Opening Bell: Futures Buck Global Selling; S&P 500 Hits 14-Month Low

 | Dec 18, 2018 05:30

  • Futures bounce back ahead of Fed
  • Yields, dollar fall, gold and yen jump on risk-off
  • S&P 500 sinks to 14-month lows
  • Futures on the S&P 500, Dow and NASDAQ 100 found their footing this morning, though European shares took their cues from Asian losses following yesterday’s broad Wall Street selloff. The prevailing risk-off mood meant that, despite the fact that tomorrow's expected Fed rate hike is weighing on equities, US Treasury yields and the dollar slipped lower while gold and the yen gained ground.

    After a lower open, the STOXX Europe 600 was further pressured by oil stocks, which tracked falling crude prices. Royal Dutch Shell (LON:RDSa) in particular tumbled 1.8 percent on reports it is mulling an $8 billion bid to acquire Texas-based Endeavor Energy Resources—almost half the price at which the US oil producer had valued itself. The pan-European benchmark is trading at the bottom of the session, above last week’s low—putting the index close to a two-year low.

    Earlier, during the Asian session, regional indices slipped after investors, already besieged by a barrage of headwinds, were disappointed by the lack of signals about China's commitment to opening its economy, from the keynote speech by Chinese President Xi Jinping, at the start of the country's Central Economic Work Conference.

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    In the US session, all four major indices lost at least 2 percent, with the S&P 500 closing at the lowest level in 14 months on mounting concerns that another rate hike would cause further volatility in a backdrop already clouded by trade wars, Brexit and US government shutdown risks.