Opening Bell: Stocks Fall As Powell Boosts Treasurys, USD; WTI Slips

 | Feb 07, 2019 05:30AM ET

  • U.S. futures drop as global rally fizzles out
  • Financials drag STOXX 600 lower on Societe Generale restructuring plans
  • Treasurys, dollar climb as Powell talks up U.S. economy
  • Oil slips on surprise inventory and record U.S. production
  • h2 Key Events/h2

    European shares edged lower and futures on the S&P 500, Dow and NASDAQ 100 extended a retreat this morning as the global equity rally lost momentum, partly weighed down by rising demand for U.S. Treasurys.

    The STOXX Europe 600 ended a seven-day rally as both automakers and financials stocks sold off. The latter sector took a hit after French investment bank Societe Generale (PA:SOGN) announced it will restructure its business model—trimming down its trading operations and risk-weighted assets—to adjust to tougher capital markets conditions, which also forced the lender to cut its profitability targets through 2020.

    Earlier, during the Asian session, the Lunar New Year holiday continued to cause a dearth of signals for traders. Japan’s Nikkei dropped 0.59 percent, pressured by a raft of corporate earnings, though Softbank Group (T:9984) surged 18 percent as it disclosed plans for its biggest-ever buyback.

    h2 Global Financial Affairs/h2

    On Wednesday, in yet another session characterized by muted volume, U.S. stocks halted a five-day winning streak over a batch of headwinds, including trade uncertainty, global slowdown risks, the looming prospect of another government shutdown and a strengthening dollar.

    The S&P 500 (-0.22 percent) in particular fell for the first time in six sessions, with Communication Services (-2.24 percent) as the main laggard. Materials (-0.59 percent) also lagged, despite U.S. President Donald Trump’s restatement that a border security wall will indeed be built up. Meanwhile, Health Care (+0.45 percent) outperformed even as Trump also vowed to tackle high prescription drug prices in his State of the Union address.

    Technically, the SPX found resistance beneath the 200 DMA, as its RSI and MACD are set to fall from overbought conditions, triggering sell signals.

    We’ve been saying this week that the current market action is not necessarily representative of investor outlook, as volumes stand below their 30-day average.

    The Dow Jones Industrial Average (-0.08 percent) outperformed—which is interesting if we consider that a stronger greenback makes multinationals’ exports less competitive in a global market that is already burdened by lingering trade jitters.

    The NASDAQ Composite (-0.36 percent) underperformed, as Alphabet (NASDAQ:GOOGL) tumbled 2.52 percent and shares of Electronic Arts (NASDAQ:EA) and Take-Two Interactive Software (NASDAQ:TTWO) plunged by over 13 percent after the two groups posted disappointing earnings results.

    Get The News You Want
    Read market moving news with a personalized feed of stocks you care about.
    Get The App

    Conversely, semiconductor makers ticked higher after Steve Sanghi—the CEO of Microchip Technology's (NASDAQ:MCHP) who famously warned of widespread weakness ahead of the 2008 financial crash and called the 2009 bottom—called for a bottom in the chip cycle.

    The Russell 2000 gave up 0.14 percent.