U.S. Opening Bell: Gold Shines; Oil Tumbles; USD Slips; U.S. Futures Waver

 | May 24, 2018 11:30

  • New threat of US tariffs on auto imports spurs global auto shares selloff

  • European miners and oil stocks outperform, even against continuing oil prices decline

  • US stocks boosted by dovish Fed minutes; futures mixed amid renewed geopolitical risk

  • Dollar takes a hit, boosting gold and yen upward move

  • h2 Key Events/h2

    Global stock indices were seen struggling to gain traction on Thursday, amid renewed global headwinds that included fresh plans by US President Donald Trump to impose hefty tariffs on automakers imports.

    US futures for the S&P 500, NASDAQ 100, Dow30 were mixed, hovering around neutral levels in the early European session.

    Automakers took a hit in Europe after Trump dealt global markets a new trade blow by ordering the US Commerce Department to examine the possibility of imposing tariffs of up to 25 percent on vehicle and car-parts imports.

    German automakers BMW (OTC:BMWYY), Daimler (OTC:DMLRY) and Volkswagen (OTC:VLKPY) plunged around 2 percent on the news.

    However, miners and oil stocks offset slumps in automakers shares, even as WTI and Brent futures kept edging lower, the former on track for a third consecutive negative session today. This helped STOXX 600 eke out a 0.1 percent gain. However, the pan-European benchmark index is still more than one percent below the three and a half month peak it posted on Tuesday, as it suffers downward pressure from both Italy's political headwinds (and in particular, from the country's new government coalition spending plans) and ongoing global trade jitters.

    Stocks in Asia also slipped lower, led by downbeat Japanese stocks, which took the brunt of Trump's latest trade tariff move.