U.S. Opening Bell: Markets Slide On Russia/Ukraine Tensions; Gold Rallies

 | Feb 17, 2022 07:31

  • Traders monitoring geopolitical situation
  • Rising risk-off sentiment putting gold in an uptrend
  • Bitcoin falls further
  • h2 Key Events/h2

    On Thursday, US futures on the Dow Jones, S&P 500, NASDAQ and Russell 2000 stumbled and European stocks dropped on increased tension at the Ukraine border, offsetting positive corporate results.

    Oil slipped on the prospect of a nuclear deal between the US and Iran.

    h2 Global Financial Affairs/h2

    All four main US benchmark contracts were trading in the red this morning, with futures on the Russell 2000 underperforming, vying currently with contracts on the NASDAQ which have slipped lower. The small cap contract reversed its lead from yesterday. The tech sector remains under pressure because it is particularly sensitive to tightening monetary policy, as rising borrowing costs render the usual equity market leaders overpriced.

    European stocks fluctuated for the second day. Having traded in the red on Tuesday, the STOXX 600 Index still closed higher yesterday but was lower at the open today.

    According to reports, Russian-supported separatists have accused Ukraine of breaking a cease-fire agreement. It is essential to note that both sides regularly make such claims about the other. The Kremlin has periodically denied any intention to invade its neighbor to the west, despite the build-up of troops on the border, and now the US and NATO has accused Russia of lying about withdrawing troops yesterday.

    In Europe, French luxury goods group, Kering (PA:PRTP), opened 5.22% higher; the shares extended their climb to over 7% continuing their advance for a fourth day, after sales at its top brand, Gucci soared to more than pre-pandemic levels.

    UK-based Reckitt Benckiser (LON:RKT) opened 3.5% higher, despite announcing a pre-tax loss, after it reported strong sales and forecast like-for-like sales growth.