U.S. Opening Bell: Stocks Wobble On Trade, Global Growth Gridlock; GE Tumbles

 | Mar 06, 2019 10:39

  • Lack of trade progress, global slowdown worries pressures U.S. futures, European shares
  • S&P 500 futures reinforce resistance at 2,800
  • Morgan Stanley forecasts lower yields, raising a red flag for equities
  • GE stock plunges after CEO signals negative cash flow for 2019
  • h2 Key Events/h2

    European stocks and futures on the S&P 500, Dow and NASDAQ 100 edged lower this morning after a mixed Asian session amid lack of progress on U.S.-China trade negotiations and heightened worries of a global slowdown.

    The STOXX Europe 600 slipped alongside automobile producers, though household goods helped the index offset a deeper drop.

    After a three-straight hour advance, U.S. future contracts staggered in the fourth hour, with SPX futures reaching a high of 2788.62 at 3:13 EST before slipping away from the 2,800 psychological level that has kept bulls at bay for the last seven sessions.

    Earlier, in the Asian session, China’s Shanghai Composite (+1.57%) outperformed its regional peers as traders bought into the Chinese government’s announcement of new stimulus measures, while Japan’s Nikkei 225 (-0.60%) underperformed. A selloff in Chemical, Petroleum & Plastic, Shipbuilding and Rubber sectors weighed on the Japanese benchmark, with a stronger yen throughout the session likely to have put further pressure on prices.

    h2 Global Financial Affairs/h2

    In yesterday’s U.S. session, equities extended a retreat.

    The S&P 500 (-0.11%) slid further below a key psychological level, with losses in Industrials (-0.64%) and Materials (-0.47%)—the two most trade-sensitive sectors—overshadowing gains in Communication Services (+0.63%). Investors were questioning recent reports of an incoming deal between the U.S. and China and focusing on the scarcity of concrete details.

    Adding to broad skepticism: a report by the host of popular CNBC program Mad Money, Jim Cramer, argued U.S. President Donald Trump could take advantage of China’s weakening economy to pressure the Asian country into a deal balanced in favor of the U.S. interest, thereby ignoring the more immediate need, by the market, of trade stability. Besides, we have been warning of the potential effect, on trade negotiations, of a slowing Chinese economy since mid-last year.

    On a more positive note, data beats on U.S. home sales and non-manufacturing PMI helped the SPX erase early losses around mid-session. However, it wasn't long before the index slid back into negative territory, after General Electric (NYSE:GE)’s CEO Larry Culp warned the company's “industrial free cash flow in 2019 will be negative.”