Opening Bell: Oil, USD Slip; U.S. Futures Rise On Easing Trade Tensions

 | May 14, 2018 07:01AM ET

  • European energy and health care shares follow US counterparts higher

  • Malaysian markets reopen after post-election volatility surge

  • Emerging Markets FX rebound as dollar continues to retreat

  • Trump switches to more conciliatory tone on trade issues with China

  • Asian stocks post upbeat performance but technicals suggest more pressure ahead

  • Crude slips toward $70 from near $72 last Thursday, after UAE says OPEC can cover Iranian supply glitches

  • h2 Key Events/h2

    Equities in Europe drifted lower on Monday, after failing to pick up the momentum seen during the Asian session. Despite positive geopolitical developments today, optimism was spoiled by the declines posted by the energy sector, which tends to underperform when global tensions ease.

    The STOXX Europe 600 opened flat, with oil shares losing ground, while health care shares followed their US counterparts higher. However, US futures on the S&P 500, the Dow and the NASDAQ 100 seem to be taking their cue from Asian indices, which closed mostly higher.

    Malaysian equities rebounded from an earlier decline after Mahathir Mohamad ousted Najib Razak’s coalition after six decades of ruling—an historic political shift that sparked the highest level of stock market volatility in almost three years. The FTSE Bursa Malaysia KLCI Index bounced off a 2.7 percent slump to climb 0.5 percent as of 12:26 p.m. in Kuala Lumpur. That’s the biggest intraday swing since early September 2015 for the Malaysian index, which breached through its 50- and 100-day moving averages. The ringgit also rebounded from a 0.95 percent plunge to a tiny 0.5 percent loss.