Opening Bell: Global Equity Selloff Continues, Bonds Stabilize

 | May 30, 2018 07:30

  • Financials lead global equity slump

  • Unprecedented Italian bond selloff reignites fears over broader EU debt crisis

  • Soros warns against largest financial crisis since 2008

  • US presses ahead with tariff plans, China says it stands ready to fight back

  • Oil's slide continues

  • h2 Key Events/h2

    The global equity selloff widened in Asian and European trade this morning. Heightened prospects of political instability in Italy spreading through the continent and US-China relations coming to a new deadlock reawakened investor fears that the first synchronized global growth in a decade may abruptly come to an end.

    The Trump administration announced on Tuesday it was moving ahead with a 25 percent duty on $50 billion worth of Chinese imports—whose final list will be unveiled by June 15—and stepping up restrictions on China's access to sensitive US technology. Hours later, China’s Commerce Ministry said Beijing stood ready to fight back to protect the country's national interest, adding the latest move by the US was "unexpected" and at the same time "within expectations."

    Europe’s STOXX 600 slid, but US futures are currently in the green: the S&P 500, NASDAQ 100 and Dow are all signaling that today's US session could be headed higher. It would be a confirming sign that the global equity dip-buying which picked up on Tuesday may be warding off a deeper selloff, at least for now. This comes on the heels of the earlier retreat of safe haven assets such as the yen, gold, and US Treasurys.