Opening Bell: Trade Optimism Buoys Futures, Global Equities; Oil Slips

 | Sep 13, 2018 06:20

  • Asian indices halt slide
  • State-owned Chinese stocks outperform in Hong Kong
  • Euro, sterling in a holding pattern ahead central bank meetings
  • h2 Key Events/h2

    Shares in Europe gained this morning, as optimism for renewed trade negotiations drove markets higher. This same sentiment earlier spurred a rebound in Asia, halting the most extended selloff for regional markets since 2002.

    US futures for the S&P 500, NASDAQ 100 and Dow, though relatively flat at time of writing, remain in positive territory, suggesting their underlying indices will open higher than where they finished yesterday's mixed session. The euro and pound are in a holding pattern ahead of today's key ECB and BoE policy meetings. Traders will be looking for clues as to exactly when each of the central banks will attempt to move toward tighter monetary policy without slowing local economic growth.

    h2 Global Financial Affairs/h2

    The pan-European STOXX 600 gained more than 0.2 percent, the fourth out of five sessions that the index advanced, adding a total of 1.2 percent. However, the benchmark’s moves were fueled by miners, but limited by declines in utilities shares.

    Earlier today the MSCI Asia Pacific Index climbed for the first time in 11 sessions, though it closed marginally lower, down 0.03%. Hong Kong's Hang Seng outperformed the region, jumping 2.54 percent, with shares of Chinese state-owned companies leading the advances. The turnaround follows news that US Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin invited a group of Chinese officials to renew trade negotiations, just days after President Donald Trump threatened to slap additional tariffs on nearly all Chines goods.

    China’s Shanghai Composite gained 1.15 percent, half of the boost seen in Hong Kong shares, as local investors priced in the lower outlook for economic growth on the mainland.