Opening Bell: Treasury Yields, Base Metals, U.S. Dollar Rally; Futures Wobble

 | Feb 08, 2022 08:03AM ET

  • Investors sell 10-year Treasuries 
  • Iron ore, aluminum boost mining stocks
  • Bitcoin recovers
  • h2 Key Events/h2

    US futures on the Dow Jones, S&P 500, NASDAQ and Russell 2000 wobbled on Tuesday, signaling that the New York session would open lower, notwithstanding that shares in Europe began the trading day higher. Rising commodity prices benefited mining stocks, which had moved into negative territory as investors continue to monitor diplomatic efforts to scale down tensions on the Ukraine border.

    US Treasury yields rallied ahead of Thursday's US inflation data.

    h2 Global Financial Affairs/h2

    The STOXX 600 Index was boosted earlier today by a 2.6% jump in basic materials. Iron ore bested the $150 per metric ton mark after China eased steel's green emissions targets, scaling back the timetable for peak steel metrics. Iron ore was up 70% from its November low. Aluminum opened higher in London, hitting a four-month high, as investors worry that any conflict in Ukraine could dent production from Russia, a major producer. However, the index failed to hold on to earlier gains. 

    In London, shares in BP (LON:BP) jumped 1.7% after posting solid earnings and declaring plans for a share buyback program. The British oil and gas major extended gains for the fourth day for a total acceleration of 5.7%, pushing the stock to its highest level since Mar. 4, 2020. However, the stock has slipped and was just 0.6% higher at the time of writing.

    Losers during today's European session included online grocer Ocado (LON:OCDO), which plummeted more than 10%, hitting its lowest level since March 2020 after the company missed full-year profit expectations. In Paris, lender BNP Paribas (PA:BNPP) slipped over 0.3% after the French bank announced disappointing fourth-quarter revenue relative to rising expenses. 

    Earlier Tuesday, shares in Asia were mixed. China's Shanghai Composite closed up 0.67%, outperforming the region. Hong Kong's Hang Seng slid 1.02%; it was the laggard in the region.

    The 10-year Treasury yield extended its advance above 1.900% as traders continue to sell Treasuries after a positive jobs report last week which signaled to investors that the Fed would raise rates in March as planned.