Opening Bell: U.S. Futures, European Stocks Bounce On Positive Omicron Headlines

 | Dec 06, 2021 08:59AM ET

  • Treasury yields and oil rise but possibly within bearish larger moves
  • China tech plunges on US delisting worries
  • h2 Key Events/h2

    On Monday, US benchmark futures for the S&P 500, Dow Jones, NASDAQ and Russell 2000, along with shares in Europe all rebounded on positive Omicron reports indicating the COVID variant might be less dangerous than previously thought.

    Early data out of South Africa, where the strain was first isolated, shows that the mutation is milder than expected and is not leading to increased hospitalization. America's top epidemiologist, Anthony Fauci, said that initial reports about the variant are encouraging, as there didn't seem to be "a great degree of severity to Omicron" though he called for more research.

    The dollar has edged higher and oil continues to rise.

    h2 Global Financial Affairs/h2

    In economic news, the data in the spotlight is US consumer prices, to be released on Friday, which are expected to reveal the sharpest yearly rise in decades, encouraging the Federal Reserve to speed up its effort to contain spiking inflation.

    The Reflation Trade is in full display this morning with all major US contracts in the green, though led by contracts on the Russell 2000, representing small cap domestic companies reliant on an open economy. Dow futures, which includes blue chip value stocks, is the second-best performer, followed by SPX futures. Contracts on the Nasdaq 100 are lagging, after the underlying benchmark completed a bearish pattern last week.

    European shares opened higher, bouncing back after last week's volatility. The Stoxx Europe 600 Index opened trading 0.7% higher. The U.K.'s FTSE 100 rallied with banks, commodities, and miners on the same cyclical rotation seen in US futures.

    Today's market behavior follows Friday's pattern of investors cashing out of mega US tech shares whose valuations are exposed to selloffs as markets anticipate higher borrowing costs.

    Last Friday's Nonfarm Payrolls release disappointed. Though US jobs increased by 210,000 last month, that was less than half the number a Reuters poll forecast. However, the unemployment rate fell to 4.2%, a significant decrease.

    During Monday's Asia session, most regional benchmarks were lower. Hong Kong's Hang Seng sank 1.8%, dragged down by Chinese tech shares, including Alibaba (HK:9988) and Tencent (HK:0700), on fears both stocks would be delisted in the US. Today's selloff extends Friday's crash, in which the NASDAQ Golden Dragon China Index, a key gauge that includes Chinese tech stocks also listed in the US, plummeted 9.1%, the worst rout for the benchmark since it was launched in 2008.

    Treasury yields, including for the 10-year note, rebounded from last week's plunge toward 1.350%, as investors locked in profits on a rally in the sovereign bonds. US bond rates are still a long way below the 1.65% level where they were in late November, ahead of Omicron concerns.

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