Opening Bell: U.S. Futures Shake Off China’s Commodity Crackdown; Metals Fall

 | May 24, 2021 07:00

  • Steel and iron ore plummet
  • Bitcoin rebounds above $36,000
  • US dollar slides
  • Key Events/h2

    Stocks in Europe opened higher, boosting futures on the Dow, S&P, NASDAQ and Russell 2000. Asian benchmarks were mixed, after China’s clampdown on "speculators and hoarders" of industrial commodities dented mining-related companies.

    Gold wavered while yields were slightly lower.

    Global Financial Affairs/h2

    All four US contracts were about 0.5% in the green, at time of writing, with stocks on the tech-heavy NASDAQ 100—representing one side of the reflation trade—and Russell 2000 futures—representing value stocks and the opposite side of the reflation trade—moving in unison. Both indexes were slightly outperforming the S&P 500 and Dow Jones, which were ranging around 0.40%. The current picture suggests that after reflecting on the markets' whipsaws last week, traders are ready to get back into equities.

    The S&P 500 Index was little changed on Friday, as technicals kept it under pressure.