Opening Bell: USD, Stocks Tumble On Fed, Trade Fears; Gold Soars

 | Mar 22, 2018 08:20AM ET

  • Dollar losses grow; yen strongest G-10 currency

  • Global stocks extend declines, US markets poised to resume selling

  • Investors whipsawed to higher interest rates

  • Oil slips after jump on surprise drawdown and Middle East tensions

  • h2 Key Events/h2

    The dollar remains weak after a volatile Asian session and Treasury yields extended their decline this morning. European stocks are slding along with S&P 500, Dow and NASDAQ futures.

    The STOXX Europe 600 dropped for a second day, weighed down mainly by bank shares, which took a beating on the outlook for diminished profits after yesterday's Fed interest rate decision. US policymakers hiked benchmark rates by a quarter percentage point on Wednesday and forecast a more aggressive path to tightening for 2019 and 2020.

    Asian stocks were volatile as traders remained indecisive about whether the quarter-point rate increase in the US will help or hinder the economy. Lurking in the background, and also weighing on investors' minds, was the possibility that US President Donald Trump' will shortly authorize a $50 billion trade tariff on Chinese imports.

    Japanese equities listed on the TOPIX pushed higher after the yen retreated from its daily high. South Korea's KOSPI reached its highest level since early February, but was weighed down by a strengthening won.

    The South Korean currency was buoyed by the Fed's less-hawkish-than-expected stance, resulting in a High Wave candle, which occurs when prices swing up and down but settle with little changed. The development of this trading pattern at the top of the March range increases the likelihood of a reversal.

    Meanwhile, Chinese investors dumped shares after the People's Bank of China raised short term market rates by 5 basis points, to 2.55. These rates influence reverse repurchase agreements (known as repos), used for open market operations.

    h2 Global Financial Affairs/h2

    Today's widespread volatility appears to mirror the dynamic seen yesterday across US indices, which initially gained ground but ended by closing lower.

    The Russell 2000 outperformed its major index peers, climbing over half percent point. The domestic exposure of its smaller-cap stocks means they would be broadly unaffected by a trade war.