Opening Bell: China Woes Pressure U.S. Futures, Stocks; Dollar, Yields Rally

 | Oct 18, 2021 09:00AM ET

  • Colliding market themes continue
  • Bitcoin rallies as first US ETF due to start trading
  • Gold slides
h2 Key Events/h2

Disappointing growth figures from China as well as soaring energy prices globally reinforced concerns about inflation and drove US futures on the Dow, S&P, NASDAQ and Russell 2000 as well as European stocks lower in trading on Monday.

Oil rallied along with energy sector.

Global Financial Affairs/h2

NASDAQ 100 and Russell 2000 futures outperformed contracts on the S&P 500 and the Dow Jones this morning, which is confusing for many reasons.

First, if investors are concerned about inflation, why are small caps outperforming? If the economy doesn't reopen due to the coronavirus, smaller domestic firms will suffer.

Second, why are tech contracts outperforming? Will rising interest rates allow borrowers to sustain record stock market highs?

Finally, why are the Russell and NASDAQ leading the advance when they are meant to represent two contradictory views about the fate of the economy?

We're seeing this as another example of a lack of market coherence, indicating rather clearly that the market does not always behave rationally.

It is worth noting that today's futures selloff comes on the heels of the best week for the S&P 500 since July.

In Europe the STOXX 600 also opened lower, dragged down by the consumer discretionary and retail sectors, as soaring commodity costs intensified the energy crisis. Miners and oil and gas providers were the bright spots, as they actually benefited from the spike in their underlying commodities.

Stocks in Asia were weighed down by data out of China, revealing the world’s second-largest economy grew at the slowest rate in a year during the third quarter, due to power shortages, supply chain disruptions and panic in the property market amid a regulatory crackdown on highly leveraged investments.

China’s GDP slowed to 4.9% YoY, missing the 5.2% estimates. Industrial production expanded by 3.1%, well below the 4.5% expected. Still, China’s Shanghai Composite declined by just 0.1%, and Hong Kong’s Hang Seng was 0.3% higher. But the FTSE China A50 tumbled 2.2%.

Yields on the 10-year Treasury note were boosted by inflationary fears that had investors hiding their money in bonds.