Opening Bell: Futures Up, USD Down Signaling Clashing U.S. Election Outcomes

 | Nov 03, 2020 07:06

  • U.S. stocks once again in positive territory over past 3 month period
  • Investors rotate out of overvalued pandemic stocks, into undervalued stocks beaten by lockdowns
  • Treasury yields continue rising
  • h2 Key Events/h2

    Heading into U.S. elections on Tuesday, three of the four futures contracts on major Wall Street indices—for the Dow Jones, S&P 500 and Russell 2000—are all up more than 1%, while futures for the NASDAQ are +0.8%, potentially signaling that the underlying benchmark may underperform for a second day. A second day rebound for the indices, despite mounting virus cases, could be flagging a possible win for President Donald Trump’s reelection bid.

    On the other hand, the USD slipped lower this morning, which some see as "net-short positioning ahead of the U.S. vote" suggesting "the dollar is somewhat less protected on the downside in the event of a Blue wave" in anticipation of a Biden victory.

    h2 Global Financial Affairs/h2

    U.S. stocks have been a statistical indicator for presidential outcomes since 1928, based on whether they are up or down within the three months prior to an election and have provided 100% accuracy since 1984 on an incumbent's chances. On Monday, stocks closed back in positive territory, which might signal a Trump victory, just as in 2016 they declined prior to the elections, foreshadowing the loss of Democratic candidate Hilary Clinton (then the incumbent party).

    Of course, anything can actually happen.

    This morning, the Stoxx Europe 600 Index opened higher and extended a recovery rally from a five-month low to its third day. Growth-sensitive cyclical stocks like oil and gas providers along with miners and bank shares led the gains. French international banking group BNP Paribas SA (PA:BNPP) surged 4.6% after posting a profit beat thanks to accelerated trading revenue.

    Earlier, during the Asian session, regional indices finished firmly in green territory, with most major benchmarks closer to a 2% gain. Australia’s ASX 200, Hong Kong's Hang Seng and South Korea’s KOSPI led the gainers.

    For Australian markets, it was the best session in almost a month after the country’s central bank trimmed interest rates and launched QE. South Korean shares gained the most in almost five months as the local mood was positively influenced by strong factory output data from major economies, including the U.S., China and the eurozone, easing concerns about another recession amid the continuing global pandemic resurgence.

    Ironically, despite’s China data “soothing some nerves ” ahead of the uncertain U.S. election, the Shanghai Composite lagged, (+1.4%), while Japan was closed for a holiday.

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    Yesterday, American equities rebounded from their worst slump since before the March lows, as dip buyers sought bargains in energy, materials and industrials shares, hoping Tuesday's election would finally remove the current primary risk to markets—the ongoing anxiety regarding what the next government might look like.

    The Dow Jones Industrial Average outperformed, (+1.6%), while the NASDAQ drooped (+0.4%), as shares of Apple (NASDAQ:AAPL) and Amazon (NASDAQ:AMZN) were sold off as investors stepped back into beaten down stocks that provide better value.

    The return of risk-on appetites also prompted investors to sell off Treasuries.