Opening Bell: China Data Pressures Futures, Stocks; Gold Slips, USD Up

 | Jul 16, 2020 06:54AM ET

  • China retail sales disappointed, overshadowing better-than-expected GDP
  • The US and China extend their tit-for-tat spat
  • Risk-off sentiment pervades markets
  • h2 Key Events/h2

    A slew of Chinese economic data, released on Thursday, sent US contracts for the S&P 500, Dow Jones, NASDAQ and Russell 2000, along with global stocks, lower. The data out of China illustrated there's a bumpy road forward toward economic recovery, as COVID-19 continues to rev up worldwide, threatening additional lockdowns.

    Demand rose for Treasuries, boosting the dollar, at the expense of gold, while the yen also gained.

    h2 Global Financial Affairs/h2

    Even though China’s GDP surprised to the upside, clearly showing a return to growth for the Asian nation in the second quarter, June retail sales disappointed, showing the contraction on this metric had deepened. As the first country to have restarted their economy after the coronavirus breakout, China’s data may be viewed as a bellwether for the global economy.

    Adding to market headwinds were increasing tensions between China and the US. After sanctioning banks doing business with Chinese officials, the US is now considering broad travel restrictions for officials of China's Communist Party.

    This morning, all major Asian markets were in the red, as were US futures. NASDAQ contracts were the hardest hit, down almost 1.5% at time of writing, extending a period of underperformance for the tech-heavy index, after it was responsible for supporting the broader US stock market.

    Contracts on the SPX pointed to an open that would erase the S&P 500's gains from the previous day.