Opening Bell: Historic Brexit Breakthrough Sends Stocks, Pound, Euro Flying

 | Oct 17, 2019 07:33

  • U.S. futures, European shares rebound as British PM and EU leaders seal final Brexit deal
  • Pound, euro rally on U.K.-EU deal
  • U.S. Treasury yields leap
  • Oil drops on surprise stockpile surge
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Key Events
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European shares and futures on the S&P 500, Dow and NASDAQ 100 staged a rebound from an early slide this morning, as an historic breakthrough on Brexit eclipsed trade caution as well as some additional red flags on the economic data front.

The STOXX 600 opened lower with mining shares, while the pound threatened to end its rally as Northern Irish Party DUP spurned the latest Brexit proposal by British Prime Minister Boris Johnson. However, the tide turned in the late European morning as Johnson and the European Commission's President Jean-Claude Junker confirmed a deal had been sealed in Brussels—ending three years of thorny negotiations between the two blocs and internal political twists in the U.K., including a tormented change of leadership in the ruling Conservative party.

The pan-European benchmark, cable and the euro all rallied on the news—though, technically, the Brexit agreement still has to pass a vote in the U.K. House of Commons on Saturday.

Meanwhile, earnings results were mixed, with Unilever (LON:ULVR)'s quarterly growth missing expectations and Nestle (SIX:NESN) unveiling a buyback. Ericsson (ST:ERICb) badly missed EPS expectations but beat on revenue, increasing its sales target for next year.

Earnings season remains in the spotlight on the other side of the Atlantic too, as companies including Coca-Cola, AMD and oil services provider Schlumberger (NYSE:SLB) prepare to report their corporate results in a climate of ongoing skepticism over U.S.-China trade accords. Investors are growing doubtful about a lasting trade truce between the two economic powers after last week’s round of talks failed to yield an official agreement. Further clouding the macro background are the dismal September retail sales figures and the “slight modest pace” of economic growth flagged by the Fed Beige Book.

In the earlier Asian session, Australia’s S&P/ASX 200 underperformed while South Korea’s KOSPI, Japan’s Nikkei 225 and China's Shanghai Composite all closed in negative territory.

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