U.S. Opening Bell: Stocks Shine Ahead Of Fed Minutes; Oil Retakes $50

 | Jan 09, 2019 10:31

  • US futures, European shares extend Asian rally
  • Oil sees its longest rally in 17 months, advancing for eight straight session
  • Yields rise, dollar slips ahead of Fed minutes
  • Small caps provide a possible divergence to trade resolution hopes
  • h2 Key Events/h2

    European shares and futures on the S&P 500, Dow and NASDAQ 100 extended a rally this morning, echoing solid Asian gains, as hopeful investors increased their risk appetite amid ongoing trade negotiations between the world’s two largest economies.

    US contracts were higher for a fourth straight session, their longest winning streak since November, as President Donald Trump’s address to the nation on border security had little impact on investors compared to the easing of two of the key drivers of recent market jitters: the Fed's tightening path and the US-China trade dispute. Investors' renewed optimism for growth, helped by Fed Chief Jerome Powell’s shift towards taking into account market conditions when fine-tuning interest rates hikes, was further buoyed by Friday’s employment report, which showed a healthy economy.

    The STOXX Europe 600 climbed, buoyed by automobile makers and miners, export-reliant sectors that benefit from mending trade relations.

    In the earlier Asian session, Hong Kong’s Hang Seng (+2.27%) led regional indices higher, thanks to greater demand for Chinese companies after the PBoC reduced bank’s reserve requirements, increasing liquidity. Tencent Holdings (HK:0700) jumped 3.80 percent, lifting the index. China Mobile (HK:0941) leaped 1.72 percent after Nomura upgraded the stock.

    The bank stated that, due to the telecom firm's market share, it is set to benefit dramatically from the development of the 5th generation mobile network in China. The analysts also cited the company's strong balance sheet.

    Ironically, the mainland’s Shanghai Composite advanced only 0.71 percent, underperforming regional peers.

    h2 Global Financial Affairs/h2

    Yesterday, equities in the US extended the 'dovish Fed-trade negotiations' rally. The Russell 2000 (+1.38%) edged higher for a third straight day, as it continued to outperform, perhaps providing a negative divergence to expectations for a resolution of the US-China trade spat. If investors believed an end to the trade war is at hand, small caps should have been discarded in favor of large caps, since the outlook for relaxed tariffs should truly increase.

    The S&P 500 climbed for a fourth day, ticking 0.97 percent higher with all 11 sectors in the green. Real Estate (+1.74%), a key beneficiary of a slower tightening cycle, led the advance, while Financials (+0.08%) lagged, as the outlook for bank profits took a hit from the same catalyst.

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    The Dow Jones Industrial Average rose for the third straight session, gaining 1.09 percent. Boeing (NYSE:BA) (+3.79%) helped lift large caps with a strong fourth quarter delivery report. Pacific Gas & Electric (NYSE:PCG) took the biggest fall, dropping 7.34 percent amid reports that the California utility giant is considering filing for bankruptcy.