Opening Bell: U.S., China Data Bust Hits Futures; Yields Resume Their Plunge

 | Mar 27, 2019 06:18

  • U.S. futures, European shares slip on downbeat U.S., Chinese data
  • 10-year Treasury yields resume their slide, posting further signs of caution
  • New Zealand join dovish central banks; ECB's Draghi downbeat on economy
  • h2 Key Events/h2

    European shares slid after opening higher and futures on the S&P 500, Dow and NASDAQ 100 hovered in red territory this morning, as a plethora of data misses continued to roil investor sentiment.

    The STOXX 600 fluctuated around yesterday’s closing price, initially climbing with automakers and miners shares. The early attempt to shrug off disheartening economic figures from the U.S. and China gave way to worries around global central banks' accommodative turn, with ECB President Mario Draghi signaling economic caution in a speech on Tuesday. The upcoming round of high-level U.S-.China trade talks, taking place in Beijing on Thursday and Friday, also kept markets under pressure.

    Yesterday, U.S. housing starts fell from 1.273 million to 1.162 million, missing the 1.213 million estimate, while building permits dropped to -1.5%, down from +1.4%, also missing the -1.3% expectation. Consumer confidence also slipped in March, to 124.1 from 131.4 in February, according to data from the U.S. Conference Board.

    The pattern of weak data continued with China’s industrial firms, which posted their worst drop in profits for the months of January and February since 2011, plunging 14%. This follows the Chinese government's reduced economic growth target for the year, to 6.0-6.5%, from 6.6% growth in 2018.