U.S. Opening Bell: Futures Waver On Confusing Market Narrative; Dollar Slips

 | Jan 05, 2022 12:07

  • Rising rates trigger technology selloff
  • US dollar slides
  • Bitcoin steadies
  • h2 Key Events/h2

    Dow Jones futures were the only leading US benchmark trading higher on Wednesday—albeit barely—as the market eagerly awaits today's publication of the minutes from the US Federal Reserve's December policy meeting. Contracts on the S&P 500, NASDAQ and Russell 2000 have been fluctuating but trending lower after a selloff in Asia, while European shares have been mixed. Yesterday's tech rout on Wall Street made it to Asia this morning. 

    Gold continued its advance.

    h2 Global Financial Affairs/h2

    The current market narrative is confusing traders. One theme is that Omicron's mild symptoms have allowed investors to disregard the pandemic risk and refocus on a US Federal Reserve that continues to move forward on tightening. We've been surprised at how well the market has thus far accepted the central bank's hawkish tilt.

    Another version of the narrative says investors are entrenched in positions even as the risks keep escalating with renewed COVID restrictions despite a "benign" variant and the sudden focus of rising interest rates.

    We view these concerns as essentially contradictory. If investors are only concerned with monetary policy, they should invest in economically sensitive sectors. On the other hand, if they're also expecting a return to a stay-at-home environment, they would invest in big tech. But neither direction has been consistently occurring. We will continue monitoring to try and see an emerging trend.

    Dow Jones contracts were fluctuating on Wednesday, between positive and negative territories. Futures on the NASDAQ 100 were more than 0.25% percent in the red, extending Monday's sharp declines on concerns that rising interest rates will render the priciest stocks even more expensive.

    While the tech selloff didn't drag down European shares, markets there did run out of steam after back-to-back records. Still, the STOXX 600 Index edged higher, forcing a gain following the US and Asian selloffs.

    The technology sector took a back seat, while autos, chemicals, and oil & gas—economically sensitive sectors—outperformed.