Opening Bell: Stocks Fall On China Trade Data; Yen, Gold Climb; WTI Drops

 | Jan 14, 2019 05:30

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    Global equities and futures on the S&P 500, Dow and NASDAQ 100 dropped this morning, reinforcing the outlook that Friday's equity slip on Wall Street may be the end of a corrective rally within a downtrend. This would, in turn, confirm that the market stands inches away from a bear market, as seen during Christmas Eve's stock rout.

    Chinese trade data posted the worst performance since 2016, with imports falling 7.6 percent and exports sliding 4.4 percent lower, seen as a direct result of the country's trade war with the U.S. While the reading exacerbated preexisting fears of an economic slowdown, some investors may hope it sways U.S.-Sino trade talks toward a compromise.

    Meanwhile, however, trade-sensitive sectors such as miners and tech firms drove Europe's STOXX 600 lower.

    In the earlier Asian open, Hong Kong’s Hang Seng (-1.38%) took the hardest hit from China's trade data miss. Australia’s ASX 200 was unscathed, edging only 0.02 percent lower. However, the Aussie dollar was sold off, as its fate is tied to China, Australia's largest trading partner. Japan’s shares were spared, as local markets were closed for a holiday.