Opening Bell: Risk-Off Grips Markets As Virus Spreads Beyond China; Gold Gains

 | Feb 20, 2020 07:21AM ET

  • U.S. Dollar jumps to 2.5-year high
  • Gold bounces to 7-year high
  • Yesterday on Wall Street, both the S&P 500 and NASDAQ notched new records
  • h2 Key Events/h2

    U.S. futures for the S&P 500, Dow Jones and NASDAQ all slipped this morning, along with European stocks, as market sentiment whipsawed on the global affects of coronavirus. The reversal back to risk-off was triggered by reports of additional cases in South Korea, bringing the number of infected individuals there to 82, as well as two deaths from the virus reported in Japan.

    Yields dropped, as the U.S. dollar hit a two-and-a-half-year high. Nonetheless, that didn’t stop gold from making a seven-year high. The safe haven yen, however, buckled under dollar strength.

    h2 Global Financial Affairs/h2

    While China appears to be gaining control of the spread of Covid-19, the number of cases reported in the rest of the world are picking up. As well, another change in Chinese counting methodology has caused a series of up-and-down sequences regarding the spread or containment of the virus, depending on whether one relies on global or Chinese data.

    On Wednesday, all four major U.S. indices gained, with the S&P 500 and NASDAQ each hitting new all-time highs. This morning, futures contracts for the main indices pared yesterday’s gains. Indeed, Russell 2000 futures wiped out nearly all of Wednesday’s advance for the small cap index.

    This remains in keeping with the recent trend of daily swings as investors fluctuate between fear and fortitude regarding the trend of the epidemic's spread and its economic impact on the world.