Opening Bell: Yen Soars, Gold Slumps; Renewed Trade Fears Weigh On Stocks

 | May 23, 2018 07:23AM ET

  • Trump's pessimistic remarks on trade and North Korea spark global equity market selling
  • South Korean shares buck the trend as strong corporate performance overshadows mounting political risk
  • Japanese shares dragged lower by stronger yen
  • Japanese investors sell off Turkish risk, rotate back into yen
  • Gold set to slip lower on technicals
  • US equities continue to be supported by technicals
  • h2 Key Events/h2

    European shares followed their Asian counterparts lower on Wednesday, mirroring the downbeat sentiment that hit US markets yesterday after geopolitical headwinds resurfaced—more specifically, the on-again/off-again US-China trade war and diminishing prospects of North Korean denuclearization. US futures for the S&P 500, NASDAQ 100, Dow are all flashing red as well, suggesting further losses may lie ahead during the US session.

    The STOXX Europe 600 slipped 0.6 percent in early trade, dragged lower by energy and basic resources stocks. As well, after it posted a second record high intraday on Tuesday, the UK's FTSE 100 gave up about half its gains, forming a shooting star. That bearish signal led to a further 0.63 percent slide on Wednesday, as traders and investors await today's CPI release after yesterday's Bank of England inflation report hearings. Data from both will be closely watched as it influences the BoE's next interest rate decision this summer.

    The British benchmark index took its cue from the US's small cap Russell 2000, which completed a bearish engulfing pattern yesterday and is currently pointing to further declines. However, the two indices are also the only two major global averages to trade around new record highs since the recent broader equity market correction.

    h2 Global Financial Affairs/h2

    US President Donald Trump sparked a fresh wave of market jitters on Tuesday when he said his administration has yet to reach a deal with Chinese officials over Chinese smartphone and networking accessory manufacturer ZTE (HK:0763), which faces estimated losses north of $3 billion if a US ban on purchases of its products and sales of US-made chips to the company takes place. Adding fuel to the fears Trump added he is “not satisfied” with the progress of trade talks, further hampering investor optimism over a diplomatic breakthrough.

    Traders seemed to abide by the maxim "buy the rumor, sell the news": they drove prices higher after the opening bell, on reports of a ZTE deal that would spare the Chinese company from ban-related losses through a more limited $1.3bn fine; but later sold their positions on Trump's remarks.

    China's Shanghai Composite and Hong Kong's Hang Seng both dipped 1.4 percent, weighed down by coal miners and financial firms. The mainland index is trading at the bottom of the day. Technically, the price is piercing the 50 DMA, while strongly confirming a hanging man, an omen that the 5 percent rally from the April-18 low may be over.