Opening Bell: Futures, Stocks Take A Breather; USD Climbs, Pressing Gold, Oil

 | Jul 07, 2020 07:06AM ET

  • Futures on Dow fell 0.8%, on the S&P down 0.75% after Monday's strong gains
  • China shares climbed for a 6th day, its longest upward streak since February
  • Oil slumps, but clings to $40 level
  • h2 Key Events/h2

    The global equity rally in stocks faltered on Tuesday, after a robust open to the trading week extended risk appetite after the best quarter for US equities in decades. This morning, however, US futures for the Dow Jones, S&P 500, NASDAQ and Russell 2000 were down, and European stocks erased Monday’s gains. Asian shares were primarily in the red as well, though the Shanghai Composite eked out a gain.

    The dollar rebounded, even as yields dropped. Oil wiped out Monday’s increases.

    h2 Global Financial Affairs/h2

    Contracts on all four major US indices were lower, with futures for the Russell 2000 underperforming at time of writing, (-1.4%). Contracts on the NASDAQ weren't quite so pressured, (-0.4%), after the underlying index posted a fresh record high during Monday's New York session.

    Perhaps, investors decided to lock in profits today. As well, the US's top, infectious disease authority, Dr. Anthony Fauci, may now be changing .

    Healthcare firms and banking industry shares pulled the Stoxx Europe 600 lower, after German Industrial Production disappointed, underscoring just how much of an uphill climb it is for any economy emerging from a lockdown.

    Asian stocks failed to follow Monday's strong rally on Wall Street. Hong Kong’s Hang Seng underperformed, (-1.5%), as investors unwound positions after a 9.5% surge in the past five sessions. Technically, the index remained above both the 200 DMA and the top of a rising channel.

    South Korea’s KOSPI was the region's second worst performer, (-1.1%), snapping a three-day rally, as rising cases of COVID-19 globally increased local worries. The number of confirmed cases of the virus has swelled to over 11.6 million worldwide, with 538,539 fatalities.

    China’s Shanghai index was once again the regional outlier—it outperformed, (+0.4%), as momentum from an editorial in The China Securities Journal touting stock acquisition as a 'healthy' way to build the country's digital economy kept alive a surge of interest by novice investors. Though the benchmark was 2.2% higher intraday, it gave up most of that advance. Still, the gauge sealed its sixth consecutive daily climb, the longest streak since its February bottom.

    On Monday, US stocks were boosted by the tech sector. The S&P 500 rallied for a fifth straight day, its longest up-move since December.