U.S. Opening Bell: U.S. Futures, Stocks Pause While Yields Rally; Oil Advances

 | Apr 05, 2022 07:02

  • Concerns of additional sanctions dent market sentiment 
  • Oil prices rally
  • Gold slips
  • h2 Key Events/h2

    US futures on the Dow Jones, S&P 500, NASDAQ 100 and Russell 2000 slipped and European stocks wavered in trading ahead of the New York open on Tuesday. The prospect of more severe sanctions being placed on Russia saw Treasuries sell-off and oil prices stiffen, both of which are headwinds for equities.

    The US dollar wobbled as investors moved out of Treasuries.

    h2 Global Financial Affairs/h2

    Equity market selloffs so far this year have been the result of rising global inflation and concerns about interest rate hikes. Rallies in Treasury yields were triggered by market expectations of interest rate hikes, which make bonds more attractive to investors than equities.

    The Treasury yield curve, a leading indicator of a recession, inverted. The yield curve inverts when shorter-dated bonds provide a higher yield than longer maturity issues which means investors are not willing to commit to the long term as they believe newer notes will provide higher yields as interest rates rise.

    After yesterday's tech rally on Wall Street—which saw the NASDAQ close up 1.9% while the Russell 2000 barely moved higher, ending the day up 0.05%—this morning, futures on the small cap index were outperforming though they've since reversed lower. The tech sector was lifted on Tuesday by the surprising news that Tesla (NASDAQ:TSLA) founder and CEO Elon Musk bought a 9% stake in Twitter (NYSE:TWTR), making him the largest shareholder of the social media platform . 

    On Tuesday, European stocks listed on the STOXX 600 Index opened higher but slipped into negative territory on concerns of stricter sanctions against the world's second largest oil exporter. 

    Asian stocks also joined the tech-led rally, though thin trading provided bulls with little resistance, as China and Hong Kong markets were closed for a holiday. Japan's Nikkei 225 and Australia's ASX 200, both rose 0.19%, outperforming the main regional benchmarks.

    Treasury yields on the 10-year note rallied, but the focus was on the yield curve which has been inverted for three days straight. At the time of writing, the 2-year yield is 2.4671%, whereas the 10-year yield is just 2.449%. Though some analysts are concerned that a recession could be in the cards, others argue the yield inversion is not as significant this time.