Opening Bell: Stocks Climb On Dovish Fed; Yields Tumble; USD Consolidates

 | Jan 31, 2019 05:30

  • Global stocks climb on Fed’s dovish tone, Apple earnings relief
  • Dollar, Treasury yields tumble post-Fed statements
  • U.S. stocks reach downtrend line since 2018 peak
  • h2 Key Events/h2

    European stocks and futures on the S&P 500 and NASDAQ 100 extended an advance this morning as robust corporate results and a dovish tilt by the Fed prompted investors to increase risk.

    Energy firms helped the STOXX 600 climb for a third day after Shell (AS:RDSa) posted solid earnings.

    Meanwhile, Facebook's (NASDAQ:FB) upbeat earnings and record profits drove NASDAQ futures higher. Fourth quarter revenue of $16.91 billion marked a year-over-year growth rate of 30.4 percent for the social media giant, while other key metrics confirmed an upward trend: daily active users reversed the earlier downtrend to grow in every geographic area, after the measure had dropped in Europe and plateaued in the U.S.. Average revenue per user, or ARPU, at $7.37 crushed analyst estimates, marking a 21 percent increase from the previous quarter and a 19 percent annual increase.

    Interestingly, the company also confirmed it is has hired three veteran privacy law activists—strengthening signs of a turn-around plan after last year's user data scandal.

    Earlier, during the Asian session, regional shares edged higher despite China's manufacturing PMI contracting for the second consecutive month. While the reading confirmed a downward trend, investors may have focused on the fact that it also showed a slight improvement from the previous figures. Alternatively, they may have disregarded Chinese data altogether and focused on the Fed and Apple (NASDAQ:AAPL) tailwinds, as well as on hopes for a U.S.-China trade resolution.

    China’s Shanghai Composite gained 0.35 percent and Hong Kong’s Hang Seng ticked 1.08 percent higher. Japan’s Nikkei climbed 1.06 percent. South Korea’s KOSPI retreated slightly (0.06 percent) while Australia’s S&P/ASX 200 underperformed, falling 0.37 percent.

    h2 Global Financial Affairs/h2

    In Wednesday's U.S. session, shares opened higher on Apple’s earnings relief, and extended their advance on reassurance by the Fed that it will maintain a wait-and-see approach on its tightening path. Chair Jerome Powell said the central bank will be “patient” on future interest rate hikes and “flexible” on its path to reducing its balance sheet.