Opening Bell: U.S. Futures Bounce On Mnuchin Trade Bullishness; Bitcoin Flies

 | Jun 26, 2019 06:40AM ET

  • U.S. Mnuchin's trade deal optimism helps U.S. futures rebound from Fed-led losses
  • European, Asian shares subdued on tempered rate cut expectations, caution ahead of key Trump-Xi talks
  • Bitcoin hits 18-month high, eyes $13,000 level
  • Oil climbs on mounting macro pressures
  • h2 Key Events/h2

    Futures on the S&P 500, Dow and NASDAQ 100 shrugged off yesterday's sharp selloffs this morning, as traders processed an apparent hawkish shift in Fed rate outlook and rising Mideast tensions ahead of a weekend that is set to be monopolized by crucial U.S.-China trade talks.

    It was mostly U.S. Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin to help U.S. contracts rebound from a weaker opening by saying the U.S.-China trade deal is 90% completed —further boosting investor hopes after Bloomberg reported the U.S. is willing to suspend the next round of tariffs on an additional $300 billion of Chinese ahead of this weekend's paramount meeting.

    The STOXX 600 also managed to crawl into green territory after initially sliding for the fourth consecutive day. Keeping a lid on prices in the early session:

    1. Tuesday's suggestions, by Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell, that markets overplayed a potential interest rate cut. James Bullard was yet more direct, arguing the current market environment doesn’t warrant the half-percentage point cut priced in by most investors.

    2. Investor caution ahead of the much-anticipated meeting between Trump and Chinese President Xi Jinping at the G20 summit in Osaka. Automobile producers, which are dependent upon affordable and smooth international shipping, underperformed other sectors at the open, also pressured by U.S. President Donald Trump's doubling down on threats to slap hefty tariffs on European auto makers last week.

    In the earlier session, most Asian shares closed lower. Citi's Chief Investment Strategist, however, struck a more positive note for the region when he said the U.S. investment bank has maintained an overweight exposure to Asian markets since the trade dispute first emerged. The bank sees value in the region , which it considers under-invested at present due to trade war-driven selling.

    Confirming the extent of the trade-war downward effect, a Reuters poll showed that South Korean exports are set to post their biggest fall in more than three years and their seventh straight month of declines in June. The report turned South Korean shares into the heaviest fallers of the day, followed by those on Japan's Nikkei 225, which also took a hit from falling domestic exports. Japanese stocks are also being hit by the country's current monetary policy stance—which appears relatively hawkish when compared with the global loosening trend—and by news of a looming raise in consumption taxes. Finally, a stronger yen—on both the central bank’s sudden relative hawkishness and on growing safe haven demand—makes equites more expensive via the exchange rate for foreign investors.

    h2 Global Financial Affairs/h2
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