Opening Bell: U.S. Futures, Asian Stocks Gain After Robust NFP, Record S&P 500

 | Apr 05, 2021 08:59AM ET

  • Reflation trade leads US futures higher
  • Unprecedented monetary, fiscal policy to boost markets in medium-term.
  • h2 Key Events/h2

    US futures for the Dow, S&P, NASDAQ and Russell 2000 all opened higher on Monday and continue to trade in the green along with Asian stocks after Friday's muscular US jobs report blew past expectations. The benchmarks are tracking Treasury yields higher this morning as well.

    Markets in Europe, Australia and New Zealand are closed for Easter Monday. Exchanges in China and Hong Kong are closed for a public holiday.

    Crude oil and gold are both lower.

    h2 Global Financial Affairs/h2

    Contracts on the S&P 500 built on Friday’s strong Nonfarm Payrolls release as well as Thursday's record high close for the underlying benchmark, after it surpassed 4,000 for the first time. Along with a shrinking unemployment rate, the report revealed 916,000 new jobs were created in March, the most in seven months.

    However, futures on the Russell 2000—where domestic, American small cap firms are listed—are outperforming significantly today, while the tech-heavy NASDAQ 100 futures are comparatively flat, demonstrating faith in an end to lockdowns. That would of course favor value stocks rather than growth-oriented shares, which benefited from pandemic and its restrictions.

    Fiscal stimulus remains in focus, after a report on Saturday noted that 60 members of Congress appealed to the Biden Administration to increase already unprecedented spending. The legislators want to add a fourth round of financial aid that would provide another check for Americans, offering “recurring direct payments and automatic unemployment insurance extensions tied to economic conditions in your Build Back Better long-term economic plan.”

    While we question the long-term economic impact of all this, we expect the excitement of a reopening economy backed by unprecedentated monetary stimulus to prop up the market, or, depending on who you ask, further inflating an ever-expanding bubble. We have long warned that the miraculous rally that followed the March bottom seems to us to be too good to be true.

    Having said that, the fear of missing out has the potential to keep driving markets, until a crisis could pierce what we have long considered the delusion of an alternate, extremely healthy economy, fostered by irrational monetary policy. Nevertheless, there are qualified economists who do support these measures, not the least those that are Federal Reserve members and administrations.

    Notwithstanding, we're following momentum within the rising trend. However, we remain cautious and ready to act. Still, barring a black swan event, we don’t anticipate a market downturn over the next few months.

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    Treasury yields, including for the 10-year note, struggled, adding to the second day of the bond rally.