Opening Bell: U.S. Futures, Global Equities Extend Gains; Gold Up; USD Falls

 | Apr 07, 2020 07:04

  • China reports zero COVID-19 related deaths for the first time since January
  • Global markets rally continues for a second day
  • UK PM Boris Johnson in ICU with worsening coronavirus symptoms, but sterling rises
  • S&P 500 completed short-term uptrend on Monday
  • h2 Key Events/h2

    Global stocks and U.S equity futures extended yesterday's gains on Tuesday, fueled by fresh signs that the coronavirus pandemic could be flattening in some global hotspots. As well, risk assets gained additional traction from Wall Street's buoyant Monday session. Nevertheless, the number of U.S. deaths from COVID-19 have now topped 10,000.

    Treasurys continued to sell off along with the U.S. dollar.

    h2 Global Financial Affairs/h2

    Contracts on the four main U.S. indices—the Dow Jones, S&P 500, NASDAQ and Russell 2000—have each climbed more than 3% at time of writing, with futures on the Dow Jones Industrial Average currently nearing the 4% mark. U.S. futures appear to have picked up where their underlying benchmarks left off yesterday. Each of the underlying indices gained more than 7% in New York trade yesterday, besting three-weeks highs.

    This morning European shares rose, pushing the pan-continental, Stoxx Europe 600 Index higher for the second day, to a near four-week high.

    Most of Asia was also in the green, with Australia’s ASX 200 reversing, (-0.65%), after the country's central bank, released pessimistic commentary in this morning's RBA rate statement on the country’s jobs market outlook. Financial shares led the declines. 

    China’s Shanghai Composite, (+2.05%), performed similarly to Japan’s Nikkei (+2.01%), both only slightly better than Hong Kong’s Hang Seng (+1.92%) or South Korea’s KOSPI (+1.77%).

    Of additional interest, Chinese shares have consistently outperformed even as other regional and global markets were sold off.  And this was true even when the country was ground zero, and later the epicenter, of COVID-19 related deaths. After reporting its first day with zero deaths (though many health workers and analysts are dubious), why today is its performance just on par with the rest of the region? Though the reasons aren't yet clear, it could be the mediocre gains are a result of profit-taking, or perhaps a lack of trust in the government data.

    Yesterday, Wall Street enjoyed the biggest equity market advance in nearly two weeks. During the final hour of trade, bulls rushed in, propelling the S&P 500 Index higher by 7%; the mega-cap Dow Jones soared 7.73%. The NASDAQ Composite jumped 7.33%. The small cap Russell 2000 outperformed, adding 8.69% of value.