Opening Bell: U.S. Futures, Global Stocks Rebound; Oil Pressured, Gold Flat

 | Sep 14, 2020 07:21

  • Markets rally on positive COVID-19 vaccine news
  • Equities buoyed by significant corporate acquisition announcements
  • Oil under pressure ahead of OPEC+ meeting and negative outlook from BP (LON:BP)
  • Key Events/h2

    US futures and global stocks rose on Monday, following an array of positive corporate deal news and and further announcements on a COVID-19 vaccine. 

    Contracts on the Dow, S&P and Russell 2000 increased more than 1% this morning while futures for the NASDAQ climbed 1.48% on the heels of last week's first back-to-back decline for US stocks since April, and the biggest losses since before markets bottomed in March. 

    The dollar was slightly weaker while gold remained flat. 

    Global Financial Affairs/h2

    Over the weekend, AstraZeneca (NYSE:AZN) announced it was restarting Phase III trials on its coronavirus vaccine and Pfizer (NYSE:PFE) CEO Albert Bourla said its vaccine may be distributed as early as the end of this year, improving sentiment.

    It was reported that Oracle (NYSE:ORCL) was on track to announce it has won the partnership battle for TikTok, the Chinese social media app, beating out Microsoft (NASDAQ:MSFT).

    Shares in SoftBank (OTC:SFTBY) jumped after NVIDIA (NASDAQ:NVDA) agreed to purchase the Japanese company’s chip division ARM for $40 billion.

    And Gilead Sciences (NASDAQ:GILD) announced it will buy Immunomedics (NASDAQ:IMMU) for $21 billion. 

    All of this positive dealmaking along with renewed hopes a COVID-19 vaccine, ahead of this week's Fed policy decision that is widely expected to remain dovish, provides bargain hunters all the fuel they require to jump right back into equities.

    Analysts are also predicting that the acute US selloff may be coming to an end, having achieved a healthy correction. Of course, that assessment is based on the premise that the bull market will endure. Goldman says it remains “optimistic about the path of the US equity market in coming months.” 

    While we cannot predict the future, we’re not as optimistic.

    Putting aside all the fundamental arguments we’ve been making even as the US stock market provided investors the best returns in decades, the S&P 500 Index may be showing signs of a reversal.

    We’re not bearish at this point, but we’re not bullish either. We’re on the fence. Here’s why:

    Strictly speaking, the S&P completed a descending series of peaks and trough, after having found resistance by the top of a broadening pattern since January 2018. However, we won’t consider it a reversal unless prices decline below the previous trough in the uptrend.