Opening Bell: U.S. Futures, Global Stocks Rise As 2022 Begins; Oil Jumps

 | Jan 03, 2022 09:09AM ET

  • Trading volumes remain light to start 2022
  • Though markets rise, virus and inflation worries linger
  • Oil vaults higher ahead of this week's OPEC monthly meeting
  • h2 Key Events/h2

    US benchmark contracts on the Dow Jones, S&P 500, NASDAQ and Russell 2000 advanced on Monday, along with European shares to start the 2022 trading year.

    Nonetheless, investors continue monitoring developments on the virus front, as the spread of the highly contagious Omicron variant continues accelerating globally. Though its symptoms have so far been milder than previous variants, ongoing worries persist as signaled by mixed Asian trade. A second focus for markets remains the Fed's path to tightening monetary policy. Inflation will therefore undoubtedly have a crucial role in how policymakers respond.

    Both oil and the dollar gained.

    h2 Global Financial Affairs/h2

    All four futures on the major US equity indices were higher this morning, with those on the tech-heavy NASDAQ 100 vying for leadership with contracts on the small cap Russell 2000 at time of publication. Mega cap futures on the Dow lagged, suggesting a cyclical rollback. Though trading was mixed in Asia, volumes remain thin; markets in the UK, China, and Japan were all on holiday.

    Europe's STOXX 600 gained over 0.5% earlier today, though the pan-European index has dipped a bit since then, starting 2022 on a positive note. The index hit a new record to finish out 2021, having surpassed the one posted in November. This morning's gains extend the 22.4% rise last year, its second-best annual showing since 2009. Central bank stimulus, growth in corporate profits, and an orderly distribution of vaccines helped investors overcome jitters from Omicron's risk.

    Today, carmakers outperformed during European trade, jumping 1.3% following positive monthly sales reports from global automobile companies.

    Germany's largest airline, Lufthansa (DE:LHAG), surged over 5% as analysts at Citigroup aggressively upgraded Europe's second-largest airline from 'sell' to 'buy.' Technically, the airline's price could now go either way.