Opening Bell: Global Stocks Jump On Trade Bullishness; Treasurys Sell Off

 | Nov 04, 2019 07:21

  • U.S. futures, European shares rally on trade bullishness
  • Global bonds rise as Treasurys sell off, with yields signaling a potential drag on stocks
  • Oil climbs on Saudi Aramco IPO
h2 Key Events/h2

Futures on the S&P 500, Dow and NASDAQ 100 rallied this morning while global bonds edged higher on a Treasurys sell off. Driving the surge was a boost in trade optimism, after U.S. President Donald Trump said on Friday he could sign a deal with China by the end of the month and, on Sunday, Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross promised U.S. companies a license to sell components to Huawei “very shortly."

Contracts on all four major U.S. indices gapped up and extended an advance, building on Friday’s fresh records for the S&P 500 and the NASDAQ Composite.

Europe's STOXX 600 also started the week on the right foot, climbing 0.89% by late European morning. Fifteen out of 19 industries advanced, led by miners and car makers ahead of an expected trade deal between the world’s two largest economies. The climb marked the second day of gains, to the highest level since Jan. 23 2018—just 3.15% below its April 15 2015 record.

Earlier in Asia, Hong Kong’s Hang Seng (+1.65%) rallied to a three-month high on trade hopes, even as unrest in the city resumed, with China urging a tougher response to what it characterized as “wanton violence.”

South Korea’s KOSPI (+1.43%) gained and the won reached a four-month high, having suffered the most from the trade fallout among the region's currencies.

h2 Global Financial Affairs/h2

On Friday, U.S. equities closed the week higher, to bring the current rally to over four weeks. Unlike the SPX and tech benchmark, however, the Dow ended 0.04% below its July 15 record close.