Opening Bell: Asia, Europe, U.S. Futures Fall; VIX, USD Pop

 | May 18, 2017 06:17AM ET

by Pinchas Cohen

  • After Wednesday’s gains the yen, gold and yields pare gains

Asia-Pacific markets followed in lock-step with yesterday’s US panic sell-off, the worst day for markets in eight months. However, US futures, and the dollar bounced this morning while all safe-havens pruned gains.

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Japanese and Australian markets led this morning's declines, after the S&P 500 plunged the most since September, falling on a 0.72% gap and closing on a 1.8% loss, after making a record close on Monday and registering a new all-time high on Tuesday. These new records broke out of the congestion since March 1 and revived hopes of another leg in the Trump Trade.

However, yesterday’s revelations of additional political scandals for the Trump administration and increasing talk of a possible impeachment dispelled those hopes and appear to have triggered the declines across all US indices. The CBOE's SPX Volatility Index, the VIX, jumped yesterday, signalling the most volatility for the index since the results of the British Brexit referendum were reported on June 25 last year.

It was largest gain for the VIX since that event. At its highest point yesterday the VIX hit 15.59. Today, it opened lower, at 14.06, but climbed back to 14.77, where it’s steady, but remaining in place, without giving back an inch.

While rising volatility scares investors, it was Christmas for short-term traders, who can profit in short periods of time.