Opening Bell: New Headwinds Pressure Futures, Shares Lower; Gold Falls, USD Up

 | May 21, 2020 07:33

  • US Senate overwhelmingly votes to increase scrutiny on Chinese firms listed on US exchanges
  • Global stocks and US futures retreat, threatening to end a rally boosted by optimism that a return to business activity and stimulus would bring a recovery
  • h2 Key Events/h2

    All four major US contracts declined on Thursday, at least 0.7% for NASDAQ futures and up to 1.2% for futures on the Russell 2000, though at the time of writing the NQ and RTY have turned higher. Still, along with futures for the Dow Jones and S&P 500, all contracts continue to trade in the red along with European shares. Earlier, Asian markets closed mixed.

    Treasurys advanced, but gold fell on dollar strength. A Bitcoin selloff eased.

    h2 Global Financial Affairs/h2

    The retreat from yesterday's rally on Wall Street has no single specific catalyst, but rather reflects a variety of immediate headwinds including weak economic data out of Asia this morning, the escalation of global confirmed coronavirus cases past 5 million, and another act brewing in the reactivated US-China trade tiff. Yesterday, the US Senate overwhelmingly passed a bill that could ultimately force Chinese companies now trading on US exchanges to delist while barring others from going public on US markets.

    The bipartisan bill, approved by unanimous consent, demonstrates a growing consensus that China has not been fair in trade. It now has to clear a House vote before it can be signed into law. Nonetheless, this is a big win for US President Donald Trump. It will also almost certainly encourage him to increase his anti-China rhetoric, such as that the Asian nation's “incompetence” on COVID-19 caused “mass worldwide killing .”

    Investors are finding this relentless discord between the world’s two largest economies and biggest trading partners a disturbing development, just when a rally in equities pushed the S&P 500 Index to its highest point since March 6. The benchmark gained yesterday, for the fourth day out of five.

    European stocks retreated this morning as investors braced themselves for eurozone PMI data ahead. All 19 sectors pulled the Stoxx Europe 600 Index down. The pan-continental index opened lower and extended the decline.

    Asian shares were mostly lower as well. Japan's April Trade Balance came in significantly below expectations, and even Exports, which surprised to the upside, were simply not as bad as feared—though the numbers weren't exactly good. The Nikkei 225 closed down 0.21%; China's Shanghai Composite fell even more (-0.55%). South Korea’s KOSPI bucked the trend (+0.44%), rising for a fifth day, its longest rally of the year. According to Reuters , the index continued its upward trajectory on a lingering positive outlook amid reopening economies and stimulus from both the US and China, offsetting the geopolitical headwinds that weighed on other regional benchmarks.

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    With the return of risk-off, investors redirected funds from equities into Treasurys, pushing yields down.