Opening Bell: Stocks Hold Onto 'Fed Rally' As Investors Cherry-Pick Chinese Data

 | Jul 15, 2019 10:08

  • U.S. futures climb as investors disregard lowest Chinese growth in three decades, U.S. inflation increase
  • Chinese shares outperform on industrial, retail data beat and expectation of economic stimulus
  • Treasury yields gain ground, dollar slips
  • Oil rebounds, helped by technicals, after sliding on China's GDP flop
  • h2 Key Events/h2

    Futures on the S&P 500, Dow and NASDAQ 100 extended the Fed-driven rally this morning, with SPX contracts hitting a fresh all-time high ahead of more central bank's speeches and earnings reports from some of the U.S. largest banks.

    Europe's STOXX 600 wavered, with automobile producers and chemical firms pushing prices higher.

    Trading was thin in the earlier Asian session due to a Japanese holiday, but regional shares still managed to notch higher after China’s industrial output and retail sales topped all forecasts. Investors prioritized signs of economic strengthening while shrugging off a more gloomy outlook coming from another key front: China's second-quarter GDP slowed to 6.2%, the weakest pace in over 27 years. The market's narrative banked on economic stabilization that would stem from what was seen as a likely move, by Chinese policymakers, to step up economic stimulus.

    The country’s Shanghai Composite (+0.4%) outperformed, highlighting investors' focus on the silver linings, while Australia’s S&P/ASX 200 (-0.65%) lagged with financials. Wealth manager AMP (ASX:AMP) was the top loser on both the sub-index and the benchmark, shedding nearly 16% on the day, to a record low. Its shares dived after the company said regulatory constraints in New Zealand will most likely push it to shelve sale plans for its life insurance and wealth protection business. The firm also cancelled its interim dividend. Miners shares, however, offset a deeper selloff.