Stock futures are signaling a positive start to the new year, after the Dow Jones Industrial Average (DJIA), S&P 500 Index (SPX), and Nasdaq Composite (IXIC) notched impressive 2017 returns. The premarket gains come as February-dated crude futures hold above the $60-per-barrel mark amid increasing political tension in Iran and the U.S. Dollar Index (DXY) points to a fifth straight down day.
Ahead of this morning's release of the Markit purchasing managers manufacturing index (PMI) for December, traders will digest a raft of analyst attention for equities. Included in the bunch is McDonald's (MCD), after Nomura named the Dow stock its top U.S. restaurant pick for 2018.
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It was a bullish start to 2018 in Asia, where most regional benchmarks ended higher. Hong Kong's Hang Seng rallied nearly 2% and touched a decade-plus high, led by strong gains for Apple suppliers. On the Chinese mainland, traders cheered a stronger-than-forecast reading on the Caixin manufacturing PMI, with the Shanghai Composite closing 1.3% higher. Gains were relatively muted in South Korea as investors kept a wary eye on the possibility of talks with Pyongyang; the Kospi was up 0.5% at the close. Markets in Japan were closed today.
Major equity indexes are wobbling lower in Europe at midday. Auto stocks are a particular pocket of weakness, pressured by soft data on car registrations. Geopolitical tensions are also keeping some buyers at bay, as ongoing anti-government protests in Iran's capital city of Tehran have now resulted in at least 14 fatalities. At last check, the German DAX is down 0.8%, the French CAC 40 is off 0.6%, and London's FTSE 100 has slipped 0.5%.