Opening Bell: Futures, European Shares Rise Despite Multiple Risks; Oil Up

 | May 07, 2020 07:14

  • China exports beat expectations
  • As a result, U.S. futures and European shares rise, but not Asian indices
  • NFP expected to report a 22 million loss of jobs on Friday
  • h2 Key Events/h2

    US futures for the Dow Jones, S&P 500, Russell 2000 and NASDAQ climbed on Thursday, along with European shares. They all bucked the slump in Asia as investors weigh multiple risk drivers, including the safety of reopening economies and rising US-Sino tensions, combined with the possibility of some horrifying, fresh economic data.

    Yields rebounded. The dollar fell.

    h2 Global Financial Affairs/h2

    We've noticed a pattern of US futures rising after declines of their underlying benchmarks during the previous day's trade. Is this a market disagreement or perhaps an intervention by the plunge protection team ?

    This morning, contracts on the S&P 500 erased all of Wednesday's losses. Contracts on the four major US indices were up at least 1%, with futures for the Russell 2000 outperforming yet again (1.3%). The e-mini Dow brought up the rear, albeit it a still respectable 1.18% at time of writing. This morning's rally comes after most of US indices snapped a two-day uptick yesterday, with the NASDAQ Composite the only guage to finish in the green (+0.5%).

    Today's positive move in futures comes even as markets await today's Labor Department release of Initial Jobless Claims, which are expected to show an additional 3 million people filed for unemployment benefits in the past week, which will bring the US well above the 30 million mark hit after last week's report.

    The Stoxx Europe 600 Index also offset yesterday’s drop, reportedly after Chinese exports surprised well to the upside. This offset a series of grim earnings results and a warning from Air France KLM SA (PA:AIRF) that demand could take “’several years’” to recover.

    Another question we can ask, though not necessarily answer, is, why would European shares benefit from rising China exports, while China itself, along with other regional indices, declined. Perhaps it's the fallout of China being in the crosshairs of President Trump’s renewed trade war rhetoric amid a pandemic that pressured Asian shares.

    Japan’s Nikkei 225 was the only major Asian benchmark that gained, (+0.3%), when trading resumed after a long holiday.

    During yesterday’s Wall Street session, equities took a step back—on mixed earnings and worsening economic conditions—ending the first two-day rally since late April. However, Apple (NASDAQ:AAPL) and Microsoft (NASDAQ:MSFT) pushed higher, boosting the NASDAQ.

    The S&P 500 Index slumped.