Opening Bell: U.S. Earnings Help Global Rally; U.S. Dollar Retreats; WTI Climbs

 | Aug 07, 2018 06:30

  • European stocks, futures boosted by Asian rebound on upbeat US earnings

  • S&P 500 hits highest close since January, but trade concerns hit materials and larger-cap stocks

  • Oil jumps as the US threatens to step up sanctions on Iran and Saudi Arabia posts lower output

  • Turkish lira nears record low on concerns over central bank’s independence

  • h2 Key Events/h2

    European equities and futures on the S&P 500, Dow and NASDAQ 100 flashed green on Tuesday, after Berkshire Hathaway (NYSE:BRKa)'s solid earnings report spurred a rebound across Asian indices.

    The pan-European STOXX 600 opened with a 0.22 percent upside gap and then extended gains, to 0.56 percent at 10.23 GMT. The rally was led by basic resources and carmakers, two of the most sensitive sectors to tariff jitters. Their outperformance signals that traders managed to shrug off geopolitical worries and focus on corporate growth.

    Earlier, during Asian trade, stocks bounced back from earlier losses that had been prompted by concerns that ongoing trade headwinds will end up halting the first synchronized global growth since the 2008 financial crisis.

    Ironically, Chinese shares led the regional comeback, with the Shanghai Composite jumping 2.74 percent (thereby wiping out Monday’s losses) and Hong Kong’s Hang Seng adding 1.54 percent to its two-day rally. Japan’s TOPIX gained 0.76 percent, also offsetting yesterday’s decline.

    h2 Global Financial Affairs/h2

    In the US session, equities advanced for a third straight day, after capping a fifth consecutive weekly gain on Friday. Financial shares and energy producers led the gains, buoyed by Berkshire Hathaway's strong results and higher oil prices respectively.

    The S&P 500 climbed 0.35 percent, with eight out of 11 sectors closing in positive territory. Communication Services (+1.00 percent) outperformed, while Real Estate (-0.21 percent) fared as the day's laggard. Materials (-0.03 percent) also edged lower, in a sign that heightened tariff risk was still playing on traders’ minds.

    The NASDAQ Composite rallied 0.61 percent and the Russell 2000 outperformed its peers with a 0.65 percent climb. The Dow Jones Industrial Average underperformed, inching 0.16 percent higher. Once again, the outperformance of small-cap stocks listed on the Russell versus mega-cap shares listed on the Dow—with the former being less dependent on exports and therefore less exposed to trade disputes—underpins lingering trade concerns.