Opening Bell: Dollar Slides, Yen Keeps Surging, Global Stocks Higher

 | Feb 15, 2018 07:04AM ET

  • US stocks on track to move higher, for a fifth day, against rising yields on weakest retail sales in 11 months

  • TOPIX bounces off 4-month low, despite strongest yen in 15 months

  • Dollar traders remain pessimistic, focusing on twin deficits instead of rising inflation

  • USD/JPY exchange rate decoupling from US interest rates raises red flag for dollar bulls

  • 10-year Treasurys yields continue to climb toward 3-percent key level

  • Oil climbs above $60 for a second day, but shows signs of weakness

  • Gold set to push to higher peak, confirming uptrend

  • h2 Key Events/h2

    Yesterday, all four major US indexes—the S&P 500 Index, the Dow Jones Industrial Average, the NASDAQ Composite and the Russell 2000—extended their rebounds to a fourth day, even as Treasury yields climbed to a four-year high, after consumer price data increased bets the Federal Reserve will accelerate its tightening cycle.

    The S&P 500 Index advanced 1.34 percent, led by Financials, which bagged a 2.38 percent gain since expected higher rates would benefit bank earnings. Utilities underperformed, suggesting investors were rotating back out of defensive stocks and into growth equities. The Real Estate sector also lost 0.63 percent in value, as traders cashed out after shares outperformed in Wednesday's session with a 0.73 percent rise. The SPX is now back to positive territory year-to-date, up 0.95 percent, after tumbling 11.8 percent from its January 26 peak.

    The Dow is up 1.04 percent after yesterday's trade, higher by 0.8 percent for the year, reversing its harsh 12.25 percent slump from the index's January 26 high.