Opening Bell: Global Trade Wars Push Stocks To Multi-Year Setback; Gold Up

 | Jun 03, 2019 08:02AM ET

  • U.S. futures, Europe follow Asia lower as recession warnings multiply
  • Yields resume drop toward 2.00
  • Gold strengthens on safe-haven rotation
  • h2 Key Events/h2

    European stocks and futures on the S&P 500, Dow and NASDAQ 100 extended a selloff this morning as a global trade war intensified in the aftermath of U.S. threats, last week, to impose progressive tariffs on Mexican goods starting from June 10. China released a report over the weekend hitting back at the U.S.'s "unilateralism" and recent breaches in trade talks, prompting investors to return to safe-haven assets such as Treasurys, the yen and gold.

    The STOXX 600 doubled Friday’s selloff in the first half-hour of the open, with oil producers and miners leading losses, and resumed to slide into the second half-hour of the session. Disappointing Eurozone manufacturing PMI added to downbeat data from Japan to re-awakened the specter of a global recession as a side effect of ongoing trade tensions. From a technical perspective, the pan-European index completed a Head-and-Shoulders pattern on Friday, mirroring indices in the U.S. and Japan. Today, the price broke through the 200 DMA, the most observed indicator even for fundamental investors.

    In the earlier Asian session, all regional benchmarks closed lower except for South Korea’s KOSPI, which jumped 1.28% after Samsung's (KS:005930) Chairman Lee Jae-yong reportedly pressed the firm's top executives to refocus resources on the core business, as demand for computer chips and smartphones fell amid the U.S.-Sino trade war.

    Australia’s S&P/ASX 200 underperformed (-1.19%). China’s Shanghai Composite dropped 0.30% after the Caixin factory Purchasing Manager’s Index showed a deteriorating manufacturing outlook, even as it slightly beat the 50.0 expectations, matching last month’s 50.2, coming to a standstill rather than to an outright slide.

    h2 Global Financial Affairs/h2

    On Friday, U.S. equities doubled weekly losses, capping the worst May performance since 2010 and the second-worst May results since the 1960s, as the S&P 500 erased $4 trillion .