Opening Bell: U.S. Yields Pass 3% (Again); USD Slips; Risk-Off Returns

 | May 15, 2018 06:30AM ET

  • European equities seesaw; US futures slide
  • Middle East tensions, US-China trade spat solution skepticism spark risk-off trade
  • US dollar slips as 10-year Treasury yields cross 3% again
  • China, Germany growth slows
  • Turkish lira slumps to fresh lows on prospect of tighter government controls
  • h2 Key Events/h2

    Stocks in Europe followed their Asian counterparts lower during Tuesday's early trade, alongside US futures for the S&P 500, the Dow and the NASDAQ 100.

    Sentiment has shifted back to risk-off. Economic growth, Middle East tensions and trade jitters have reignited investor worries.

    While US President Donald Trump was once again in the eye of the storm on Monday, the market narrative has taken a surprising twist. Though Trump has adopted a more conciliatory stance toward China, in particular by offering a reprieve to China's ZTE (SZ:000063), which had previously faced US sanctions, US lawmakers—on both sides of the aisle—have criticized his apparent change of priorities, diminishing investor hopes that trade tensions would finally cool off.

    However, last night the Wall Street Journal MSCI inclusion to its equity indices of 234 China large cap A shares. The mainland benchmark index climbed 0.6 percent, closing at the top of the session and posting a total two-day advance of 0.95 percent.

    Upbeat sentiment overshadowed worries about China's economy and ongoing trade tensions with the US. However, investors initially shed their stocks, after China missed estimates on investment and retail sales for April and a decline in home sales exacerbated the country's murky economic outlook.

    Shares listed on Hong Kong's Hang Seng missed out on investor optimism and posted a1.15 percent slump, wiping out nearly all of Monday's gains and halting a six-day advance.