Opening Bell: Oil Climbs Above $25; U.S. Futures Rise, Global Stocks Mixed

 | May 06, 2020 06:54

  • Yesterday’s Fed warnings failed to deter investors in the face of a return to business
  • The recent oil crash, followed by its forceful rally, demonstrates structural problems seen across all asset markets
  • h2 Key Events/h2

    All four major US contracts—for the S&P 500, Dow Jones, NASDAQ and Russell 2000—advanced on Wednesday while European shares slipped. Asian regional indices were mixed, as hopes of economic recoveries grow ahead of the easing of US lockdowns, while European shares were pressured by uneven earnings results and additional negative data.

    Yields climbed on increased risk-off sentiment. The dollar was flat.

    h2 Global Financial Affairs/h2

    The pan-European STOXX 600, opened lower, but is now relatively flat. Mixed earnings results and ongoing US-China discord continue to weigh on markets. Still, it’s difficult to reconcile that narrative with the fact that both US futures and Chinese shares gained.

    This morning, Asian stocks pushed higher after China allowed its yuan to rise. That was seen as a gesture of good will by Beijing to the US, a way, perhaps, of relieving renewed pandemic-related trade tensions.

    South Korea’s KOSPI surged 1.75%, outperforming the region. Australia’s ASX 200 lagged, (-0.4%), as investors took profits after two days of robust gains.

    Yesterday, US stocks pared gains in the final 45 minutes of Wall Street trading after Fed Vice Chairman Richard Clarida warned that all the stimulus thus far is insufficient to support the economy and the government will need to do more. St. Louis Fed President James Bullard admitted that the unprecedented Fed stimulus is “very much an experiment.”

    President Donald Trump reiterated his charge that COVID-19 and the devastation it's brought is China’s fault, reawakening concerns of a trade war. The earlier rally reversed, but the S&P 500 Index still advanced 0.9% on a gap and the tech-heavy NASDAQ finished up 1.13%.

    The yield on the U.S. 10-year note climbed for a third day and moved past 0.67%.