U.S. Opening Bell: Futures, Stocks, Oil Wobble Amid Omicron-Related Disruptions

 | Dec 27, 2021 06:41

  • Some investors wonder whether Omicron risks were prematurely dismissed as worries escalate
  • Oil slumps as traders weigh demand risks
  • h2 Key Events/h2

    US futures for the Dow Jones, S&P 500, NASDAQ and Russell 2000, along with European stocks, all struggled to rally on Monday amid significant travel disruptions caused by the Omicron variant during the holiday weekend.

    Treasury yields fell and the US dollar rose.

    h2 Global Financial Affairs/h2

    At time of writing, contracts on the S&P 500 and NASDAQ 100 were trading in the green, while Dow Jones futures were flat even as Russell 2000 futures were lower. This paradigm—a reversal of the cyclical rotation—is the roadmap for investing according to a world subject to social restrictions.

    Value stocks, most associated with the opposite ends of the market cap spectrum—since the Dow lists mega-cap blue-chip shares and the Russell 2000 is home to small-cap domestic firms—are struggling today. Conversely, growth shares, as represented by stocks on the tech-heavy NASDAQ 100 and the S&P 500, which is currently overweight technology firms, are gaining.

    In Europe, a slump in the energy sector—tracking lower oil prices—offset an advance in real estate stocks, forcing the STOXX Europe 600 Index to give up a rally.

    Developments out of China were a case of good news/bad news for investors. On the one hand, over the weekend, China saw its worst daily jump in COVID cases in 21 months, with infections more than doubling in the northwestern city of Xian. On the other hand, the Sino central bank, the PBoC, promised more significant support to the country's economy. The Shanghai Composite remained flat, reflecting investor ambivalence.

    South Korea's KOSPI underperformed regional peers, losing 0.43% of value, followed closely by Japan's Nikkei 225 which declined 0.37%.

    Markets in Australia, Hong Kong, the UK, and Canada are closed today for an extended Christmas holiday.

    Yields on the 10-year Treasury fell for a second day, as investors increased their safe-haven positions.