U.S. Opening Bell: European Stocks, U.S. Futures Slide; Dollar, Treasuries Advance

 | Dec 09, 2021 12:42

  • Traders cash out of US and European shares
  • Sterling at year's low on UK Omicron restrictions
  • Dollar rebounds
  • Key Events/h2

    Futures on the Dow Jones, S&P 500, NASDAQ and Russell 2000 are all pointing to a lower US open on Thursday and European shares, after opening higher today, have now fallen into negative territory as well.

    And, after a three day rally, the oil price slid.

    Global Financial Affairs/h2

    Perhaps, the reason for the decline in US futures contracts is investors cashing out after yesterday's bullish display on Wall Street.

    The slump in the STOXX 600 follows a rally earlier in the week when, like the S&P 500, the pan-European benchmark notched up its best two-day performance of the year. Nevertheless, while the S&P 500 reclaimed all the losses incurred when the first news of the new Omicron variant hit, the European index has struggled to recapture lost territory, falling 0.6% on Wednesday.

    Thursday's Asian session was mixed. Encouraging news about Pfizer (NYSE:PFE) and BioNTech (NASDAQ:BNTX) vaccines didn't appear to convince regional traders. Market observers noted the performance in Asia was driven by caution ahead of the release of Friday's US inflation data and any implication it could have on next week's Fed meeting.

    China's Shanghai Composite rose 1%, extending its rally to a third day, after the country's consumer prices rose 2.3% yearly, less than the 2.5% expected. China's producer price figures weren't uniformly even. On the positive side they declined from 13.5% the previous month however, the data surged 12.9% year-over-year, higher than the 12.4% forecast.

    In another contradiction to the view that investors are positive about the economic outlook, investors added US Treasuries, including the 10-year note, to their portfolios which ended a three-day rise in yields.