Opening Bell: AstraZeneca Boosts Global Stocks, Oil; Dollar Drop Continues

 | Nov 23, 2020 12:16

  • Ironically, even on positive vaccine news, shares of AstraZeneca fell
  • The US dollar descends close to its April 2018 low
  • Bitcoin hovers at 3-year high
  • Key Events/h2

    Global stocks and futures contracts on the Dow, S&P, NASDAQ and Russell 2000 jumped on Monday after AstraZeneca (LON:AZN) announced its potential COVID-19 vaccine prevents an average of 70% of virus cases.

    The news enhances the already positive vaccine results from Pfizer (NYSE:PFE) and Moderna (NASDAQ:MRNA) and could reduce the timeframe for the rollout of a global vaccination program.

    The increased possibility of an economic recovery at the same time helped drive the price of oil higher. The dollar continued its decline.

    Global Financial Affairs/h2

    In London, AstraZeneca’s shares fell following its positive news, presumably on the maxim “buy the rumor, sell the news.”

    Although all four major US contracts rose at least 0.4%, Russell 2000 futures were the strongest on the continued rotation out of tech shares and into sectors sensative to a re-opening economy as well away from mega caps and into small caps.

    In Europe, the Stoxx 600 Index opened higher and continued climbing with the energy and banking sectors outperforming. France's Credit Agricole (PA:CAGR), the world’s largest cooperative financial intuition, opened 2.25% higher and extended gains to 3.7%, the highest since March, on news it agreed to buy Italian lender Credito Valtellinese (MI:PCVI) for 737 million euros, or USD$875 million.

    Asian indices were all green, though Japanese markets lost out on the positive mood as they were closed for a holiday. South Korea’s KOSPI outperformed, increasing 1.9%. Hong Kong’s Hang Seng lagged and closed up just 0.1% on renewed US-China tensions.

    The White House is moving to restrict 89 Chinese companies it labels "military end-users," such as aerospace as well as other companies, from having access to US goods and technology. At the same time, a high ranking US Navy admiral visited Taiwan—a place China claims as its own—to oversee US military intelligence in the region.

    US indices ended lower last week, except for the Russell 2000 which remained in positive territory throughout the week, as reported cases of coronavirus across the globe continued to climb and additional social restrictions were introduced.

    Along with the risk-off that decreased appetite for stocks, investors also sold Treasuries.