Opening Bell: Bonds, Stocks Fall In Unison As Market Structure Breaks Down

 | Mar 25, 2019 07:22AM ET

  • U.S. futures remain under pressure from Friday's selloffs
  • Asian stocks plunge, slipping below uptrend lines alongside European indices
  • Treasury drop, yields rebound after re-igniting recession fears—prematurely in our view
  • Yen weakens; Gold surges
  • h2 Key Events/h2

    Global stocks, along with futures on the S&P 500, Dow and NASDAQ 100, took a hit from Friday's sharpest U.S. stock selloff since January this morning. Oddly, safe-haven Treasurys and the yen weakened.

    The STOXX Europe 600 opened 0.3% lower and extended the decline to 0.68%, heading for its most substantial two-day slide since early February. Miners and retailer shares dragged the benchmark lower. Technically, the index extended Friday’s violation of its uptrend line since the Christmas-eve selloff, with the 200 DMA below 370, making the March 8 trough the next major support. The 50 DMA approaches it from below. Will it cross the 200 DMA, triggering a golden cross, or will it find a steel ceiling, signaling a trend reversal? The RSI topped out. Also, the MACD saw the shorter MA cross below the longer MA for the second time after the highest levels since December 2016. However, that was a whole different set of circumstances, and the pan-European benchmark proceeded to climb another 8% before its first correction.

    In the earlier Asian session, Japan’s Nikkei 225 (-3.01%) led the selloff, opening 1.65% in the red.