Opening Bell: U.S. Surge Boosts Global Shares; Pound Rally Gives Way To Caution

 | Mar 12, 2019 06:06

  • Global shares take cues from biggest U.S. stock jump in six weeks
  • Treasurys fall on risk-off, weighing on U.S. dollar
  • Pounds jumps on EU support for May's deal; later gives in to caution ahead of key Brexit vote
  • WTI leaps on OPEC cuts
  • h2 Key Events/h2

    Global equities and futures on the S&P 500 and NASDAQ 100 extended a rally this morning after U.S. stocks sealed the biggest advance in six weeks on Monday, helped by a surge in chipmakers shares and by upbeat U.S. retail sales data, which eased concerns over a downturn in the world’s biggest economy.

    Future contracts on the Dow remained in negative territory, struggling to overcome the weakness of Boeing (NYSE:BA) shares.

    The STOXX 600 jumped, driven by miners and carmakers—two export-sensitive sectors. Considering the current rally has nothing to do with any tangible progress in U.S.-China trade talks, investors are either being overly-optimistic or finding the trade-proxy sectors to be a bargain after last week’s trade-related rout.

    Earlier, prices jumped in Asia, riding on the coattails of the best U.S. daily session since January. Last-minute support from the EU for U.K. Prime Minister Theresa May's Brexit deal also helped prices higher, lowering global geopolitical risk head of a crucial Brexit vote at the British Parliament today.

    MSCI’s broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares excluding Japan pared some gains to rise 0.9% in the second part of the session, pulled up by energy shares, which tracked a recovery in crude oil prices.

    Japan’s Nikkei 225 outperformed its regional peers, surging 1.79%, followed by Hong Kong’s Hang Seng, which leaped 1.46%. The Shanghai Composite sealed a 1.10% climb, paring most of the downward correction that followed its miraculous recovery at the beginning of the year.

    h2 Global Financial Affairs/h2

    Yesterday, U.S. shares were buoyed by chipmakers' gains after NVIDIA (NASDAQ:NVDA) announced it will buy Israeli networking chipmaker Mellanox (NASDAQ:MLNX). A rebound in January sales also boosted trading.