Opening Bell: European Stocks, U.S. Futures Slump; Dollar Higher

 | Oct 28, 2020 12:10

  • Germany and France are considering month-long lockdowns
  • Pandemic-favored tech outperforms
  • Dollar and yen havens rise 
  • h2 Key Events/h2

    European equities, including the Stoxx 600, slumped to a five-month low on Wednesday morning on the expectation that France and Germany will announce stricter lockdowns later today. Virus case numbers are racing higher across Europe and the US. Futures contracts for the Dow, S&P, NASDAQ and Russell 2000 all slid ahead of the US open. 

    Safe haven investments, including the dollar and yen are all trading higher on increased demand, but gold is lower.

    h2 Global Financial Affairs/h2

    Futures on the S&P 500 Index suggest the underlying gauge will fall for the third straight day to a near-4 week low. NASDAQ futures outperformed overnight, buoyed by earnings from Microsoft which benefited from increased demand for cloud and video gaming in the current stay-at-home environment.

    In Europe, banks and travel firms led the Stoxx 600 index to a third consecutive decline, tumbling 2.5% on the news that leaders from the two of the largest European economies are considering closing restaurants and bars for an entire month in an effort to break down the spread of the infection.

    Asian stocks were mixed. South Korea’s KOSPI (+0.6%) outperformed after consumer confidence there surged to 91.6 from 79.4 in October, compounding the dramatic growth in GDP reported yesterday. The positive economic news added to the weight of evidence of a strong economic recovery in the region which was driven by China. Japan’s Nikkei (-0.3%) underperformed, suffering from a strengthening yen, rising to the Mar. 6 peak.