Opening Bell: Commodities Drop, Futures, Stocks Flat As Markets Await Tightening

 | Aug 09, 2021 06:48AM ET

  • Futures, stocks holding at record highs as investors seek new direction amid conflict of faster economic recovery vs stimulus removal concerns
  • Gold rebounds from flash crash, but still looks to be heading lower
  • Oil on the verge of a downtrend
  • h2 Key Events/h2

    US futures for the Dow Jones, S&P 500, NASDAQ and Russell 2000 all dipped on Monday, at the start of weekly trading, while European stocks were at a standstill. The week opened on unsure footing as investors try to get their bearings after US equities hit back-to-back records last week, even as speculation has been growing that monetary tightening from the Fed will come sooner than expected as the US economy grows at a faster pace than anticipated.

    With the prospect of a stronger dollar after Friday's Nonfarm Payrolls upside surprise, commodities are being sold off this morning, though gold has climbed back from last week's flash crash. However, we expect the yellow metal to encounter resistance shortly.

    h2 Global Financial Affairs/h2

    European stocks on the STOXX 600 Index were little changed this morning, as energy-related shares followed commodities lower, offsetting gains in technology companies. Royal Dutch Shell (AS:RDSa), Total (PA:TTEF) and BP (LON:BP) declined on both the strengthening dollar, as well as the escalating Delta variant contagion in Asia, which has the potential to hit summer demand amid social restrictions.

    Metal prices were among the commodities hit, dragging down miners including BHP (LON:BHPB), Glencore (LON:GLEN) and Rio Tinto (ASX:RIO). The pan-European benchmark was in a holding pattern on Monday after last week posting its strongest week since mid-March, a full year after global stocks bottomed in 2020, producing the worst selloffs since the 2008 financial market crash.

    Earlier, most regional Asian markets were up. South Korea’s KOSPI was one of the few regional indices in the red, -0.30%, with foreign net selling weakening the won, as investors bet on the Fed cutting stimulus after Friday’s US jobs beat.

    Australia's ASX 200 closed flat, with gains in financial sector shares ahead of additional earnings releases this coming week, and after US jobs growth set the tone for global central bank tightening, were offset by a selloff of miners, a key sector in the Aussie economy, amid gold's plunge.

    The outlook for higher rates, including on the 10-year benchmark note, triggered a selloff in Treasuries, as investors sought higher payouts.