Opening Bell: Investors Cash Out Of Trump Rally; Oil, Italy Eyed

 | Nov 29, 2016 06:34AM ET

by Eli Wright

Normal trading volumes returned to the markets yesterday, and with it came profit-taking, as investors sought to cash out of the Trump Rally, at least for now. Despite expectations of a successful Cyber Monday, Wall Street ended the day yesterday broadly lower. Ongoing concerns regarding tomorrow's OPEC meeting alongside the upcoming referendum in Italy this weekend, as well as the state of the Italian banking sector also contributed to the decline in global equity markets.

The Japanese market took an overnight hit, as the Nikkei dropped 0.27% to 18,307.04. In Hong Kong, the Hang Seng fell 0.23%, to 22,778. In China, reports of government investment in infrastructure and property sent the Shanghai Composite up 0.16% to 3,282.19.

In Europe, markets appear to be getting skittish ahead of the December 4 referendum in Italy. The FTSE MIB fell nearly 2% yesterday, but is currently up 0.74% as of this writing, at 16,342.50. The FTSE 100 has fallen 0.76% to 6,745; the DAX is relatively flat, down 0.02%, to 10,581; and the Stoxx 50 is up 0.41%, at 3,027.

The Dow stayed above its new 19k level, but dropped 0.28%, to 19,097.90. The S&P gave back 0.53% yesterday, closing at 2,201.72. The NASDAQ closed 0.56% lower, at 5.368.81. The Russell 2000 tumbled 1.33%, down to 1,330.47. Nevertheless, it's still outperforming the S&P 500, at least for now.