Opening Bell: Futures Struggle, Global Stocks Sell Off As Lockdowns Return

 | Jul 14, 2020 07:05AM ET

  • Global stocks fall on California lockdown, despite positive China data
  • Gold pressed lower by stronger dollar
  • Oil falls below $40 ahead of EIA report
  • h2 Key Events/h2

    US futures for the S&P 500, Dow Jones, NASDAQ and Russell 2000 fluctuated on Tuesday, while European shares tanked. Renewed worries about the second California shutdown weighed on markets after the US's most populous state announced yesterday it was reacting to a spike in COVID-19 cases. Investors are concerned this return to lockdowns will offset optimism driven by a string of better-than-expected economic data and hopes for a positive earnings season.

    The dollar strengthened, pressuring gold. Oil remains below $40.

    h2 Global Financial Affairs /h2

    Though all four contracts on the major US indices opened higher, they were dragged down at the start of the European session. However, at time of writing all are trading higher.

    The Stoxx Europe 600 Index was down 1.4%, paring a 1.9% initial drop that erased nearly two days of gains.

    Asian indices all finished in the red. They'd gained earlier this morning when China’s trade data for June beat estimates. Exports rose 0.5%, while imports jumped 2.7% YoY. But ongoing US-China tensions—this time a shift in Washington policy toward Beijing's maritime claims in the South China Sea—dragged regional markets lower.

    Hong Kong’s Hang Seng suffered the worst selloff, (-1.14%). It opened 1.4% lower, after the financial hub joined a global trend to reimpose containment measures in effort to slow down the raging pandemic. South Korea’s KOSPI outperformed, (-0.1%), closing only marginally lower, as the country added only 33 new coronavirus cases today, demonstrating sharply slowing momentum from Monday’s 62 confirmed cases and Sunday’s 44. Health officials still warned of a continued rise in cluster infections and imported cases.

    From time to time we point out ironies in the market narrative, here's today's incongruity: a selloff in Asia and Europe over the lockdown in California, while US futures bulls push back.

    There's also an argument drop seems to have proven that wrong. Of course, we can’t be sure what’s really in the minds of investors when it comes to in short-term moves. We are simply projecting the narrative.

    On Wall Street during Monday's session, most US shares declined, after reaching the highest levels intraday since the panic-induced March coronavirus selloff. The Dow Jones Industrial Average was the only major index that managed to remain in the green, even if just barely, (+0.04%). The NASDAQ Composite underperformed, (-2.1%), after posting another new all-time high.

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