Opening Bell: Futures Ignore Trade, Tech Jitters; WTI Surges; USD Drops

 | Nov 21, 2018 05:30AM ET

  • European shares rebound from 5-day losing streak, US futures climb
  • WTI surges on surprise inventories drop
  • Dollar traders take profit on return to risk
  • h2 Key Events/h2

    European shares rebounded from a five-day stock rout and futures on the S&P 500, Dow and NASDAQ 100 climbed higher this morning, making up for a mixed Asian session that felt the pinch of re-ignited trade tensions. The STOXX Europe 600 advanced with technology firms and automobile makers.

    Earlier, Asian shares sold off as preliminary talks for a trade resolution ahead of the G20 meeting on November 30 fell through, quashing hopes that US and Chinese leaders would be able to make some headway anytime soon. Chinese stocks on the Shanghai Composite closed higher after erasing early losses, as a rebound in property and healthcare stocks offset losses in energy shares sparked by Wall Street selloffs and a plunge in oil prices.

    h2 Global Financial Affairs/h2

    Yesterday, US shares tumbled for a second day, with price slumps in energy stocks magnifying the broader selling. Apple (NASDAQ:AAPL) spearheaded a continued rout in tech hardware firms. Retailers were also dumped by investors despite strong sales results, amid worries that new online customers would entail additional heavy investment costs.

    The S&P 500 briefly slid 10 percent below its September record close before clawing back just above the threshold and closing 1.82 percent in the red. The NASDAQ Composite slid 1.7 percent, almost 14 percent below the closing high it reached in August. The Dow Jones Industrial Average shed more than 500 points, or 2.21 percent, as angst spread across global equity markets.

    Considering the Russell 2000, with its listed domestic, non-export reliant companies, failed to substantially outperform peers (-1.65 percent), we don't believe the current stock rout is trade-related. Rather, it seems driven by the ongoing slide in energy prices. This would also explain the underperformance of the Dow, which features a high concentration of energy companies.