Opening Bell: U.S. Futures Drop On Fading Trade Hopes; Pound Rallies

 | Feb 26, 2019 05:30AM ET

  • Global stocks, U.S. futures take a hit from mixed signals on trade
  • S&P 500 nears 20% climb from Christmas, but technicals show weakness
  • 10-year yields continue bearish pattern
  • WTI slips on Trump’s rhetoric
  • h2 Key Events /h2

    Global equities dropped and bonds rebounded this morning as exuberance over a delay in new U.S. trade tariffs waned. However, elsewhere, an unrelated delay had a more positive effect: the pound sterling leaped forward, hitting a 21-month high against the euro, after it was reported that British Prime Minister Theresa May was considering plans to rule out a no-deal Brexit—which in turn sparked speculation the March 29 deadline will be postponed. Meanwhile, an improved outlook on post-Brexit U.K. from Bank of England's Governor Mark Carney also lent cable a helping hand.

    Futures on the S&P 500, Dow and NASDAQ 100 joined a global equity selloff and swung back to risk-off, while the STOXX Europe 600 slipped lower with most of its sectors.

    The mood is likely to have turned sour after U.S. President Donald Trump said he might sign a deal with China, but, then again, it “might not happen at all”—thereby justifying our caution that markets probably priced in a resolution that may not happen as expected, especially with such a seemingly impulsive and outspoken U.S. president perpetuating uncertainty.

    Earlier, in the Asian session, shares backtracked from yesterday’s rally, which had been prompted by Trump’s tweets announcing his intention to delay higher tariffs on Chinese exports to allow more time for a trade deal. China’s Shanghai Composite dropped 0.67%—though, after yesterday’s 5.6% surge, that should be considered as holding onto gains. Hong Kong’s Hang Seng slipped 0.65%, erasing yesterday’s gains. Japan’s Nikkei 225 dropped 0.37%, after brushing off a two-and-half month high. A weakening yen in the early global session probably offset deeper losses.

    h2 Global Financial Affairs/h2

    In yesterday’s U.S. session, stocks opened higher thanks to Trump's upbeat signals, shaking off the previous European decline and resuming an Asian rally. However, the main indices closed well off their highs, and small caps’ gains turned into losses before the day was out.