* European shares open down sharply
* STOXX 600 index down 2.4%, erases December gains
* New virus strain, Brexit uncertainty spooks investors
* Nasdaq futures edge up
*
Welcome to the home for real-time coverage of markets brought to
you by Reuters reporters. You can share your thoughts with us at
markets.research@thomsonreuters.com
THE YEAR THAT WAS: "CONTRARIAN CATASTROPHE" (0947 GMT)
Did you make a contrarian bet this year that didn't work out
the way you'd hoped for?
If your answer is yes, there isn't much you can do about it
now as 2020 draws to its close but it may be somewhat comforting
to know that you were not alone.
"... 2020 has been the worst year on record for contrarian
global stock-pickers. 2019’s winning trades kept winning. The
losing trades kept losing," strategists at Citi say.
It was a "contrarian catastrophe", they note.
"While we all like to think of ourselves as contrarians, the
simple point is that this strategy doesn’t work. The big payout
years for contrarians, like 2000 when the Tech bubble burst, are
not enough to make up for the more frequent years when they
lose. And in some years (like 2020), they can lose really big".
Check out this chart to make your own call.
(Danilo Masoni)
*****
EUROPE'S DECEMBER GAINS WIPED OFF, VOLATILITY PICKS UP (0832
GMT)
The stress caused by the new COVID-19 variant has resulted
in a broad sell-off across European equity markets in early
trading as investors fret over the damage expected from the
tougher restrictions imposed to fight the virus' spread.
Travel and leisure stocks are the hardest hit, down more
than 5%, followed by other cyclicals such as banks and oil. No
sector was trading in the black, and defensive plays barely
managed to limit their declines.
As a result the pan-European STOXX 600 benchmark
index fell 2% to erase all the gains it made so far this month,
while volatility gauges picked up, sending the euro zone
volatility index to a six-week high.
Among the handful of stocks in positive territory were
stay-at-home darlings such as Ocado and other delivery
firms, while precious metal miners like Fresnillo also
rose, as safe haven demand lifted gold prices to six-week highs.
Here's your snapshot:
(Danilo Masoni)
******
NEW STRAIN PAIN (0757 GMT)
A new COVID-19 strain, said to be up to 70% more
transmissible than the original, has led several countries to
shut their borders with the UK. And the lack of tangible
progress in Brexit talks, ahead of a Dec. 31 deadline has put
markets back into a state of angst.
That means there's little comfort from a U.S. congressional
deal on a $900 billion relief bill as focus has turned back to
the economic damage caused by tougher lockdown measures and the
possibility of tariffs on nearly $1 trillion worth of trade
flows between the UK and Europe.
Sterling is at the forefront of selling pressure, set for
its biggest one-day drop since September. European stocks index
futures are down more than 1.5%, while safe-haven demand is
supporting the dollar and lifting gold back to a six-week high.
U.S. stock futures steadied, however, helped by the stimulus
deal which will be likely voted on today. But Treasury yields
are down in response to the gloomy headlines and the gap between
two- and 10-year yields, which widened on Friday to near
two-year highs in anticipation of the stimulus package, has
narrowed a touch.
Monday also marks the much anticipated entrance of Tesla
into the S&P500 index. To make space for Telsa, which is up 720%
so far this year and trades at an astonishing 165 times forward
earnings, passive funds will need to sell an estimated $80 bln
worth of other stocks.
Meantime M&A continues apace. Lockheed Martin will to buy
U.S. rocket engine maker Aerojet Rocketdyne for $4.4 billion,
while a private-equity firm Thoma Bravo has reportedly inked a
$9.6 billion deal to buy software firm provider RealPage.
(Danilo Masoni)
*****
MORNING CALL: NEW VIRUS STRAIN STRESS (0635 GMT)
European stock markets are expected to open sharply down
this morning as the new strain of the virus which has shut down
much of the United Kingdom and closed its border is spooking
investors out of risk assets.
Futures for euro zone stocks are down 1.3%, 1% for Germany's
DAX and 0.8% for London's FTSE 100.
The blow for the UK blue chip benchmark is however softened
by the pound falling well over 1% which provides a currency
hedge to dollar earners on the index.
Things look better for Wall Street with futures for the S&P
500 flat and clearly rising (+0.4%) for the Nasdaq.
The deal for a new stimulus package in the U.S. should
clearly be a boost for global stock markets but the grim
coronavirus headlines are keeping any excess enthusiasm in
check.
MSCI's broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan
<.MIAPJ0000PUS is flat and oil prices have taken a 3% hit.
On the bright side, many analysts believe that in the great
scheme of things, the new virus strain isn't a game changer.
"Once the markets have finished panicking and unwinding
recent speculative positioning, the fundamentals of lower for
more extended monetary policy, and the search for yield in a
zero per cent world, will quickly reassert themselves", wrote
Jeffrey Halley at OANDA.
(Julien Ponthus)
*****