U.S. Opening Bell: Trade Jitters Quash Wall Street Rally; Yuan Slumps; USD Flies

 | Jul 19, 2018 11:30

  • Fresh US-China trade jitters rattle global equities
  • Dollar nears highest close in a year; Chinese yuan slumps to year low
  • Gold slips to year low

  • h2 Key Events/h2

    European equities and futures on the S&P 500, Dow and NASDAQ 100 were struggling on Thursday, after renewed trade tensions rattled Asian shares and currency markets. Fresh diplomatic blows from the US and China threat to quash the impact of bullish earnings results from Wall Street heavyweights, which sent S&P 500 only 2 percent from its all-time high yesterday.

    The US dollar, meanwhile, is on track for its highest close in a year as it gains ground for a third consecutive day, pushing emerging markets assets further down. In early European trade, it stood only 0.07 percent away from its June 28, 95.39 close.

    At the opposite side of the spectrum, the Chinese yuan is heading for its lowest close since July 26 2017, after the People's Bank of China weakened its currency fixing for the first time since it started plunging in June, thereby singling it may let it slide further.

    The pan-European STOXX 600 opened slightly lower, then briefly crawled higher, only to slide back into the red as mixed corporate reports failed to provide traders with a clear indicator.

    Earlier, Asian markets suffered another volatile session and closed broadly in the red, unable to maintain early gains.

    Japan’s TOPIX closed at the very lowest point of the session ( -0.1 percent), halting a four-day winning streak on a sour note as it failed to hold on to early 0.5 percent gains.

    China’s Shanghai Composite echoed yesterday's performance as it gained 0.64 percent, then ran out of steam and ended 0.49 percent in negative territory, capping a five-day losing streak of 2.25 percent. Technically, it closed slightly below Tuesday’s hammer’s support.

    Hong Kong’s Hang Seng also started on a strong foot, but then turned a 0.65 percent gain into a 0.2 percent loss toward the end of the morning session and posted a deeper 0.38 percent slide by the close, for an aggregate three-day slide of 1.7 percent. Technically, the price slightly extended a downside breakout of a bearish pennant, at the 28,000-support level since October 2017.

    South Korea’s KOSPI opened 0.4 percent in the green but by the closing bell it had slipped 0.34 percent lower, suffering an aggregate four-day decline of 1.27 percent.

    Australia’s S&P/ASX 200 yet again bucked the trend as it sealed a 0.28 percent gain, though giving up a stronger 0.47 percent climb. Technically, the index is developing a second back-to-back continuation pattern. The supply-demand balance formed a continuation pennant, June 25 to July 5, complete with an upside breakout on July 6. Afterward, a second bear vs bull struggle developed in the form of a falling flag, July 10 till now. An upside breakout above the 6,280 level will complete it, completing the second half of a double bullish signal.

    h2 Global Financial Affairs/h2