Opening Bell: Directionless Markets Waver On Health Worries, Economic Optimism

 | Jun 22, 2020 11:59

  • US contracts, stocks fell at the open, but then pushed higher
  • WHO reported biggest single-day surge for COVID-19 cases over the weekend
  • Gold flirted with a 7-year high
  • h2 Key Events/h2

    Contracts on the four main US indices—for the Dow Jones, S&P 500, Russell 2000 and the NASDAQ—opened lower on Monday, though at the time of writing they've all reversed into positive territory. As well, the NASDAQ's gap closed.

    Treasury demand increased and the dollar fell as gold headed higher.

    h2 Global Financial Affairs/h2

    The World Health Organization reported the biggest one-day jump in COVID-19 cases over the weekend, with more than 183,000 new cases worldwide. Over 30,000 of thoseoccurred in the US, which actually hit that number two days in a row, on Friday and Saturday, the largest daily increase in the viral outbreak since May 1. On Saturday, seven states reported new record numbers. Moreover, Florida and South Carolina posted three straight days of single-day records.

    This morning, European shares are struggling, pressured by the negative news across the region. The coronavirus outbreak rate in Germany jumped for a second day, spiking at a 60% increase in just 24 hours. Spain, one of the worst affected countries on the Continent, reopened its borders, which have been shut for 14 weeks, even as a second wave appears to be accelerating.

    The STOXX Europe 600 Index fell at the open, dragged lower by a variety of high-profile stocks: Wirecard (DE:WDIG), the German fintech company currently beset by a scandal that includes 1.9 billion euro ($2.1 billion) of company funds gone missing; Lufthansa (DE:LHAG), which is facing a dramatic week as the state negotiates bailout terms for the German airline; and commodity miner and trader Glencore (LON:GLEN), now the subject of a Swiss criminal investigation on suspicion of corruption in the Democratic Republic of the Congo.

    Earlier today, most Asian benchmarks finished lower on increased volatility, as confused traders sought direction when China and South Korea both reported a reduction in COVID-19 cases, while the pandemic hit records in other parts of the world.

    South Korea’s KOSPI underperformed, (-0.7%), on disappointing export data and fears of a second wave, even as it reports lower virus numbers. Australia’s ASX 200, (+0.03%), was the only major regional index in the green, though just barely.

    Still, the session wasn’t completely risk-off. Safe haven assets were not necessarily rising.

    The yield on the 10-year Treasury retreated slightly, after initially advancing, even as equites and US contracts were being sold off.