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U.S. Opening Bell: Markets Ignore Iran Risk; Stocks Boosted, Most Havens Dumped

Published 07/01/2020, 12:21
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  • The market sentiment pendulum has flipped. Investors are now largely disregarding Iran's sabre rattling
  • Yields and equities are on the rise
  • Oil, however has declined, though losses have been pared

Key Events

Investors in Asia today disregarded Iran's repeated threats of reprisals after the U.S. killing of the Middle Eastern country's top general late last week. Regional stocks rebounded strongly and U.S. futures built on yesterday’s bounce during the New York session.

Yields resumed a comeback while the yen declined. Among safe haven assets, only gold trimmed yesterday’s losses. Even crude oil dropped.

Global Financial Affairs

U.S. futures, including for the NASDAQ, S&P 500 and Dow Jones, fluctuated earlier after it was reported Teheran was considering 13 potential retaliatory scenarios.

SPX Futures Daily

However, futures contracts regained their equilibrium and are now higher. Technically, S&P 500 futures might be forming a bullish pennant.

The STOXX Europe 600 Index gapped up at the open, following yesterday’s Wall Street comeback, as fears of an outright war between the world’s most powerful military and Iran receded.

The FTSE 100 also rebounded on Tuesday. Shares in mid-cap FTSE 250 Premier Oil (LON:PMO) surged more than 16% after it announced plans to buy some of BP's (LON:BP) North Sea assets. Aston Martin (LON:AML) shares slid more than 12% following a profit warning from the luxury carmaker, favourite of James Bond.

Asia closed mostly in the green, as investors recognized a buying dip after Monday's knee-jerk selloff. Japan’s Nikkei 225 outperformed, (+1.60%), followed by Australia’s S&P/ASX 200, (+1.35%). Hong Kong’s Hang Seng lagged, (+0.14%). The Taiwan Weighted Index was one of the session's few decliners.

During yesterday’s U.S. session, equities rebounded. The S&P 500 climbed after a three day slump, wiping out losses. Internet giants Amazon.com (NASDAQ:AMZN) (+1.49%) and Alphabet (NASDAQ:GOOGL), (+2.67%), drove both the Technology sector and the broader benchmark index higher. Naturally, the tech-heavy NASDAQ Composite provided the best results among the major indices, (+0.56%).

UST 10-Y Daily

Yields, including for the 10-year Treasury note, are climbing for a second day, as investors rotate out of safe havens and back into risk assets.

USD/JPY Daily

The dollar is strengthening, even against the yen, reflecting the market shift away from headline geopolitical tensions. However, over the longer term, the dollar-yen pair appears to be weakening irrespective of the headwinds, after falling below its uptrend line since August, along with the longer-term downtrend line since October 2018.

Gold Daily

Gold was the sole haven asset to rise, setting the commodity up for it's seventh straight daily advance.

Oil, the most sensitive asset to U.S.-Iran tensions, also slipped, after its two-day surge.

Oil Daily

Nevertheless, WTI is well off its daily lows. Investors are clearly continuing to keep their fingers on the buy button, should Iran actually retaliate.

Even if in the long run the value of oil contracts won't change much, in the short run, depending on how events play out, prices can certainly spike in the near-term.

Up Ahead

Market Moves

Stocks

Currencies

  • The Dollar Index was little changed.
  • The euro declined 0.1% to $1.1183.
  • The British pound rose 0.2% to $1.3199.
  • The Japanese yen dipped 0.1% to 108.46 per dollar.
  • Bonds

    • The yield on 10-year Treasuries climbed one basis point to 1.82%.
    • Germany’s 10-year yield rose one basis point to -0.27%.
    • Britain’s 10-year yield rose five basis points to 0.821%.

    Commodities

  • West Texas Intermediate crude dipped 0.6% to $62.90 a barrel.
  • Gold advanced 0.15% $1,566.50 an ounce.
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