Euro Pares Gains As German Turbulence Persists

 | Jul 02, 2018 05:19AM ET


Here are the latest developments in global markets:

  • FOREX: The US dollar index – which tracks the greenback’s performance against a basket of six major currencies – was higher by 0.2% on Monday. The euro was a touch softer as German political uncertainties remained a key theme. The loonie was also on the defensive amid a drop in oil prices, giving back some of the gains it posted on Friday following strong data releases.
  • STOCKS: US markets closed higher on Friday, albeit not significantly so. The Dow Jones gained the most (+0.23%), while the Nasdaq Composite (+0.09%) and S&P 500 (+0.08%) lagged. However, risk appetite seems to have turned sour, as futures tracking the S&P, Nasdaq 100, and Dow, are all in negative territory, pointing to a notably lower open today. The risk-off move may be owed to lingering concerns on trade, as well as reports suggesting a potential reescalation in the North Korea conflict. Reflecting this, Asia was a sea of red on Monday. Japan’s Nikkei 225 and Topix plunged by 2.21% and 2.06% respectively, while in South Korea, the KOSPI 200 was down 2.25%. Major European indices are also set to open with large gaps to the downside according to futures, amid continued political turbulence in Germany.
  • COMMODITIES: Oil prices opened lower on Monday, with WTI and Brent crude being down 0.9% and 1.1% respectively. The drop followed a tweet from US President Trump on Saturday stating that Saudi Arabia’s King Salman had agreed to raise his nation’s oil production. While this was quickly watered down by the White House – which said Saudi Arabia “could” raise production “if needed” – investors still took the opportunity to lock some profits on prior long-oil positions. Overall though, prices remain elevated near multi-year highs, which suggests that while this story may be taking some wind out of oil’s sails, the broader narrative is still one of higher prices and constrained supply. In precious metals, gold was down 0.3% on Monday, hovering just above the $1248/troy ounce level, and continuing to mimic the US dollar’s movements in inverse fashion.