Opening Bell: US Equities Pop But USD Continues To Struggle

 | Jan 25, 2017 06:01AM ET

by Eli Wright

The US dollar is lower this morning, but US equity markets finally broke out of their tight three-week ranges yesterday, which has pulled global indices higher as well. The resumption of the US stock market rally—at least for now—has traders shifting away from safe haven commodities gold and silver, driving precious metal prices lower as a result. Oil is down on weekly API data charting a rise in US crude stockpiles.

Overnight in Asia, the Nikkei climbed 1.43% to 19, 057.50. Experiencing more modest gains, the Shanghai Composite rose 0.22% to 3,149.55 while the Hang Seng gained 0.43%, to 23,049.12.

In Europe this morning, the FTSE is 0.24% higher, at 7,167; the DAX has jumped 1.16% to 11,730; and the Stoxx 50 is up 1.13%, at 3,316.50.

On Wall Street yesterday, the S&P 500 and NASDAQ Composite both reached new record highs. The S&P rose 0.66%, to 2,280.07, while the NASDAQ climbed 0.86% to 5,600.96. The Dow closed 0.57% higher, at 19,912.71.

In pre-market trading, all three major US indices have continued higher: the Dow and S&P are both up 0.3%, while the NASDAQ is up almost 0.4%.

US Treasury yields are uniformly higher this morning: the 2-year yield is at 1.228%; the 10-year yield is at 2.478%; and the 30-year yield is at 3.062%.

h3 Forex/h3

The Dollar Index is lower this morning, down 0.27% to the pivotal 100.00 level at the time of this writing, as the greenback weakens against a basket of currency majors.