European Markets Were Firmer Again In Early Trade On Wednesday

 | Nov 11, 2020 09:12

The risk-on rotation trade continues to have legs for the time being but we could see this suffer a bit of payback before long. Yesterday it still very much the driving force as the Nasdaq 100 fell almost 2% and the Russell 2000 small cap index rallied over 1.7%. That left the S&P 500 almost flat for the session, closing a shade lower at 3,545. US Treasury yields rose, with 10s approaching the psychologically important 1% barrier. US bond markets are closed today for the Veterans Day holiday and there is an empty data roster ahead, though we will be watching Christine Lagarde’s speech later. Donald Trump continues to refuse conceding the election and Republicans are closing ranks around the president as they eye two Senate runoff races in Georgia. They know they need the Trump appeal to get the vote. Have markets been too sanguine about an impending constitutional crisis?

European markets were firmer again in early trade on Wednesday, with the FTSE 100 clearing 6,300 to hit its highest since the middle of June and it now trades above its 200-day simple moving for the first time since late February. A close above the 6,340 brings 6,500 and the post-selloff peak into view.  However it’s a bit more complex today than being all about the reopening trade – this week’s big gainers like Rolls-Royce (LON:RR) and Compass Group (LON:CPG) are down, whilst Ocado (LON:OCDO), Kingfisher (LON:KGF) and Just Eat (LON:JE) have risen. Rotation is not going to be a straight line – this reopening move is taking a bit of a hit this morning. After the initial kneejerk, investors will need to work out now which ‘value’ stocks remain value traps and which have some growth in them. Expect pullbacks along the way but the overall landscape remains much more positive than it was a week ago for these sectors worst affected by the pandemic. 

Chart: FTSE breaking free, eyes post-trough highs.