REUTERS/Peter Andrews
Good Morning! US Futures are drifting around unchanged right now as the S&P digests its First three-day winning streak in a month amidst multiple headlines as earnings start hitting. European futures are off small, led by a 30bp retreat in the DAX as sentiment very cautious with Greece's parliament is facing a Wednesday deadline to approve and implement economic reforms. Volumes are pacing very light, but Consumer Discretionary shares under sharp pressure in Frankfurt, losing 1.5%. Over in Asia, Shanghai lost 1.1% and the Hang Seng lost 0.4%. Roughly 250 Chinese A-shares were estimated to resume trading - leaving some 27% of Chinese listed companies still frozen (Down from more than 50%). Japan's Nikkei 225 is up 1.5%, and Australia is up 1.9% led by the miners.
The US 10YY is off 2bp, while German 10's are basically flat after the huge reversal yesterday. Sovereign debt yields on the periphery of the eurozone are creeping higher, with Spain and Italy out slightly. The euro is rebounding from some time spent under 1.10 waterline, and the Yen is gaining some upward mojo into BOJ tonight - helping the DXY reverse some of yesterday's gains, causing a tailwind for commodities. That said, only "softs" are higher, as all the metals are under pressure, led by a 1% drop in Silver and Copper - both considered "growth" proxies, as concern builds ahead of a big China GDP and retail sales print tonight. With the Iran nuclear agreement announced, we have weakness in both Brent and WTI - with the complex off 1.5% but rallying from overnight lows.
Scheduled Catalysts today include Advance Retail Sales at 8:30 - NFIB Small Business Optimism at 9 - Business Inventories at 10. Tonight after the close we get API data for Crude and Fed's George Speaks on Economy in Kansas City. Semis will be active today, as Gartner slashes Cap Spending estimates (INTC off 1%) - Semicon West kicks off, MU Takeout headlines, and LRCX, KLAC investor days. Banks will be jumping, with JPM and WFC all reporting. Watch the retailers - we say a sharp bid in many discretionary names, led by AMZN hitting fresh all-time highs into their "Prime Day" sales event tomorrow.