U.S. Opening Bell: U.S. Futures, Global Stocks Sell Off As Europe Enters Lockdown

 | Dec 20, 2021 07:23

  • Omicron spread continues to dent investor sentiment
  • Failure of the US Build Back Better Act adds to market concerns
  • Goldman reduces forecast for US growth after the bill's collapse
  • h2 Key Events/h2

    The start of a strict coronavirus lockdown in the Netherlands on Sunday as well as the collapse of a $2 trillion US bill that was a cornerstone of the Biden administration's agenda, saw futures on the Dow Jones, S&P 500, NASDAQ and Russell 2000, as well as European shares slump on Monday. Traders are worried that additional health restrictions are likely as the Omicron variant spreads. 

    Oil plummeted while US Treasuries jumped, forcing yields lower.

    h2 Global Financial Affairs/h2

    After months of talks between President Joseph Biden and Democratic Senator, Joe Manchin, the Build Back Better Act collapsed when Manchin unexpectedly backed out of supporting the $2 trillion program to expand the social safety net and fund climate change projects.

    As a result, Wall Street investment bank behemoth, Goldman Sachs reduced its US GDP growth forecast to 2% for the first quarter, down from 3%; to 3% for Q2 from 3.5%; and to 2.25% from 3% for Q3. 

    All US futures opened lower as trading began on Monday and extended their slide to over 1%. However, the Russell 2000, whose listed domestic firms are most dependent upon an open economy—as well as Biden's spending plans—suffered the sharpest drop, down more than 1.5%, as of the time of writing.

    S&P 500 contracts fell for the second day, increasing the risk of a top.