Opening Bell: Futures, Stocks Slump On Lockdowns, Afghanistan; Gold, USD Rally

 | Aug 17, 2021 09:04AM ET

  • Continuing spread of coronavirus increases market jitters
  • Investors look to today's town hall with Federal Reserve Chair for policy clues
  • Tech sector rally resumes
  • Key Events/h2

    US futures contracts on the Dow, S&P, NASDAQ and Russell 2000 tracked a global selloff on Tuesday, as increased lockdowns across the world continue to test the global economic recovery and the crisis in Afghanistan adds to risk-off sentiment. This follows the Dow and S&P posting new record closes yesterday during the US session.

    Gold jumped as traders pivoted into safe havens.

    Global Financial Affairs/h2

    While all four US futures were in the red, there was an obvious loser—the Russell 2000, which tumbled 1.2% this morning, tripling the 0.4% decline of the NASDAQ 100, illustrating a clear reversal for the Reflation Trade.

    Growth stocks appear to be back in vogue, predominantly in the technology sector. Tech stocks have already benefited significantly from the global pandemic as lockdowns forced people to move much of their activity including work, socializing and shopping, online. This recent rally in tech stocks, whose valuations were already stretched, demonstrates that many investors think the economic rebound will not continue.

    In Europe, shares opened lower, extending yesterday's selloff. The STOXX 600 index declined for the second day and if it continues sliding may post its sharpest two-day slump in four weeks, after the pan-European benchmark posted a 10-day streak of records earlier this month, in its longest advance in history.

    Matching the paradigm in US futures, in European trade, economically sensitive sectors suffered the biggest losses. Travel stocks, automakers, real estate shares, and retail equities were leading decliners.

    Earlier, Asian markets continued to suffer from ongoing Chinese regulatory tightening in the tech sector, which dented the sector in regional trade. In a recent development, officials have restricted companies’ handling of user data which has led to selloffs among Sino internet mammoths including Tencent (HK:0700) and Alibaba (HK:9988). The tech sector in Hong Kong, where a number of major Chinese internet companies are listed, slumped 2.6%, underperforming the broader benchmark, the Hang Seng Index, which dropped 'only' 1.7%, slightly less than the slump in China’s Shanghai Composite.

    US stocks rebounded on Monday, with the S&P 500 Index and the Dow Jones Industrial Average gaining about 0.3%, as both notched new all-time highs.

    The S&P 500 Index has jumped 104% from the March 2020 bottom. The Dow Jones Industrial Average has rallied 95% while the NASDAQ 100 and NASDAQ Composite 123% and 122% respectively. But the biggest surprise is the 128% surge of the Russell 2000, and that’s after recent declines. By March of this year, the small cap gauge had added 144% since the March low of 2020.

    The S&P 500 posted its 49th record for this year. However, note that defensive utilities and healthcare outperformed. We have been pointing out recently that it doesn’t bode well for the broader market when defensive stocks lead the rallies.

    In stock news, Apple (NASDAQ:AAPL) climbed to an all-time high, while Tesla (NASDAQ:TSLA) stumbled after US auto safety regulators opened an investigation on the electric vehicle’s autopilot system.

    Investors are eagerly awaiting any indication from Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell at today's town hall of what may be revealed at the Jackson Hole symposium later this month, when traders taper tantrum .

    Meanwhile, investors are continuing to move into haven positions, increasing their holdings in 10-year Treasury notes, pushing yields toward recent lows.