Opening Bell: Gold Falls, Dollar, Stocks Rally Ahead Of U.S. CPI

 | Mar 13, 2018 08:00AM ET

  • S&P 500 and Dow dragged down by Industrials, on specter of trade tariff retaliation

  • Small-caps rally, NASDAQ posts fresh record

  • Broadcom shares fly after Trump blocks bid for Qualcomm

  • Micron jumps after Nomura nearly doubles share price target

  • Dollar inches higher

  • Safe havens gold and yen decline

  • Bitcoin bulls and bears resume tug-of-war over critical level

  • h2 Key Events/h2

    After trading higher than their Friday close, yesterday, most stocks ended lower. They were dragged down by the two leading US indices—the S&P 500 and Dow Jones Industrial Average. Still, the NASDAQ Composite and the Russell 2000 managed to close in positive territory.

    Investor sentiment had at first been buoyed by the fruitful combination of spectacular growth in new jobs via Friday's Nonfarm Payroll release and subdued wage growth, indicating that inflation won't be rising. However, as the day progressed, investors woke up to the persistent reality of US President Donald Trump's protectionist stance. His tax cuts may have been a windfall for corporations, but his tariffs on steel and aluminum are anything but.

    US-based global industrial giants would bear the brunt of a trade war, if countries hit back with hefty tariffs on US exports. These companies are in fact highly dependent on exports to foreign markets and would also be strongly affected by higher material costs.

    France's Minister of the Economy Bruno Le Maire told CNBC yesterday that the EU will join forces with foreign jurisdictions to counter the US's protectionist stance. An obvious natural ally would be China, the US's largest trading partner.

    The S&P 500 closed 0.13 percent lower, with Industrials tumbling 1.2 percent. The sector's drag on the broader index becomes even more evident when we consider that the second worst performing sector, Health Care, fell 0.43 percent: just about one third of losses incurred by shares of Industrials. Consumer Cyclicals (+0.6 percent) and Telecommunications (+0.5 percent) were the best performing sectors, painting a mixed picture of defensive and growth stocks, revealing a lack of market leadership.

    The Dow Jones Industrial Average came in 0.6 percent lower at 25,206, pulled down by Boeing (NYSE:BA) (-2.9 percent) and Caterpillar (NYSE:CAT) (-2.4 percent).

    The NASDAQ Composite posted a fresh record as it clinched a straight seventh positive day, closing 0.4 percent in the green.

    The US Treasury blocked Broadcom's (NASDAQ:AVGO) $117 billion bid for US chipmaker Qualcomm (NASDAQ:QCOM), citing concerns of national security and indicating that Singapore-based Broadcom hadn't given sufficient notice on its plans to re-domicile to the US.

    The acquisition, which would have marked the biggest deal in tech history, was allegedly opposed by Trump on worries that it would give China the ability to overshadow US technology. Broadcom shares soared 3.6 percent following the news, as it quashed fears that the acquisition would drain the company's coffers.