U.S. Opening Bell: Stocks Move Past Trade Fears; Oil, Bitcoin Dip; Euro Rises

 | Jun 11, 2018 11:50

  • Global stocks trade higher, moving past this weekend's disastrous G7 summit
  • Italy's PM gets nod of approval by EU officials, easing tensions around anti-euro plans

  • Looming US-North Korea summit weighs on yen

  • Oil slips further after Friday's stronger rig count
  • Bitcoin falls to two-month low while retesting February lows

  • h2 Key Events/h2

    European and Asian stocks traded broadly higher on Monday ahead of a trifecta of interest rate decisions later this week from the US Fed, the European Central Bank and the Bank of Japan.

    The STOXX Europe 600 gained ground for the first time in five sessions, while US futures on the S&P 500, Dow and NASDAQ 100 were flat in early European trade, after trimming earlier losses.

    The UK's FTSE made further gains on Monday morning following disappointing UK factory output data for April causing the pound to drop more than 0.3% against the dollar. The weaker pound helped lift the London index 0.8%. Manufacturing production dropped by 1.4% in April, markedly lower than the 0.3% increase economists had forecast, and marking the lowest month-over-month drop since 2012.

    This morning, during Asian trade, indices excluding China's Shanghai Composite and Australia's S&P/ASX 200 inched higher after bouncing back from a weak open, as investors managed to shrug off trade worries even after this weekend's G7 summit headlines indicated some disastrous diplomatic faux pas had occurred.

    Financial networks reported that, going into the new week, investors would focus squarely on the historic US-North Korea summit in Singapore, scheduled for June 12, aimed at shutting down North Korea's nuclear program. However, we believe investors are actually honing in on economic data instead, and will keep bidding up stocks for as long as they see hard evidence of expanding growth in the US.