Opening Bell: Stocks Slip As U.S. Ramps Up China Trade War; Oil Tumbles

 | Jun 12, 2019 07:23AM ET

  • Global stocks, U.S. futures slip as Trump resumes trade offensive on China
  • Apple bucks falling stock on reassurance of production capabilities outside China
  • Yields drop as safe-havens climb on risk-off
  • Oil tumbles on dismal outlook of low demand and oversupplied market
  • h2 Key Events/h2

    Futures on the S&P 500, Dow and NASDAQ 100 tracked global stocks lower as the U.S. turned its trade tariff salvos from Mexico—which boosted the rally triggered by a dovish Fed compounded by weak economic data—back to China.

    The STOXX 600 opened lower, threatening to end a three-day winning streak and seven sessions out of eight of sealing gains.

    In the earlier Asian session, Hong Kong’s Hang Seng (-1.94%) underperformed, falling back below the 200 DMA after scaling above it for the first time since Jan. 31, amid mass protests against an extradition bill that would allow people to be sent to mainland China for trial.

    Nevertheless, the Hong Kong dollar climbed to the strongest level since December amid signs of tightening funding costs. While the HKD completed a double-top, its technical signals are questionable as the currency is not allowed to trade freely, as it’s controlled by the Hong Kong Monetary Authority. Despite being the third most active currency in Asia—and the eighth most traded currency in the forex marketplace—the HKD is not a major reserve currency.