Less Ads, More Data, More Tools Register for FREE

GLOBAL MARKETS-Wall St heads for mixed start, eyes GDP, short-selling

Thu, 28th Jan 2021 13:01

* U.S. GDP snapshot, jobless claims at 1330 GMT

* Dollar gets safe-haven bid as euro backtracks

* Analysts question how far short-selling can last

* European shares wipe out their gains for the year

By Huw Jones

LONDON, Jan 28 (Reuters) - Wall Street headed for mixed
start on Thursday with investors preparing for the latest
snapshot of economic growth and any signs that a big squeeze in
shorted stocks has more to run.

Dow E-minis were up 52 points, or 0.19%, S&P 500
E-minis were off 5 points, or 0.12%. Nasdaq 100 E-minis
were off 50 points, or 0.5%.

U.S. shares saw their sharpest falls in three months on
Wednesday amid a squeeze on hedge funds holding short positions
in stocks like GameStop that are being targetted by an
army of retail buyers.

Investors were seeking refuge in U.S. dollar, with its index
up at 90.72 from a January low of 89.206. Yields on the
10-year U.S. Treasury bond were flat.

The market "smells a bit of blood", but it was unclear how
far the squeeze has to go, said Ned Rumpeltin, European head of
currency strategy at TD Securities. "It does feel like markets
are trying to find a bit of a floor here," he said.

The wait during Wednesday for a statement from the U.S.
Federal Reserve probably kept some investors on the sidelines,
but they would be freer to join in on Thursday, Rumpeltin said.

"What happens as we head into the weekend? All these retail
investors have some spectacular gains on paper - will they be
induced to cut and run and take profits?"

The Commerce Department's snapshot at 1330 GMT of fourth-
quarter gross domestic product in the United States is expected
to show the recovery from the pandemic losing steam as 2020 came
to a close.

U.S. jobless claims for the latest week were also due at
1330 GMT.

Earnings are due from American Airlines, Mastercard,
Macdonalds, Dow Chemicals, JetBlue Airways, Amazon, Mondelez,
and Visa.

Southwest Airlines Co's shares fell in pre-trading
after it reported an annual loss of $3.1 billion, its first
since 1972 as the pandemic stalled demand.

BACK TO SQUARE ONE

European shares wiped out their gains in Europe for the
year, soured by Wednesday's sell-off on Wall Street, no end in
sight to pandemic lockdowns and the squeeze in short positions.

The pan-European STOXX benchmark was down 0.5% at
400.9 points, after hitting its lowest point since December.
London, Paris and Frankfurt were flat
to lower.

"The initial optimism of early this year is starting to
dissipate because of the prospects of tighter pandemic
restrictions for longer, and concerns over 'vaccine
nationalism'," said Michael Hewson, chief market analyst at CMC
Markets.

The European Union, locked in a public spat with vaccine
producer AstraZeneca, wants a shortfall in the company's
supplies to the bloc topped up from production in Britain.

"We could see much more choppiness and much more volatility.
We have a bit of a perfect storm heading into the month end,
which is weighing on equity markets, but I don't think at the
moment we are in a place where it's going to come crashing off,"
Hewson said.

Asian shares slid on Thursday while the safe-haven dollar
rallied as Wall Street's sell-off and delays in coronavirus
vaccines provided an excuse to book profits on recent gains.

MSCI's broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan
fell 2%, with valuations looking stretched after
the index rose more than 6% just this month.

The euro eased to $1.2102 amid reports the European
Central Bank felt markets were under-pricing the risk of more
rate cuts.

The bounce in the dollar kept gold prices soft around $1,840
an ounce.

Global demand concerns restrained oil prices despite a drop
in U.S. crude stocks. U.S. crude fell 15 cents to $52.71
a barrel. Brent crude futures dropped to $55.74.

(Additional reporting by Alwyn Scott; editing by Christian
Schmollinger, Ana Nicolaci da Costa, Larry King)

Related Shares

More News
Today 11:46

Ryanair, Easyjet and others fined for cabin luggage fees

MADRID, May 31 (Reuters) - Spanish authorities have slapped fines on budget airlines Ryanair, easyJet , Vueling and Volotea totalling 150 million e...

Today 08:55

Ryanair, others fined 150 mln euros in Spain for cabin luggage fees, SER radio reports

MADRID, May 31 (Reuters) - Budget airlines Ryanair , easyJet, Vueling and privately owned Volotea have been fined 150 million euros ($162.30 million...

30 May 2024 13:14

JP Morgan stays at 'overweight' on EasyJet even as supply-demand balance returns

(Sharecast News) - Analysts at J.P.Morgan sounded a positive note on shares of Easyjet following the recent share price weakness that had taken them b...

30 May 2024 09:23

LONDON BROKER RATINGS: Jefferies and UBS cut Anglo American

(Alliance News) - The following London-listed shares received analyst recommendations Thursday morning and on Wednesday:

27 May 2024 07:06

easyJet, eyeing record summer, boosts nerve centre with AI

(Alliance News) - A cutting-edge facility featuring artificial intelligence – easyJet PLC's new control centre is tasked with handling about 2,000 m...

Login to your account

Don't have an account? Click here to register.

Quickpicks are a member only feature

Login to your account

Don't have an account? Click here to register.