Opening Bell: U.S. Futures Bounce Back; Dollar, Gold, Oil Slip

 | Mar 26, 2018 07:30AM ET

  • Asia trade opens lower but stocks rally into gains

  • China’s mainland stocks which bear brunt of trade war, manage to rebound from steeper losses

  • US Futures recoup some of Friday's losses
  • Materials and Industrials suggest trade risks are not fully priced in

  • Copper falls to 15-week low; gold, bonds, yen all drop

  • WTI falls from biggest weekly gain since July, failing to overcome January peak

  • h2 Key Events/h2

    Investors were given a ray of hope during Monday's Asia session, as early losses transformed into gains and shares in Europe opened higher. The STOXX Europe 600 is advancing, mainly driven higher by telecommunications and auto manufacturers.

    Perhaps even more hopeful, US futures recouped half of Friday’s steep losses.

    Japanese equities listed on both the TOPIX and the Nikkei 225 came back from a slide of more than 1 percent to close 0.4 percent and 0.6 percent higher, respectively. Technically, however, the rebound is a return move to a Descending triangle, a bearish pattern.

    South Korea’s KOSPI slid to an intraday loss of 0.6 percent, but still managed to close 0.9 percent higher. Technically, it confirmed a rising channel.

    Shares listed on China's mainland Shanghai Composite, however, bore the brunt of last week's news regarding the US's imposition of $60bn-worth tariffs on Chinese exports. The index closed down 0.7 percent. Nevertheless, shares still bounced back from a much steeper 1.9 percent loss, which helped contribute to the overall market optimism.

    Hong Kong’s Hang Seng also recovered from a 1 percent loss, climbing to 0.25 percent into positive territory. Technically, however, it is considered a return move to a bearish, Rising Wedge, echoing the one seen on the S&P 500 last week.