Opening Bell: Futures, Global Stocks Push Higher On Sino-U.S. Trade Optimism

 | Aug 25, 2020 07:43AM ET

  • All four major US contracts along with global stocks up, though China lags
  • Gold falls together with dollar, bolstering equities
  • USD's decline confirms continued downtrend
  • h2 Key Events/h2

    US futures for the S&P 500, Dow Jones, NASDAQ and Russell 2000, as well as global stocks all pushed higher on Tuesday, propelled by news from China's commerce ministry that there had been "constructive dialogue" between the US and the Asian nation on trade. This helped build on existing gains spurred by signs of thawing US-Sino relations, apparent stability in the pandemic's spread and a faster track to a virus treatment—as all the signals seem to be lining up for a continued rally.

    The dollar fell along with Treasuries and gold.

    h2 Global Financial Affairs/h2

    The world’s two largest economies have managed to reaffirm their joint commitment to the Phase 1 of what is hoped will ultimately culminate in a broader, satisfactory trade deal between Washington and Beijing, to be reviewed twice-yearly. As market participants know, this is not a forgone conclusion given the array of tensions over a broad spectrum of disagreements starting with data security and ending with democracy in Hong Kong.

    On the other hand, considering this is just the first segment of what's hoped will be a larger deal—the same Phase 1 accord signed by President Donald Trump and China’s Vice Premier Liu He on January 15, 2020, after months of breakups and makeups between the two economic powers—the notion of a consumation remains impossible to predict in this universe.

    Put more bluntly, that signature was nothing more than a public relations stunt, and the biannual review now being heralded as a breakthrough is akin to hitting the snooze button, while investors go back to sleep to dream about riches provided by infinite QE producing unending equity rallies.

    Contracts on the SPX and Dow this morning suggest the underlying benchmarks will climb for a fourth day, while NASDAQ futures point to a fifth day advances. US Russell futures are signaling a second day rally for the small cap index.

    The Stoxx Europe 600 advanced with airline shares. Germany's DAX jumped at the open building on gains which took it over the 13,000 level on Monday. However, the benchmark retreated earlier and is well off its highs, though it has remained above the 13,000 mark.

    The pan-European index was also pushed off its highs, to fall below the 200 DMA.

    Most of Asia was in the green this morning, with South Korea’s KOSPI outperforming, (+1.6%), seeing the biggest gains in a month on the positive trade news from the US and China. As well, the Bank of Korea is expected to keep interest rates on hold on Thursday as it weighs concerns about rising household debt and property prices.

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    Japan’s Nikkei followed, (+1.35%), boosted by Paper and Pulp stocks, Railway and Bus shares and Real Estate sector equities.

    As we've often point out, Chinese stocks were the surprising contrarians. Despite the biggest positive theme in the news cycle centering on China’s trade with the US, the Shanghai Composite was one of the few major Asian benchmarks in the red, (-0.4%), though Hong Kong’s Hang Seng and India’s Nifty 50 were both down as well, though the Indian index eked out a marginal gain. It's possible fears of another 2015-like Chinese stock bubble could be weighing on mainland shares.

    On Monday, during the New York session, US stocks climbed to yet another all-time high amid COVID-19 treatment hopes. The S&P 500 notched another record, while the NASDAQ Composite garnered a second consecutive all-time high.