Opening Bell: Futures Falter, Global Stocks Rise As COVID-19 Cases Accelerate

 | Jul 09, 2020 07:35AM ET

  • US futures mixed
  • European stocks snap 2-day decline after SAP posts positive guidance after coronavirus hit
  • China shares continue to outperform, their longest streak since January 2018
  • h2 Key Events/h2

    US futures for the Dow Jones, S&P 500, NASDAQ and Russell 2000 wavered on Thursday, even as European shares headed higher, snapping a two-day losing streak, following a positive Asian session.

    This morning's boost was driven by hopes of additional economic support measures ahead of today's virtual meeting between euro area finance ministers. It follows yesterday's UK government announcement of its latest economic rescue plan which would pump 30 billion pounds ($38 million) into the British economy as it reopens. As well, with earnings season approaching, prospects of reassuring corporate news, such as from Germany's SAP this morning, helped fuel market optimism.

    The dollar rebounded from a loss, even as yields remained at their lows. Nonetheless, gold reached a nine-year high as coronavirus worries continued to weigh on investors as the global confirmed case count crossed 12 million.

    h2 Global Financial Affairs/h2

    US futures contracts for the SPX, Dow and Russell 2000 are all down, while NASDAQ futures have been gaining, one day after the tech-heavy index posted a fresh record.

    The Stoxx Europe 600 Index rose software giant SAP (DE:SAPG) indicated it was seeing a rebound in its business after the decline caused by pandemic. The German multinational corporation surged 6.5% to a record after confirming its full year outlook. Just the fact that the company was willing—and able—to provide a forecast was positive in and of itself after 80% of S&P 500 stocks didn't provide guidance last quarter.

    During the Asian session anticipation that earnings season will confirm an economic recovery fueled gains. China’s Shanghai Composite outperformed for a fourth day, (+1.39). The mainland index notched its the 8th day continuous advance, its longest winning streak since January 2018.

    Right now China is enjoying two tailwinds that could be dual catalysts for the exuberance of its local markets. To begin with, it was the first country to effectively emerge from lockdowns and flatten the curve. Second, generous government stimulus along with state media selling the fundamentals of stock ownership helped produce the current powerful rally, albeit one that has the telltale signs of a bubble.

    As common investor wisdom posits, when the broader public gets involved in the market, it’s often the beginning of the end.

    On Wednesday, US equities advanced during the New York session. Traders continue to consider big tech a sure bet, notwithstanding any geopolitcal health or Sino-US trade risks.

    Get The News You Want
    Read market moving news with a personalized feed of stocks you care about.
    Get The App

    The S&P 500 hit a monthly high and the NASDAQ Composite achieved a fresh record, its 25th for the year, thanks to such mega cap tech stalwarts as Apple (NASDAQ:AAPL) and Amazon (NASDAQ:AMZN).

    The problem over the long run, of course, is that a few large caps can’t carry the entire market . This divergence is, in fact, a sign of market weakness.

    We can see this divergence on the chart, via the AD section.