Opening Bell: U.S. Futures Rise On Vaccine Distribution Despite New Lockdowns

 | Dec 15, 2020 07:24

  • NYC and Germany go back into lockdown
  • New strain of virus discovered in U.K.
  • Dollar slump continues
  • Key Financials/h2

    Despite ongoing negative news on the spread of the coronavirus pandemic, contracts on the Dow, S&P, NASDAQ and Russell 2000 were up on Tuesday as vaccinations began in the US and Canada. European stocks continued to build on Monday's rebound thanks to reports of progress on another round of US stimulus.

    The dollar and Bitcoin are under pressure as gold rises.

    Global Financial Affairs/h2

    Mayor Bill de Blasio warned yesterday that New York City might go into a hard lockdown amid rising COVID-19 cases there, following a strict lockdown already in effect in California, as the metropolis recorded record numbers. Meanwhile high-risk health care workers began getting vaccinated}}, providing hope that the rate of contagion will ease.

    In US stimulus news, the bipartisan group of lawmakers working on a relief package had a “Christmas miracle,” in store, according to Republican Senator Susan Collins. The group has managed to divide the original proposal into two parts, giving both the Democrats and Republicans what they want, according to upgraded its outlook on stocks to “overweight,” meaning the global investment firm recommends that clients increase the weighting of stocks in their portfolios, at the expense of safe bonds.

    Of note: after outperforming in Monday’s session—when the Dow and S&P sold off—NASDAQ 100 futures are lagging again. This pattern has been consistent in almost every session recently, although the cyclical rotation was mixed on Friday.

    More evidence that recent rallies are supported by value stocks—while investors reverse rotations during declines—is that contracts on the Russell 2000 are outperforming. One of the market shifts during the recent rallies has been between large and small caps.

    In Europe, the Stoxx 600 Index built on Monday’s rebound, even as Germany heads into a new national lockdown on Wednesday, until at least Jan. 10. The harsh measures, which include closing shops, schools and childcare facilities, are in response to 30,000 new cases and 600 deaths on Friday and could push Europe's largest economy into recession.

    The FTSE 100 rebounded from a lower open and sterling pared losses after reports of positive movement on Brexit talks.

    Asia was painted red, as coronavirus news continued to dampen sentiment, only days after regional benchmarks hit records. Even China’s growth, as measured by industrial output—which increased for the eighth month in a row—garnered no positive reaction. The MSCI Emerging Markets index fell 0.6% to the lowest in over a week, just after a series of record highs in recent weeks.

    Yields, including on the 10-year Treasury note, rebounded from a second day decline, as investors continued to move into stocks.

    Stimulus progress weighed on the dollar.