Opening Bell: U.S. Futures Tread Water As Earnings Hopes Waver, Trade Woes Rise

 | Jul 17, 2019 06:45AM ET

  • U.S. futures, European shares crawl higher as earnings hopes outweighed renewed U.S.-China trade tensions
  • Dollar drops after jumping on positive retail sales, housing data
  • Bitcoin extends slide below $10,000 critical level
  • h2 Key Events/h2

    Futures on the S&P 500, Dow and NASDAQ 100 ticked mildly higher and bucked a falling Asian trend this morning, against a backdrop of renewed U.S.-China tensions and protracted uncertainty over the Fed’s path to lower interest rates.

    Europe’s STOXX 600 pared a lower open that threatened to end a three-day winning streak. At the open, a selloff in financials offset a tech rally. The banking sector dropped with Swedish banks after Svenska Handelsbanken (ST:SHBa) disappointed on earnings, and Swedbank (ST:SWEDa) cut shareholder pay-out policy. Technology stocks, conversely, led a charge higher on the back of ASML (AS:ASML)’s earnings beat.

    In the earlier Asian session, regional equities edged lower after a pick up in U.S. President Donald Trump's tariffs rhetoric resulted in a lackluster U.S. session performance. South Korea’s KOSPI (-0.91%) underperformed, while Australia’s S&P/ASX 200 (+0.49%) bucked the regional trend.

    h2 Global Financial Affairs/h2

    In yesterday’s U.S. session, equities retreated from all-time highs as strong earnings beat from some key market players such as JPMorgan (NYSE:JPM), Morgan Stanley (NYSE:MS) and J&J (NYSE:JNJ) were overshadowed by comments, from President Donald Trump, that higher tariffs on China could be reimposed should the Asian country fail to substantially increase its purchases of U.S. farm goods. On its part, China added hard-liner Commerce Minister Zhong Shan to its negotiating team, sparking worries of new diplomatic tensions.

    The S&P 500 (-0.34%) ended a five-day advance. Trade-sensitive sectors Energy and Technology lagged (-1.10% and -0.95% respectively), the former also tracking weakening oil prices.

    Renewed trade worries hit demand for oil also based on the consideration that OPEC producers recently synchronized their production cut decision to progress in trade talks between Trump and Chinese President Xi Jinping, as ongoing trade spat jitters had strengthened the outlook for a slowdown in global growth and fuel demand.

    Tech companies' growth is also particularly dependent on smooth trade relations, with the U.S.-China dispute seen, at a core level, as a struggle for global tech dominance. Industrials (+0.65%) outperformed.