Opening Bell: Futures, Stocks Rise Ahead Of Unpredictable Q1 Earnings; Gold Up

 | Apr 14, 2020 05:20

  • All four major U.S. contracts gain over 1%; NASDAQ futures near 2%
  • Dollar edges lower, extending a drop
  • Oil prices remain precarious
  • h2 Key Events/h2

    Contracts for the S&P 500, Dow Jones and NASDAQ, along with stocks in Europe and Asia, all advanced on Tuesday, on light volume. This display of risk-on vigor occurs even ahead of, arguably, the most unpredictable earnings season in market history which begins in earnest later today. Of course, the biggest global risk, the continuing spread of COVID-19, remains a factor too; as of this writing, total confirmed cases worldwide are over 1,921,000 and the number of fatalities is at 119,730. 

    The U.S. dollar was sold off for a fourth straight day. Gold headed toward $1,800.

    h2 Global Financial Affairs/h2

    U.S. futures took advantage of trading volume that was more than 30% below average for most Asian markets. Contracts on all four major U.S. indices jumped more than 1% this morning, with the Russell 2000 futures outperforming, posting a 1.9% gain, at the time of writing. 

    In addition, European futures rose, with the Euro Stoxx 50 up 0.3%. France’s CAC 40 led the charge, surging 1.6%, while the German DAX was sluggish with just a 0.2% advance.

    Asian digital boards all flashed green as well, with regional markets rebounding after China trade data beat expectations, even amid ongoing concerns over the economic impact of the pandemic. China’s March exports dropped only -6.6%, a fraction of the -14% plunge expected. The mainland's Shanghai Composite gained 1.59%, Australia's ASX 200 rose 1.87% and Japan’s Nikkei 225 surged a whopping 3.13%.

    Yesterday on Wall Street, American equities dropped, ahead of the great unknown of upcoming earnings results and of course the continuing spread of coronavirus. Financial institutions are the highest profile reports this week, including from mega cap lenders such as JPMorgan Chase (NYSE:JPM), Citigroup (NYSE:C) and Wells Fargo (NYSE:WFC).

    Still, the S&P 500 closed well above the day's lows, trimming losses to 1% from an earlier 2.5% decline. Technology (+0.22%) and Communication Services (+0.15%) were the only sectors in the green. As a result, the tech-heavy NASDAQ Composite gained 0.57%, even as the other three major indices declined.

    Nevertheless, equities have inexplicably ended a bear market in a record three weeks and started a new bull run, even with so many looming risks on the horizon and as the U.S. endures its worst unemployment since the Great Depression. There's one substantial difference between then and now, however: the gold standard. Now, the USD is backed only by the Fed's largess as it provides the QE stimulus manna to increasingly fearful investors. We can't help but wonder if markets will eventually demand real 'food.'

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    One tech giant currently being 'nurtured' significantly by current lockdown fundamentals is e-tailer Amazon (NASDAQ:AMZN).