Opening Bell: Europe, U.S. Futures Shrug Off Asian Risk-Off; Pound Thrives

 | Mar 13, 2019 06:00AM ET

  • European shares, U.S. futures rebound after Asian stall
  • Healthcare leads U.S. rally on Trump’s Medicare budget cuts
  • Boeing extends fall, but signals buying opportunity
  • Oil climbs after significant inventory drop
  • h2 Key Events/h2

    European shares rebounded this morning, after this week’s global stock rally, which was also helped by upbeat U.S. retail data and chipmakers' gains, absorbed the buying opportunity presented by last week’s rout, losing steam. Futures on the S&P 500, Dow and NASDAQ 100 also clung onto green territory.

    In the Asian session, every major index posted losses. Japan’s Nikkei 225 (-0.99%) underperformed after the country’s machinery orders dropped the most in four months, in a ripple effect of the U.S.-Sino trade war. Also, the country’s larger firms offered lower pay raises compared to previous months, in line with the weaker economic backdrop. Technically, the index slipped well below but closed nearly above the 100 DMA, demonstrating some support.

    h2 Global Financial Affairs/h2

    In yesterday’s U.S. session, equities climbed for a second day. The S&P 500 gained 0.3%, with all sectors but Industrials (-0.83%) edging higher and Healthcare (+0.73%) leading the rally after President Donald Trump significantly cut Medicare spending in his 2020 budget proposal. Technically, the index's gain was paltry and well off its highs. It formed a shooting star, as selling orders increased when prices neared the March 4 peak that had spurred last week’s rout.

    The Dow Jones Industrial Average slipped 0.38% weighed down by Boeing (NYSE:BA), as the aircraft company stock extended losses on news that more countries grounded the 737 Max jet after Sunday's Ethiopian Airlines plane crash. BA dropped 6.15% to $375.41 on Tuesday, for a total dip of 11.15% in the last two days. Absent an overall market decline, we consider this a buying opportunity, as the day’s lows confirmed the support—seen on Monday—of the November-December-January highs. Also, the 100 and 200 DMA’s realigning with the $360 price level reinforces the presumed support.

    The NASDAQ Composite added 0.44% to the tech-led rally, for a total of 2.28% gains over the last two days. Like the S&P 500, the index produced a small real body, suggesting bulls are losing momentum below the March 4 peak.

    The Russell 2000 underperformed, eking out a 0.12% climb and forming a doji.