Opening Bell: Futures Pop On Signs Of U.S.-China Trade Progress; Oil Climbs

 | Dec 31, 2018 05:38

  • Futures markedly higher on Trump's and Xi Jinping's upbeat remarks
  • European shares mostly flat
  • Oil rebounds from Friday's fall, confirming instability
  • h2 Key Events/h2

    Futures on the S&P 500, Dow and NASDAQ 100 rallied this morning, perhaps a last-ditch attempt by US equities to end the worst year of the current, long-standing equity bull market on an upbeat note. Chinese President Xi Jinping's reported confidence that China and the US can meet halfway and seal an agreement "as early as possible" added to Trump's messages, on Saturday, of "big progress" on trade to shore up market sentiment.

    The STOXX Europe 600 was up for a second day buoyed by miners and retailer shares in the early session, though it later eased to neutral levels. The pan-European benchmark is still set for a 13 percent loss on the year—the worst annual performance for the benchmark since 2008.

    In the earlier Asian session, most regional exchanges were closed for the holiday, including China, Japan and South Korea. Xi Jinping's comments helped Hong Kong’s Hang Seng gain 1.34 percent, though the advance could be the result of traders flocking to the only open market in the region.

    h2 Global Financial Affairs/h2

    On Friday, US equities paused their upward trajectory after a two-day rally that included the biggest daily reversal since 2010; clearly investors were not willing to take on yet more risk over the weekend. Last week's shortened holiday-week started with the worst Christmas Eve session ever, which was followed, right after Christmas, by the largest daily advance since the Great Recession. Holiday trading is now likely to get thinner, as trader indecision hampers activity.

    The S&P 500 dropped 0.12 percent to close the week, though it still managed to hold onto its first weekly gain of the month.

    The Dow Jones Industrial Average slipped 0.33 percent lower on last week's final day of trade. The NASDAQ Composite slowed, reaching a standstill, closing 0.08 percent higher. The Russell 2000 outperformed, climbing 0.38 percent.