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Wall St to open weak as commodities rout rattles the markets

Wall Street's major indexes were set to open lower on Monday as investors became uneasy due to a violent drop in precious metals at the beginning of a week that will be filled with earnings reports and important economic data.

As a result of the CME Group increasing margin requirements, gold and silver fell as much as 10%. This was after a historic drop on Friday. Leveraged investors were forced to unwind their positions in order to meet margin requirements.

Jim Baird is the chief investment officer of Plante Moran Financial Advisors.

Premarket trading saw a drop in the U.S. listings of gold and silver mining companies. Harmony Gold, Sibanye Stillwater and other gold and silver miners fell 2.2% and 0.4% respectively.

Hecla Mining?and Endeavour Silver fell by 2% and 1,6% respectively.

Last week, the metals market plunged after U.S. president Donald Trump named Kevin Warsh to be the next Federal Reserve Chair?to succeed Jerome Powell. This was a decision that investors saw as hawkish.

Energy companies' shares fell as oil prices dropped 5% after Trump stated that Iran was "seriously speaking" with Washington. This signaled a?de-escalation, and eased supply disruption concerns. Exxon Mobil, Chevron and other energy companies fell between 1.2% to 2%.

At 8:25 a.m. At 8:25 a.m. ET, Dow Eminis had fallen?46, or 0.09 percent, S&P Eminis by?30.75, or 0.43 percent, and Nasdaq Eminis by 182 points or 0.72%.

After a choppy week last week, the volatility VIX index rose to 18.75. This is near a 2-week high, and was triggered by mixed megacap earnings, as well as increased policy uncertainty resulting from Trump's selection of Warsh.

In premarket trading, tech mega-caps fell. Nvidia, Tesla, and Alphabet each lost 1%.

Microsoft and Amazon each lost 0.7%.

Microsoft shares had their worst week in March 2020 after cloud revenue disappointed. This highlights the growing investor sensitivity towards lofty capital spending plans and the pressure that Big Tech faces to justify massive outlays of money with meaningful returns.

Baird said, "You can see investors becoming more selective..and you're starting to see companies warning a little bit on earnings.

Alphabet and Amazon, as well as AMD, are among the S&P 500 companies that will be reporting results this week.

Disney's stock fell by 2.3%, despite exceeding Wall Street's expectations for the first quarter.

Despite some selloffs in January, due to geopolitical tensions and the S&P reaching 7,000 for the first, all three indices ended higher. Investors cheered on some strong earnings and the steady demand for AI growth stories. The index had also reached record levels earlier in the month.

After Congress failed to pass a bill to fund a large number of government operations, the U.S. experienced a shutdown that is expected to last only a few hours.

The markets are becoming more reactive to labor data. This week, JOLTS, ADP's hiring figures, and non-farm payrolls will be the focus of attention along with PMI numbers.

Bloomberg News reported that the Trump administration had launched a $12 Billion minerals stockpile against china. Shares in rare earth miners, and other critical minerals, rose. (Reporting and editing by Shinjini Ganuli in Bengaluru, Twesha Dhikshit from Bengaluru)

(source: Reuters)