US Opening Call from Alpari UK on 1 July 2014
US futures higher on stronger Chinese data
There’s been a lot of data released over the last 24 hours leaving investors with a lot of information to digest. Looking at the markets though, it would appear that they largely approve, with European indices trading comfortably in the green and US futures pointing to a similar open in a few hours. As it stands, the S&P is expected to open 4 points higher, the S&P 37 points higher and the Nasdaq 10 points higher.
The Chinese manufacturing numbers appear to be providing quite a significant boost this morning, particularly in the FTSE which has a large exposure to its manufacturing sector. Basic resources are leading the way, sending the FTSE up almost 0.5% on the day. Given that China has been one of the stories acting as a drag on markets at times this year, evidence that the targeted stimulus programs, both fiscal and monetary, are working is very welcome. This doesn’t just apply to the relevant stocks, sentiment as a whole is boosted when China performs well as it benefits the global economy. This explains why risk assets, like stocks, are performing well across the board.
In Europe this morning, the manufacturing PMIs were a little mixed, while the unemployment rate for the eurozone fell to 11.6%, continuing its gradual decline following the five year ascent to record highs of 12.1%. The UK manufacturing PMI rose to 57.5, ahead of market expectations and the highest level since November. This helped drive sterling above 1.71 against the US dollar to trade at highs not seen since October 2008.
Economic data will remain the focal point as we head into the US session, where two more manufacturing PMI figures will be released, the official and the ISM. The preliminary reading of the official PMI was unchanged in June and we’re expecting this to remain the case, while the ISM is expected to rise to 55.8 from 55.4.
US futures higher on stronger Chinese data
There’s been a lot of data released over the last 24 hours leaving investors with a lot of information to digest. Looking at the markets though, it would appear that they largely approve, with European indices trading comfortably in the green and US futures pointing to a similar open in a few hours. As it stands, the S&P is expected to open 4 points higher, the S&P 37 points higher and the Nasdaq 10 points higher.
The Chinese manufacturing numbers appear to be providing quite a significant boost this morning, particularly in the FTSE which has a large exposure to its manufacturing sector. Basic resources are leading the way, sending the FTSE up almost 0.5% on the day. Given that China has been one of the stories acting as a drag on markets at times this year, evidence that the targeted stimulus programs, both fiscal and monetary, are working is very welcome. This doesn’t just apply to the relevant stocks, sentiment as a whole is boosted when China performs well as it benefits the global economy. This explains why risk assets, like stocks, are performing well across the board.
In Europe this morning, the manufacturing PMIs were a little mixed, while the unemployment rate for the eurozone fell to 11.6%, continuing its gradual decline following the five year ascent to record highs of 12.1%. The UK manufacturing PMI rose to 57.5, ahead of market expectations and the highest level since November. This helped drive sterling above 1.71 against the US dollar to trade at highs not seen since October 2008.
Economic data will remain the focal point as we head into the US session, where two more manufacturing PMI figures will be released, the official and the ISM. The preliminary reading of the official PMI was unchanged in June and we’re expecting this to remain the case, while the ISM is expected to rise to 55.8 from 55.4.
Read the full report at Alpari News Room