U.S. Opening Bell: Markets Set To Bounce After Wednesday's Omicron Slump; Oil Up

 | Dec 02, 2021 12:26

  • COVID variant keeps markets on edge
  • Volatility remains
  • The dollar steadies
  • h2 Key Events/h2

    As European shares followed the lead of yesterday's performance on US markets and opened in the red, US futures on the Dow, S&P, NASDAQ and Russell 2000 advanced in trading on Thursday ahead of the New York open. This divergence is symbolic of the rapidly changing views of traders on the Omicron variant of COVID-19 as well as tightening US monetary policy, and explains why volatility has increased in recent days.

    Bitcoin remains under pressure while oil jumped.

    h2 Global Financial Affairs/h2

    Value stocks dominated US futures trading this morning with contracts on the Dow, which lists blue-chip, mega cap stocks, up almost a full percentage point while contracts on the Russell 2000, whose small caps rely on an open economy to thrive, were the second-best performer, up about 0.6%, as of the time of writing.

    On the other side of the reflation trade, futures on the tech-heavy NASDAQ 100 lagged, up a mere 0.3%.

    Tech's underperformance was even more noticeable in European trading, where it weighed on the STOXX 600 Index, which fell more than 1% amid fluctuations. Travel shares also slumped as traders readjust portfolios for potential additional coronavirus restrictions, as the latest mutation of COVID-19 shows up across the globe, including in Australia, Norway, South Korea and Ireland.

    It's interesting to see the pessimism expressed in the European session even when there has been some positive news on the virus front. GlaxoSmithKline (NYSE:GSK) reported its antibody treatment shows signs of effectiveness against Omicron in the early testing stages.

    Moreover, the World Health Organization said there's no evidence that Omicron is any deadlier than previous variants.

    On Wednesday, US traders witnessed the worst back-to-back selloff since October 2020 after the US identified its first case of the new COVID variant. During a wild session which saw high trading volume, the S&P 500 wiped out its early gains in the sharpest reversal since April to close down 1.2%. Sectors most sensitive to an open economy took the biggest hit.

    The Russell 2000, home to small cap companies, plunged to close down 1.8%. Airlines, cruise operators and hotels underperformed, as COVID-19 cases nearly doubled in South Africa in one day.

    Treasury traders took profits, allowing yields to rally after investors flocked to the haven yesterday, pushing yields on the 30-year note below 1.75%, its lowest since January.