowest level of the year.

    Global Financial Affairs/h2

    In Europe, the technology sector led the STOXX 600 Index to a new all-time high, though at the time of writing the pan-European benchmark was off its highs, showing there remain some willing sellers.

    In the largest takeover in the history of European real estate, Vonovia (DE:VNAn) plummeted almost 7% because it agreed to buy competitor Deutsche Wohnen (DE:DWNG) for $23 billion. Wohnen, by contrast, leaped over 15% to a record.

    Earlier today, Asia was painted green, as regional benchmarks tracked yeserday's rally on Wall Street after inflation concerns faded. The region’s main equity gauges climbed with MSCI’s broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan up 1.3% at a two-week high. China’s Shanghai Composite jumped 2.4%, outperforming peers.

    On Monday, Fed officials again downplayed inflation risk, stating that surging prices are simply because of unleashed pent-up demand amid a receding pandemic, which will stabilize as economies return to normal. Therefore, inflation will only be temporary and not upend an economic recovery.

    China, the world’s second largest economy did its part to rein in inflation worries, threatening business executives with severe punishments for excessive speculation and spreading fake news.

    In yesterday’s US session, technology shares led the rally. Ten of the 11 S&P 500 sectors were in the green. Utilities was the only sector in the red. Technology (+1.8%) and Communications Services (+1.8%) were the obvious outperformers, as growth stocks benefit the most from an outlook of lower inflation. By contrast, Financials (+0.5%) was among the laggers, as lower inflation means a narrower profit margin in the largest part of its business, loans.