Opening Bell: U.S. Futures, Global Equities Retreat; Oil Slumps; Yields Fall

 | Mar 26, 2020 07:44AM ET

  • Investors look past yesterday's $2 trillion U.S. stimulus deal and refocus on pandemic fears
  • ECB to buy unlimited bonds to support eurozone economy
  • h2 Key Events/h2

    Futures contracts for U.S. major indices including the S&P 500, Dow Jones and NASDAQ, along with most global shares, trimmed gains on Thursday, after the spirited rally of the past two days. Market optimism fueled by the promise of unprecedented U.S. stimulus faded as worries about the worst global pandemic in 100 years returned to the spotlight.

    Yields dropped and the yen strengthened.

    h2 Global Financial Affairs/h2

    We've noted previously that throwing more and more money at the economic problems stemming from the COVID-19 outbreak won’t necessarily solve them. The current bear market is a result of a clear lack of real growth, with manufacturing lines and supply chains experiencing their worst disruptions since WWII.

    As long as the number of global and U.S. cases continues to rise and the fatality count increases, bulls will find themselves increasingly alone.

    However, knowing there is sufficient liquidity to avoid bank runs may steer the world out of a severe global depression, such as hasn't been seen in almost a century. While it may be economically sound to keep the arteries of the economy pumping, the market won't rise in any significant way until it finally bottoms out. And we haven't yet seen that—not by a long shot.

    S&P 500 futures slumped after the number of coronavirus cases in the U.S. topped 69,000 and the death toll neared 1,000.