U.S. Opening Bell: Global Shares Fall; U.S. Futures Mixed, USD Corrects

 | May 03, 2018 12:15

Global stocks in US, Asia and Europe resume selling

  • Australian shares buck the trend for a second day
  • China's Xiaomi files for IPO in Hong Kong
  • Oil will continue to rise—just ask Saudi Arabia
  • Consolidation of S&P 500 and Dow signals bears are winning, while Russell 2000 outperforms.
  • Apple surges 4 percent but closes below channel top
  • Why is the dollar falling after the Fed confirms higher interest rates are coming up?
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European equities slipped lower on Thursday morning, with most sectors in the red. Insurance firms in particular have been posting a downbeat performance.

Earlier today, Asian shares also underwhelmed, echoing the decline seen in US indices yesterday after the Federal Reserve left interest rates unchanged on Wednesday but confirmed its tightening schedule as it expects inflation will rise above target.

However, futures on the S&P 500, NASDAQ 100 and the Dow are all pointing to a stronger open later this morning, while the dollar continues to retreat.

Will investors find new optimism by turning their focus back to corporate earnings, or will US-China trade tensions ahead of diplomatic talks beginning tomorrow add to worries of rising rates, and keep pressuring stocks lower?

Earlier today, Australian shares listed on the S&P/ASX 200 bucked the region's downward trend for the second day in a row, as financials stocks continued their rebound from an earlier selloff.

Chinese shares on the Shanghai Composite also gained ground after an earlier decline, while stocks on Hong Kong's Hang Seng underperformed despite the fact that smartphone maker Xiaomi announced it would IPO on the Hong Kong exchange. The Chinese company is seeking to raise $10 billion from investors, in what is set be the world's largest IPO since Alibaba's (NYSE:BABA) first foray into the public markets in September 2014. The actual offering is expected to happen "in the next couple of months," according to CNN.

Japan's bourses remained closed today for the Constitution Day holiday.

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Xiaomi's vaunted IPO notwithstanding, there's and even more sizeable IPO on the way. Saudi Arabia is looking to sell a 5 percent stake in its state-owned energy giant Aramco for a gargantuan $100 billion—which would be four times the current record held by Alibaba and dwarf Xiamco's launch. That offering, on the country's own Tadawul exchange, is expected to happen either later in the year or in early 2019.