Opening Bell: U.S. Futures, European Shares Drop Ahead Of Key Midterm Vote

 | Nov 06, 2018 05:31AM ET

  • US futures, European shares show weakness ahead of crucial US midterm vote
  • Berkshire Hathaway surges; Apple, tech stocks tumble, prompting broader selling
  • Oil keeps sliding on Iran bypassing sanctions, US waivers on purchases
  • h2 Key Events/h2

    Global stocks were mixed on Tuesday as investors awaited the results of the US midterm elections. Shares in Europe slipped lower alongside futures for the S&P 500, Dow and NASDAQ 100, while Asian indices ended mostly higher. Treasury yields edged lower, the dollar reversed early losses and the pound sterling extended an advance on Brexit hopes.

    The STOXX Europe 600 gave up earlier gains, dragged down by financials and carmakers.

    Earlier, during the Asian session, Japan’s Nikkei 225 outperformed with a 1.05 percent advance and China's Shanghai Composite underperformed with a 0.23 percent slide, even as Chinese Vice President Wang Quishan regulatory filing , which was published on Saturday, revealed it bought back $928 million worth of shares.

    As well, dip buyers took advantage of October’s brutal selloffs, after the Dow Jones dropped 1,300 points, or 5 percent—the most since the January 2016 correction. The S&P 500 plunged almost 7 percent over the month, suffering its worst loss since September 2011, and the NASDAQ Composite took its most significant hit since November 2008, a whopping 9 percent.

    During Monday's session, the SPX climbed 0.56 percent, with Energy shares outperforming (+1.67 percent), even as oil prices continued to fall. Real Estate also inched higher (+1.66 percent), on upbeat economic data, even against a backdrop of rising rates, which could weigh on REIT profits. Berkshire Hathaway's ranking as the world's second-biggest real-estate broker also boosted the broader sector.

    Financials advanced (+1.59 percent) on a stronger outlook for interest rate tightening following Friday’s NFP beat and the highest annual wage gain since before the financial crisis. Communication Services (-0.41 percent) was the day's laggard, followed by Technology (-0.1 percent), which was dragged lower by Apple (NASDAQ:AAPL), Facebook (NASDAQ:FB) and Amazon (NASDAQ:AMZN).