Opening Bell: U.S. Futures Rebound After Tech Probe Scare, Helped By Fed

 | Jun 04, 2019 07:33AM ET

  • Europe, U.S. futures point to rebound from tech-probe selloff
  • Facebook, Alphabet, Amazon and FedEx take the brunt of Monday's rout
  • Yield slide eases; gold continues to gain on demand for safety
  • Oil drops as demand dwindles and Saudi Arabia ups output
  • h2 Key Events/h2

    European equities and futures on the S&P 500, Dow and NASDAQ 100 rebounded this morning following a tumultuous Asian session, suggesting U.S. indices may be able to reverse Monday's losses later in the day. Upbeat NASDAQ contracts in particular confirmed that yesterday’s steep rout, triggered by reports of a brewing U.S. probe into the biggest names in tech, may have eased.

    The STOXX 600 slid half a percentage point in the first three minutes of trade, with technology stocks leading losses, but then pared most of the slide, finding support by the 200 DMA. After three straight days in which the pan-European index fell below buy rebounds, we might expect volatility to break through the trading range.

    After falling below its 50 DMA in May, which later turned to resistance, followed by another drop below the 100 DMA for the first time since crossing above it in January, momentum is to the downside. Subsequent to completing a H&S top last week, the supply-demand balance is indeed presumed to be tilted to the side of the sellers. How European tech stocks perform today might give us a clue to the upcoming performance of the corresponding U.S. sector.

    During the earlier Asian session, regional stocks all extended a rout as weak economic data and an intensifying Sino-U.S. trade war magnified worries about global growth. However, the session ended mixed, as some benchmarks managed to trim losses by the closing bell.

    China’s Shanghai Composite gave up 0.96%, extending a drop below its 100 DMA, toward the bottom of a descending triangle, whose downward bias suggests a continued slide from the April highs, to challenge the 200 DMA below 2,800.

    Yuan traders speculate China will allow its currency to fall below the psychological 7.000 mark, which it had been defending up to now. Analysts are betting that the PBoC will refocus on accommodation to stimulate growth, by leveraging a weak yuan to increase global market share, something that has been irking the U.S. president and that was a major trigger of the trade war.

    On the other hand, a growing consensus for a U.S. rate cut may mitigate that factor, which otherwise holds the potential to exacerbate a diplomatically sensitive issue. However, it is unlikely that a move by the Fed would sway Donald Trump’s bargaining position.