Futures Slip as Markets Retrace Gains
U.S. equity futures fell slightly in overnight trade following
large gains on Wall Street Wednesday as Washington was able to
agree a deal to avert the Fiscal Cliff in the short term. U.S.
stock markets had, by some accounts, the best first trading day of
the year ever, signaling that markets expected gridlock in
Washington to carry on much longer.
Top News
In other news around the markets:
Ekathimerini is reporting that Greek tourist bookings for 2013 are
expected to increase handedly, with Russian tourist bookings
doubling and German tourist bookings rising 20 percent for the
year. President Obama officially signed the American Taxpayer
Relief Act of 2012, officially putting pen to paper on the bill to
avert the majority of tax hikes that would have occurred under the
full Fiscal Cliff. The Chinese service sector, much smaller than
the manufacturing sector, continued to expand in December and at a
faster rate, as the official Non-Manufacturing PMI rose to 56.1 in
December from 55.6 in November. Yesterday, economists at Nomura
published a report highlighting that they expect growth to
accelerate to an 8.2 percent annualized rate of GDP growth in the
first half of 2013 only for it to slow to 7.2 percent in the second
half. S&P 500 futures fell 3.4 points to 1,453.70. The EUR/USD
was lower at 1.3102. Spanish 10-year government bond yields rose to
5.037 percent. Italian 10-year government bond yields rose to 4.286
percent. Gold fell 0.27 percent to $1,684.20 per ounce.
Asian Markets
Asian shares were relatively muted overnight as markets in China
and Japan remained on holiday breaks. The Hang Seng Index rose 0.37
percent overnight and the TSE Index in Taiwan rose 0.74 percent.
The Korean Kospi was weaker overnight, falling 0.58 percent and
Australian shares rose 0.74 percent on the stronger Chinese
data.
European Markets
European shares were mostly lower in early trading as markets
retraced gains following the Fiscal Cliff deal and some became
skeptical that the simply just pushes the cliff back two months.
The Spanish Ibex Index fell 1.15 percent and the Italian MIB Index
fell 0.47 percent. Meanwhile, the German DAX fell 0.29 percent and
the French CAC slipped 0.51 percent while U.K. shares fell 0.15
percent.
Commodities
Commodities were weaker overnight following gains the day
before. WTI Crude futures fell 0.61 percent to $92.52 per barrel
and Brent Crude futures fell 0.63 percent to $11.73. Copper futures
did rise 0.19 percent on the stronger Chinese data this past week,
rising to $374.35 per pound. Gold was lower and silver futures fell
0.05 percent to $30.98 per ounce.
Currencies
Currency markets were in a clear risk-off mode overnight as the
dollar rose against most pairs save the yen and investors flocked
to the safety of these currencies. The EUR/USD was lower at 1.3102
and the dollar fell against the yen to 87.00. Overall, the Dollar
Index rose 0.36 percent with strength against the euro, the pound
and Swiss franc, driving the dollar higher. Notably, the euro was
broadly weak, falling 0.64 percent against the Australian dollar,
0.64 percent against the greenback, and over 1 percent against the
yen. Also, the EUR/USD just broke major neckline resistance at
1.3150 and if it falls below 1.3050, the chart gets much
uglier.
Pre-Market Movers
Stocks moving in the pre-market included:
J.P. Morgan Chase (NYSE:
JPM
) shares fell 3.25 percent pre-market as regulators cut its
Community Lending Grade, a measure of how much the bank lends in
low- and medium-income neighborhoods. McDonald's (NYSE:
MCD
) shares rose 0.34 percent pre-market as data out of China showed
better economic performance in December. Marathon Oil (NYSE:
MRO
) fell 3.0 percent pre-market as the company awaits a decision on
FEMA aid for Sandy relief following the super storm's massive
destruction more than a month ago. Carnival Corporation (NYSE:
CCL
) shares fell 1.87 percent pre-market as the company announced the
departure of a key executive, Pamela Conover.
Earnings
No notable companies are expected to report earnings
Thursday.
Economics
On the economics calendar Thursday, motor vehicle sales and
chain store sales are expected to be released. Also, it is
Thursday, which means initial jobless claims data will be released
as well as Challenger job cuts and the ADP employment report. Later
on, the FOMC minutes for the December meeting are to be released.
Overnight, European service PMIs are set to be released ahead of
the much anticipated Non-Farm Payrolls report Friday morning.
Good luck and good trading.
(c) 2013 Benzinga.com. Benzinga does not provide investment advice.
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