Opening Bell: Renewed Omicron Fears Jolt Stocks, Dollar, Bitcoin; Gold, Yen Rally

 | Nov 30, 2021 08:55AM ET

  • Moderna CEO warns on Omicron
  • Powell may signal a delay on rate hikes
  • Dollar slips
  • h2 Key Events/h2

    The market narrative on the risk from the new variant of COVID-19 shifted yet again during Tuesday trading, provoking another global selloff with futures on the Dow, S&P, NASDAQ and Russell 2000 slumping. Ongoing uncertainty due to a lack of any concrete data on Omicron means that markets are expected to remain volatile.

    Safe haven gold along with the Japanese yen continue to benefit from the uncertainty in markets.

    h2 Global Financial Affairs/h2

    Today provides another example in a long line of events proving market fickleness. On Friday, global equities sold off dramatically on reports that the Omicron variant could pose a severe risk to world health and global economies. Then, on Monday, that assessment was deemed premature as the South African researchers who originally identified the strain said Omicron symptoms were milder than the Delta variant. But investor sentiment has whipsawed back to risk-off after Moderna's (NASDAQ:MRNA) chief executive said earlier Tuesday that the mutation could pose a severe threat and a new vaccine may be needed.

    Yesterday, Fed Chief Jerome Powell expected to tell Congress that the new strain is another challenge facing the economy that is already enduring the worst inflation in three decades.

    Some market watchers think that the US central bank may delay raising interest rates next year. While that view didn't seem to help equities, it boosted the price of gold and the yen and dented the dollar.

    All four US futures were deeply in the red and the Russell 2000, which lists domestic firms that suffered most during the height of the pandemic, was the biggest loser, down over 1.5%. It was closely followed by futures on the blue-chip, mega-cap Dow Jones while contracts on the NASDAQ 100 were down a mere 0.5%. Technology shares excel even when the economy is slowing. They also benefited during previous coronavirus lockdowns when people were forced to work from home.

    Sectors that require an open economy to thrive, including energy and travel, led the European STOXX 600 Index to a decline that wiped out Monday's rebound. Retail stocks also underperformed, as investors expected consumers to reduce spending.

    Meanwhile, eurozone inflation for November reached its highest level on record , clouding the European Central Bank's policy path.

    Stocks in Asia gave up early gains after the comments from Moderna management. Japan's Nikkei, which fell 1.63%, and Hong Kong's Hang Seng, which slid 1.58%, were hit the hardest. China's Shanghai Composite eked out a 0.03% gain.

    US Treasuries fell even lower, dipping below Friday's slide when fears of the new mutation first hit markets.

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    Yields on the 10-year note are forming a top on the daily chart. The benchmark Treasury has become a barometer for COVID-19 fears.