Opening Bell: U.S. Futures, Stocks Fall On Lockdown Risk-Off; Oil Reverses

 | Sep 21, 2020 07:00

  • US indices enter downtrends
  • Fears rise that coronavirus resurgence in Europe will further dent global growth
  • Oil signals further declines
  • h2 Key Events/h2

    US futures, including the Dow, S&P, NASDAQ and Russell 2000, as well as European stocks are all in the red on Monday as the number of coronavirus cases in Europe and the US continue to increase.

    Traders are concerned that governments may introduce additional social restrictions to curb the spread of the virus which could further dent the global economy. Oil also fell on concerns over tougher travel restrictions. 

    Global Financial Affairs/h2

    The pandemic’s momentum is accelerating, increasing the risk of a second lockdown in the UK and other European countries. The UK's Chief Medical Officer, Chris Whitty is expected to warn later today that the country is at a “critical point.”

    Meanwhile, Germany's health minister, Jens Spahn said that European case-trends are “worrying,” and he urged people to remain vigilant. Over the weekend, the number of deaths in the US neared 200,000 and the CDC is predicting that the US death toll could reach 218,000 by Oct.10. 

    Investors expect that any indication of progress on America’s long-awaited fiscal stimulus package may turn the selloff around, after Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell said that government aid for businesses damaged by coronavirus shutdowns had been "critical" to the US economy. 

    All four major US contracts were hovering around -1.5% this morning, with futures for the small cap Russell 2000 down around 2%.

    The Stoxx Europe 600 slumped, pressured by airline and travel stocks, as well as a 6% decline in shares of HSBC (LON:HSBA). The bank underperformed the 3.5% decline in the benchmark FTSE 100 Index. It hit  a 25-year low on new revelations over the weekend that several global banks had allegedly been involved in money laundering for over 20 years. 

    On Friday, US stocks fell to a six-week low, weighed down by tech stocks, as investors cashed out due to the lack of a catalyst to take stocks higher. The S&P 500 Index declined for the third straight day after whipsawing amid Friday’s quadruple witching, a quarterly event fueling volumes, as large positions in derivative contracts roll over.