Opening Bell: Futures Rise, European Shares Soar As Markets Eye Reopening

 | Jun 02, 2020 07:10

  • Investors choose optimism over risk, pushing global shares, futures higher
  • Dollar extends selloff, while yields and gold are flat
  • Oil holds above $36
  • h2 Key Events/h2

    Futures for all the major US indices—the S&P 500, Dow Jones, NASDAQ and Russell 2000—reversed higher on Tuesday, erasing earlier losses. Investors were weighing conflicting macro economic fundamentals: promises of more government liquidity and a restarting global economy versus grim economic data and continuing social unrest in the US as well as simmering trade tensions between Washington and Beijing. Optimism clearly prevailed and European shares opened markedly higher.

    Oil inched up while the US dollar continued slipping.

    h2 Global Financial Affairs/h2

    Despite the worst economic data since the Great Depression and warnings by the Fed and the IMF that the economic slump could be more severe than expected and last longer than anticipated, traders have been bidding up global stocks to three-month highs on the promise that worldwide reopenings would create a V-shape recovery—immediate growth to follow the contraction, with no downtime.

    The escalating tension between the world’s two largest economies might have also given investors pause that an economic recovery could be more difficult to achieve under trade war conditions, though not for long it seems. That's ironic since opening economies are already facing uphill battles as coronavirus cases in countries that have ended lockdowns spike. Plus the uncertainty around COVID-19, with more than 6 million confirmed cases and growing and a global fatality count of 375,987, will be harder to ignore than some might think.

    We don’t consider the current unrest in the US to be a source for long-term worries, though the event that caused the situation is both tragic and polarzing. Despite that, however, the US is still one of the most stable countries in the world.

    However, we are concerned that the Fed’s money printing will cause a spike in inflation that could get out of control, that a cold war between China and the US would depress growth for as long as it persists (or till world manufacturing and shipping are restructured). Plus, chief among our concerns is a still nonexistent cure for COVID-19.

    This morning, US futures were relatively flat, but have since picked up, with contracts on the S&P 500 and the Dow fluctuating though Russell 2000 futures are slightly higher.