Opening Bell: Futures, Stocks Gain On Fed Implications; Treasuries, USD Sell Off

 | Sep 23, 2021 06:38

  • Fed said bond purchase paring could start in November
  • Powell stresses taper not tied to interest rate decision
  • Gold failed to rise on weak dollar amid risk-on resurgence
  • Key Events/h2

    Wednesday's indication from the Fed that it will start paring monetary stimulus drove futures on the Dow, S&P, NASDAQ and Russell 2000 as well as European stocks higher in trading on Thursday ahead of the New York session open. 

    Bitcoin's recovery continued for a second day. 

    Global Financial Affairs/h2

    Yesterday, Fed chair, Jerome Powell stated that the central bank may start reducing its bond purchasing as early as November. However, he temporized, by stressing that this will have no implication on interest rates, softening what some may have otherwise considered a hawkish statement. Powell's aim was to be seen as flexible in an effort to avoid a so-called 'taper tantrum,' something that by and large, the Fed has been able to avoid thus far.

    All four US contracts were up significantly. In particular, futures on the Russell 2000 almost doubled gains on NASDAQ futures, indicating renewed expectations of economic expansion. The small cap index benefits from a recovery, whereas the tech benchmark excels amid a contraction.

    In Europe, the STOXX 600 Index advanced broadly. The reflation trade that appears to be dominating US futures was not as obvious there. While travel and leisure—sectors sensitive to a restarting economy—led the gains, so did technology stocks. All we can figure is that investors broadly consider prices to be at bargain levels after the recent selloffs.

    The sharp market declines earlier in the week were due to fears that China’s giant real estate developer, Evergrande (HK:3333), might default, causing the type of financial fallout brought on by the collapse of Lehman Brothers in 2008. 

    Markets calmed as Beijing pumped the local financial system with liquidity, indicating China won't echo President George W. Bush’s decision to let the investment bank collapse. Also, private negotiations led to an announcement by Evergrande that its September bond coupon would be paid, keeping a default away, for now.

    China’s Shanghai Composite and Hong Kong’s Hang Seng—where the property developer is listed—advanced slightly. The group’s shares, which rallied initially, trimmed gains, suggesting traders are not yet convinced the company is out of trouble, as it has failed thus far to publish a plan to reduce its more-than $300 billion debt burden. That leaves a level of uncertainty for adjacent, non-equity markets as well.

    Yields on the 10-year Treasury note jumped, as bond holders sold off at the prospect of an end to monetary stimulus.