Opening Bell: U.S. Futures Climb After Global Stocks Sputter; Bitcoin Slips

 | Jun 05, 2018 07:33AM ET

  • European indices, US futures inch higher after this morning's underwhelming open

  • Asian markets slow down after US rally on Monday
  • US stocks break consolidations on upside

  • Russell 2000 posts fresh record, NASDAQ follows close behind

  • US domestic, smaller-cap stocks listed on the Russell 2000 are losing steam after trade-dispute led outperformance

  • Oil recoups some of the losses incurred after OPEC's signals of production increases
  • h2 Key Events/h2

    US shares closed at a 12-week high on Monday, but will they be able to resume their rally for a third straight day after today's Wall Street open? While the US equity rally—which saw the the S&P 500 break out of its 14-session consolidation—showed that US traders were relatively unfazed by trade war threats, global indices today have been enduring a bumpier ride.

    Does this mean that US stocks, unlike their global peers, will actually benefit from a hard line on trade? Or will we see US markets follow the lead of global peers and also take a hit today?

    Possibly not. European shares have bounced back from a lower open, following a jittery Asian session. The STOXX Europe 600 is edging higher, on track for a three-day rally, as shares of automakers helped balance out losses in the telecom sector. The rebound in European trade appears to be buoying US futures: the SPX, Dow and NASDAQ 100 are all safely in positive territory at time of writing.

    Earlier this morning, during the Asian session, Japan’s TOPIX ended flat, giving up a 0.35 percent gain at the open. Shares in China managed to shrug off heightened trade headwinds, with the Shanghai Composite gaining 0.75 percent—for a two day increase of 0.95 percent. The mainland index closed at the height of the session, in the absence of any bearish resistance.

    From a technical perspective, however, the price stopped dead at the top of the May 30th falling gap, where sellers and speculators usually wait to push prices back down. The previous 5.5 percent drop from the May 21 high, followed by the upward consolidation from the May 30 low, developed a falling flag, posting a bearish signal with a downside breakout of the pattern.

    If we focus on the upbeat performance posted by mainland Chinese and US shares, it's almost as if traders in the hottest part of the "trade-war zone" were actually encouraged by the ongoing diplomatic dispute.

    Shares listed on Hong Kong’s Hang Seng closed 0.31 percent higher, which brings its two day advance to 2.01 percent. Technically, however, the index posted a High-Wave candle after swinging more than 1 percent between losses and gains, which highlights a lack of direction. Since the price move followed a 4 percent rise, it may be signalling a downward reversal.

    South Korea’s KOSPI added 0.25 percent, for an aggregate three day gain of 1.25 percent. Australia’s S&P/ASX 200 slipped 0.5 percent, remained within a tight 1 percent range for the tenth day.

    h2 Global Financial Affairs/h2

    The tepid performance seen across Asian and European markets today follows yesterday's bullish US session, in which the S&P 500 climbed 0.45 percent, for an aggregate two day rally of 1.5 percent. The advance was led by Consumer Discretionary stocks (+1.14 percent), while Energy (-0.89 percent) underperformed, following oil prices lower. Interestingly, defensive Consumer Staples (+0.83 percent) was offset by another defensive sector, Utilities (-0.8 percent), in what appears to be investor indecision.