U.S. Opening Bell: Bonds, USD Slide Ahead Of Powell; Tech Fears Hurt Stocks

 | Jul 17, 2018 11:30

  • European tech stocks slide alongside US futures

  • USD, Treasuries edge lower ahead of Powell testimony
  • Underwhelming Netflix subscriber growth prompts 14 percent stock tumble in after hours trade, broader tech investment worries

  • WTI crude eases after steep plunge on reports of extra supply from both Saudi Arabia and the US

  • h2 Key Events/h2

    Equities in Europe and futures on the S&P 500, Dow and NASDAQ 100 followed Asian stocks lower on Tuesday, as investors weighed mixed earnings reports from some US heavyweights including Netflix and Bank of America against a backdrop of ongoing trade jitters.

    The FTSE was down 0.1 percent on Tuesday. Commodity stocks recovered some of Monday's losses, helping to save the London exchange from dropping further into the red. Glencore (LON:GLEN) shares lifted 0.9 percent, while Rio Tinto (LON:RIO) and BHP Billiton (LON:BLT) were up 1.2 percent and 0.3 percent respectively.

    Corporate results so far have provided an uneven picture, making a rally in equities more challenging for traders who were hoping that solid company performance would offset persistent geopolitical uncertainty. Yesterday, Wall Street darling Netflix (NASDAQ:NFLX), whose high-flying shares reached an all time-high as recently as July 11, sorely disappointed, missing a key metric for the company's growth, new user estimates, which were off by 20 percent, sparking fears in Wall Street of a valuation bubble for the internet television giant.

    Currently, US Treasuries and the dollar are sliding lower ahead of Fed Chairman Jerome Powell's semi-annual testimony to Congress; any cue from the Fed Chairman regarding forward monetary policy is set to be the key market mover this week, alongside earnings data.

    However, the fact that both government bonds and the USD are losing ground today, for a second straight session, could underpin different drivers: if we consider that the greenback is usurping the status of global safe haven currency from the yen and the Swiss franc, one explanation could be that investor sentiment is shifting to risk-on. However, if that were the case, stocks would be moving higher and they're currently weak.

    A second interpretation could, therefore, be more accurate: traders may be selling Treasuries since they expect Powell's signals will point to a hawkish stance by the Fed, based on the recent strong economic data and an underlying expectation that US growth is intact. This would warrant higher interest rates, in turn prompting higher yields and leading investors to rotate out of bonds and into equities. But then, why would the dollar be falling? Should it not strengthen on the positive outlook?

    Maybe the Treasury selloff is driven by foreign investors, whose repatriation includes selling the greenback.