U.S. Opening Bell: Trade Uncertainty Pressures Global Stocks; Gold Moves Higher

 | Feb 21, 2019 12:07

  • U.S. futures crawl into green territory, European stocks waver on trade uncertainty, weak earnings
  • Treasurys, gold provide negative indicators for equities
  • Dovish confirmations from Fed minutes fall short of prompting stock rally
  • h2 Key Events/h2

    Futures on the S&P 500, Dow and NASDAQ 100 rebounded from an early slide this morning, while European shares remained under pressure from weak corporate results and conflicting headlines on U.S.-China trade negotiations.

    The STOXX 600 swung between gains and losses in a tumultuous opening session: it opened around 0.1 percent lower following a mixed Asian session—tracking mixed reports about the outlook of trade talks. The pan-European index then jumped into positive territory, nearing 4-month highs, thanks to a Reuters report that Chinese and U.S. negotiators were nearing some draft commitments on a number of the most contentious issues of their 11-month old trade dispute.

    Later, however, poor earnings reports pushed the benchmark back below opening levels. Technically, should the price close at the current weak levels, it would form a shooting star, bearish in an uptrend.

    British multinational energy and services firm Centrica (LON:CNA) underperformed, plunging 11 percent, after it warned the recently-introduced national energy price cap will squeeze cash flow and hurt its financials this year.

    Meanwhile, Danish Moeller - Maersk (CO:MAERSKb), the world's largest shipping company, tumbled 8.7 percent even after meeting analyst expectations, after it warned that trade war jitters may hurt future profits. Though we have no real answer, we can't help but wonder why investors would decide that the stock is worth almost 9 percent less, if at the same time they were bidding market prices up based on positive trade headlines?