U.S. Opening Bell: Stocks Fall On China Warning, Yields Waver, Dollar Climbs

 | Mar 02, 2021 12:10

  • China regulator warns of housing bubble
  • JP Morgan and Bank of America offer conflicting equity market perspectives
  • Oil recovers despite weaker outlook
  • Key Events/h2

    US futures contracts on the Dow, S&P, NASDAQ and Russell 2000, and global stocks were trading in the red on Tuesday, weighed down by falling commodities after global markets rallied strongly on Monday, posting some of their best performances since June.

    Gold continues to slide while the dollar rallies.

    Global Financial Affairs/h2

    The narrative over the last two weeks has been that stocks were selling off due to rising yields, which would lead to higher interest rates and therefore dent an economic recovery.

    However, in the previous two weeks when stocks rallied, the explanation was also rising yields. This time however the increase in yields was due to the expectation of higher inflation as a result of the economic recovery after the coronavirus enforced lockdown strangled growth.

    Small cap futures—which had been leading rallies amid the reflation trade, as reopening economies will provide the most benefit to domestic stocks which have been neglected during lockdowns—are the worst performers, followed by NASDAQ futures. Yesterday, these two sectors provided the best performance, reinforcing our argument that there are two opposing trades happening simultaneously which favor both growth and value stocks.

    In Europe, the STOXX 600 Index fell 0.2%, after yesterday enjoying the best returns in four months. Oil producers like Royal Dutch Shell (LON:RDSa) and Total (PA:TOTF) sold off between 1 and 2%, tracking declining oil prices amid concerns of slowing demand in China, the world’s biggest oil importer.

    Earlier, stocks in Asia sold off after sobering reports from China that its banking regulator is “very worried” about rising risk amid bubbles in the global financial markets and in particular, the Asian nation's property sector. This would be a good time to remind that the 2008 global financial crash followed the US's housing bubble. China is the world’s second-largest economy, so a collapse in its housing market could lead to devastating market chain reactions.

    China’s Shanghai Composite dropped 1.2%, underperforming among the major regional benchmarks.

    Yields, including on the 10-year Treasury note, were fluctuating today, first slipping, and while writing this article, edging higher to build on yesterday’s advance above 1.4%.