Opening Bell: Trade Rally Dies Out On Risk-Off Flight; USD Weakens

 | Dec 04, 2018 05:30

  • Investors shed stocks, flee to safe-havens amid lack of trade deal details
  • Dollar weakens despite risk-off shift
  • 3 /5-year Treasury yield curve inverts for the first time in ten years
  • Oil extends bounce on OPEC+ supply cuts hopes, technically only a correction
  • Pound stages intraday rebound
  • h2 Key Events/h2

    Global stocks slipped lower alongside futures on the S&P 500, Dow and NASDAQ 100 this morning, as investors' initial euphoria around the weekend's US-China trade breakthrough met with the complex reality of the world’s two largest economies finding a formula that both sides could live with. US Treasurys, gold and the yen jumped as investors back-pedaled into safe-haven assets, while the dollar missed out on the risk-off wave and edged lower.

    The STOXX Europe 600 retreated from yesterday’s gains, though, technically, losses were muted relative to Asian counterparts. The decline of the pan-European benchmark is confirming yesterday’s shooting star, when the index gave up most of its intraday gains. The bearish candle stick increases the likelihood of the benchmark’s H&S continuation pattern, bearish after the near-10 percent decline between late September and late October.

    In the earlier Asian session, Japan’s Nikkei (-2.39%) led the regional slide, erasing all of yesterday’s gains amid a lack of details around the much publicized US-China tariff deal. Furthermore, the Chinese government failed to reciprocate US President Donald Trump’s upbeat tweets with an equally positive statement around a prospective deal—something that must have not sit well with investors who bought into the deal following the G20 summit.

    The explanation, by various unnamed Chinese officials, that President Xi Jinping had not yet returned from his trip and was therefore unable to comment on the key breakthrough is weak at best. Unless, of course, he doesn’t consider the 90-day tariff pause a breakthrough. We have recently suggested that the onus is on bulls and that US equities are weak. We also provided a contrarian trade to short the Dow from its premarket height.

    h2 Global Financial Affairs/h2

    Yesterday, global shares jumped on the prospect of a forthcoming trade deal, as well as on last week’s robust gains. The S&P 500 climbed 1.09 percent, extending last week’s rally—the biggest in nearly seven years. Energy (+2.22%) outperformed, tracking the near 4-percent jump in WTI crude, with Technology (+2.21) following close behind. Health Care (-0.48%) was the only sector closing in red territory.

    The Dow Jones Industrial Average rallied 1.13 percent and the NASDAQ composite outperformed its peers, gaining 1.51 percent.

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    Meanwhile, the Russell 2000 lagged as the only major index to fall short of a full percentage point gain (0.89%)