Opening Bell: U.S. Futures, Europe Waver As Grim Data Strains Reopen Sentiment

 | Apr 30, 2020 07:11AM ET

  • US stocks touch 7-week highs on strong tech earnings, possible antiviral drug treatment
  • Oil jumps over 13%
  • h2 Key Events/h2

    US contracts, including for the S&P 500, Dow Jones and NASDAQ, as well as European shares, wavered on Thursday, bucking the bullish Asian trend seen earlier in the morning. Though corporate results for mega cap tech companies have been better than expected, and reports continue to surface that there's apparent progress in combating COVID-19, markets are also being pressured by grim economic data.

    There was decidedly good news on the energy front, however: oil futures shot past $18 today.

    h2 Global Financial Affairs/h2

    After an 11% rally for global stocks—over 31% for American equities—traders are now weighing the frightening economic data alongside the outlook for reopening businesses and hopes for the arrival of a treatment for the coronavirus of which, to date, there are more than 3,200,000 confirmed cases globally. The virus's fatality rate is nearing 228,000, with more than 61,000 dead in the US alone.

    After US stocks reached a seven-week high yesterday, futures fluctuated around Wednesday’s closing prices, giving up an early advance. The notable exception: contracts on the NASDAQ advanced more than 0.55%, albeit having pared an initial 1.2% gain. The tech-heavy contract was buoyed by strong results yesterday from Microsoft (NASDAQ:MSFT), Facebook (NASDAQ:FB) and Tesla (NASDAQ:TSLA).

    Tech giants demonstrated they were still profitable, even during the pandemic, boosting the NASDAQ Composite 3.5%. Additional good news from Gilead Sciences (NASDAQ:GILD), which reported that early trials of its antiviral drug remdesivir as a possible treatement for COVID-19 were promising, contributed to the rally as well.

    Still, other companies—including earlier today oil major Royal Dutch Shell PLC Class A (LON:RDSa)—have announced dividend cuts. Meanwhile, both US and European data show their economies fell into a recession in the last quarter.

    Car manufacturers led the Stoxx Europe 600 Index higher at the open on Thursday, as the pan-European benchmark followed yesterday's Wall Street rally. Société Générale (PA:SOGN) plunged more than 5%, after unexpectedly posting a quarterly loss.