U.S. Opening Bell: Tech Selloff To Continue As U.S. Policy Tightens; BTC Slips

 | Jan 06, 2022 06:59

  • Fed minutes revealed a faster path to higher interest rates 
  • Uncharacteristically, bonds sold off with stocks
  • Oil advanced
  • h2 Key Events/h2

    After the release of the latest Federal Reserve meeting minutes on Wednesday, US markets took a dive, with the growth stock-heavy NASDAQ and small cap Russell 2000 each plunging over 3%.

    Most Asian benchmarks followed Wall Street lower on Thursday, while futures on the NASDAQ remained in negative territory though contracts on the Dow Jones, S&P 500 and Russell 2000 recovered and at time of writing were trading in positive territory...but only just. The minutes indicated that the US central bank is more ready to tighten policy, and earlier than many expected.

    The dollar was flat while gold slumped.

    h2 Global Financial Affairs/h2

    After a volatile session yesterday, US contracts this morning trimmed earlier losses, with contracts on the Dow and S&P wavering but edging into positive territory. Futures on the Russell are currently outperforming though they too have been fluctuating. At time of writing contracts on the NASDAQ 100 are lagging.

    This paradigm may suggest that while investors are rotating capital from the technology sector into value stocks on the Dow, they are undecided about domestic firms listed on the Russell 2000 as they are most sensitive to any lockdowns amid the current coronavirus surge globally due to the Omicron variant. Also, both the NASDAQ 100 and Russell 2000 outperformed in 2021 as investors moved between the extremes of growth and value.

    In Europe, the STOXX 600 Index opened 1.25% lower after the minutes revealed US policymakers were more hawkish than investors realized. Fed members focused on the difficult hiring environment and stubborn inflation which could lead to interest rate hikes sooner than the market had priced in.

    The singlemost impactful item in the minutes was probably the Fed's willingness to reduce its holdings in Treasuries and mortgage-backed securities to the tune of $8.3 trillion, drying up available liquidity.

    The release caught the equity market off guard—something the Fed takes great pains to avoid—after the central bank had already announced last year the accelerated reduction in its stimulus program and shortened the timeframe to interest rate hikes.

    Traders were forced to readjust portfolios, including quickly unloading stocks and bonds. Longer-dated Treasuries suddenly seemed more expensive, as the dollar's value was set to rise, and current yields became unattractive in a higher-rate environment. Shorter-dated bonds fared better as investors are not locked in, so their funds will be available for newer issues whose payouts would reflect higher interest rates.

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    After outperforming last year, technology and small caps underperformed yesterday. 

    The yield on the 10-year note reached as high as 1.7444, the same as on Mar. 31, 2021, which was the highest since Jan. 24, 2020, when COVID-19 was just an issue in Asia.