Opening Bell: Dollar, Stocks, Oil Fall; Safe Havens Rise

 | Jul 18, 2017 06:15AM ET

by Pinchas Cohenh3 Key Events/h3

US stocks opened the week sluggishly, stalling yesterday while awaiting earnings.

h3 Global Affairs/h3

The S&P 500 stalled after registering a record high last week, while other indexes did the same, or have reached their highest levels since the Great Recession. China was the only market that fell hard on concerns of tightening government regulations which could hurt profits. Ironically today, when global equities overall are lower, China’s Shanghai Composite and Hong Kong’s Hang Seng are slightly higher.

After yesterday’s elevated open, European markets closed lower, while Asian stocks ended a six-day advance at their highest point since 2008.

The dollar extended its 8.7 percent decline since January to a 10-month low, as it becomes clearer that the American healthcare reform bill is not going to pass in its current version, and investor confidence in Trump-reflation continues to flounder.

As things stand, the dollar’s trajectory is down. While some analysts still believe inflation will warrant a December rate hike, providing a boost to the dollar, that’s a fourth quarter story.

Safe haven assets returned to being in vogue as Treasuries rose for a third straight day, while the yen and gold climbed.