Opening Bell: Gold Pops, Dollar Drops, Retailers Disappoint

 | Jan 05, 2017 06:31AM ET

by Eli Wright

The US dollar is markedly lower against a basket of currencies, which has helped lift gold by 0.6% so far this morning. US equities were up yesterday on growth in the auto sector, but the retail sector is weighing on US indices today because of negative after-the-close reports yesterday from several bricks-and-mortar retailers. Right now, global indices are mixed.

In Asia overnight, the Nikkei fell 0.37% to 19,520.69. However, the Shanghai Composite inched 0.18% higher, to 3,164.60 and the Hang Seng gained 1.46% to close at 22,456.69.

In Europe this morning the FTSE is up 0.09% to 7,196.40 and the Stoxx 50 is 0.05% higher, at 3,315. The DAX, however, is down 0.15%, to 11,567.

On Wall Street yesterday, the Dow rose 19,942.16; the S&P 500 gained 0.56% at 2,270.75; and the NASDAQ closed 0.88% higher, at 5,477. Small-caps saw the largest increases, as the Russell 2000 jumped 1.69% on the day, to finish at 1,389.12, five points off its record high.

In pre-market trading, however, things aren't so rosy; the Dow is down 0.03%; the S&P is down 0.07%; and the NASDAQ is down 0.13%.

US Treasury yields are lower across the board: the 2-year yield is at 1.222%; the 10-year yield is at 2.434%; and the 30-year yield is at 3.034%.

h3 Forex/h3

The Fed’s December meeting minutes were released yesterday, revealing a less hawkish tone than previously thought.

“Members agreed that there was heightened uncertainty about possible changes in fiscal and other economic policies as well as their effects,” the minutes of the Dec. 13-14 meeting said. “About half of the participants incorporated an assumption of more expansionary fiscal policy in their forecasts.” However, they “agreed that it was too early to know what changes in these policies would be implemented and how such changes might alter the economic outlook.”

The US Dollar Index has fallen approximately 1.2% since yesterday; as of this writing it’s at 101.95, breaking below its consolidation levels from the past three weeks.