Jumat, 28 Februari 2020

Dow Futures Plunge Amid Worst Stock Market Slide Since Global Financial Crisis - TheStreet

Dow Futures Plunge Amid Worst Stock Market  Slide Since Global Financial Crisis

Wall Street looks set to extend its worst week since the financial crisis -- and the fastest correction on record for the S&P 500 -- as investors fear the coronavirus will accelerate into a global pandemic.
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The Friday Market Minute

  • Global stocks near correction territory, amid the worst five-day stretch since November 2008, as health officials warn of a potential cornoavirus pandemic.
  • COVID-19 cases top 83,000 worldwide, with new infections in Africa and New Zealand overnight, as governments accelerate their response procedures and biotechs race to find an effective vaccine.
  • European stocks extend slump, taking the Stoxx 600's five-day decline to 11.6%, with basic resource and tech shares leading the decline.
  • Benchmark 10-year U.S. Treasury bond yields hit fresh all-time low of 1.15% in overnight trading, with 2-year notes slipping below 1%, as investors bet on central bank support and Fed rate cuts amid the fastest correction on record for the S&P 500.
  • The CBOE's VIX volatility index hits a two-year high of 45.67, sending stocks reeling as investors dump risk in markets around the world.
  • U.S. equity futures suggest further opening bell declines on Wall Street ahead of earnings from Foot Locker before the start of trading and January inflation data at 8:30 am Eastern time.

Wall Street historic rout looks set to continue Friday, with futures prices pointing to extended declines for the three major benchmarks amid the worst week for world stocks since the financial crisis, as investors prepare for what could be a global coronavirus pandemic. 

Asia stocks were pummeled in overnight trading, following on from last night's sell-off on Wall Street that hived more than 1,000 points from the Dow Jones Industrial Average for the second time this week, pulling the MSIC World stock benchmark closer to correction territory and setting up its worst five-day run since November 2008.

With Moody's Investors Service warning of the potential for a coronavirus-lead global recession, supply chains disrupted by China's ongoing health crisis and the lingering effects of its trade war with the United States and government bond yields around the world testing fresh all-time lows, risk appetite was in short supply Friday, with gold price rising, oil extending declines and fund manager cash piles expanding.

More than 83,000 people -- mostly in China but in rising numbers around the world -- have been infected by the respiratory virus, officially known as COVID 19, with new cases confirmed overnight in Nigeria, New Zealand and Lithuania.

"This virus has pandemic potential," World Health Organization Director General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesu said Thursday. "This is not a time for fear. This is a time for taking action to prevent infection and save lives now."

With an unknown lethality and a rising infection rate, COVID 19's impact on the global is unknown at this stage, but with U.S. equity valuations recently trading at their highest levels since 2002, investors are in little mood to speculate on the ultimate outcome of any pandemic.

U.S. equity futures, in fact, suggest another session of deep declines on Wall Street Friday, with contracts tied to the Dow Jones Industrial Average priced for a 615point slide, taking the five-day total to around 1,600 points, and those linked to the S&P 500 poised for a 70 point retreat.

The S&P 500, in fact, suffered its fastest "correction" -- where stocks fall from 10% from a recent peak -- on record as of yesterday when the benchmark closed under the 3,000 point mark after hitting an all-time high on February 19. Nasdaq futures suggest a 212 point opening bell decline.

Benchmark 10-year U.S. Treasury bond yields, meanwhile, fell to a fresh all-time low of 1.15% mark in early European trading, extending a decline that has clipped more than 70 basis points from one of the world's most liquid financial instruments since the beginning of the year. Two-year notes, meanwhile, traded below the 1% mark for the first time on record, a move that was shortly followed by a similar level for 5-year notes.

With bond yields tumbling, pressure continues to mount on the Federal Reserve -- and indeed other central banks around the world -- to respond with either rate cuts or targeted monetary support.

Chicago Fed President Charles Evans, however, told a financial conference in Mexico Thursday that it would be "premature" to talk about central bank action in the wake of COVID 19's spread, and repeated the Fed's stance of "closely monitoring" developments in the global economy.

CME Group futures, however, now suggest at least a 77% chance of a March rate cut, compared to just 9% only a week ago, and are fully pricing in further cuts between now and the end of the year.

European stocks opened notably weaker in Frankfurt, London and Milan, with the Stoxx 600 benchmark tumbling 4.1% at the start of trading, while the FTSE 100 slumped 4% to the lowest levels since 2016 in London.

Germany's DAX index, which has fallen 15% from its recent highs, was marked 4.5% lower by mid-morning trade in Frankfurt.

In Italy, where the number of coronavirus cases has risen to 655 -- from just 3 a week ago -- with at least 17 deaths, the benchmark FTSE MIB index fell 3.4% in early dealing in Milan.

Global oil prices, too, extended declines amid their worst five-day stretch in four years, taking Brent crude some 15% lower on the week as investors adjusted demand forecasts from both China and other major economies around the world.

Brent crude futures contracts for April delivery, the global benchmark, were last see seen $2.1 lower from their Thursday close in New York and trading at $50.08 per barrel, while WTI contracts for the same month were seen $2.07 lower at $45.02 per barrel.

Overnight in Asia, Japan's Nikkei closed out a 9.6% slide for the week with a 3.67% slump that pegged the benchmark at 21,142.96 points, while China's Shanghai Composite fell 3.7% and Hong Kong's Heng Seng index tumbled 2.71%.

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2020-02-28 10:03:00Z
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U.S. stock futures sink as coronavirus fears set to drive deeper selloff - MarketWatch

U.S. stock futures fell sharply on Friday, a day after major benchmarks pushed into correction territory as investor fears heightened over just how much damage the fast-spreading coronavirus will wreak on the global economy.

How are major benchmarks trading?

Dow Jones Industrial Average futures YM00, -1.81%  slid over 600 points, or 2.5%, while S&P 500 futures ES00, -1.78%  dropped 2.5% to 2,882.25 and Nasdaq-100 futures NQ00, -2.02% fell nearly 3% to 8,132. 

On Thursday, the Dow industrials DJIA, -4.42% lost 1,190.90 points, or 4.4%, to close below 26,000 at 25,766.60, while the S&P 500 SPX, -4.42%  slid 137.63 points, or 4.4%, to end at 2,978.76. The Nasdaq Composite COMP, -4.61% slumped 414.29 points, or 4.6%, finishing at 8,566.48.

Read: Dow’s weekly skid would rank within the top 15 worse in its 124-year history

All three benchmarks closed in correction territory, defined as a decline of at least 10%, but no more than 20%, from a recent peak. For the S&P 500 and Nasdaq, it marked the worst daily percentage drop since Aug. 18, 2011, but the steepest since Feb. 5, 2018 for the Dow.

The Dow is now down 9.71% for the year, while the S&P 500 is off 7.80% year-to-date, and the Nasdaq has lost 4.53%.

Read: Stock market slammed by fears coronavirus will deliver a ‘supply shock’ that central bankers can’t fix

What’s driving the market?

Investors have endured days of increasingly grim updates on fallout from the coronavirus, as new infections continue to rise even as countries enact stronger and stronger measures. New Zealand and Nigeria were among the latest countries to report their cases.

Asian markets took up the grim baton from Wall Street on Friday, with the Nikkei 225 index NIK, -3.67%  finished down nearly 3.7%, as Japan Prime Minister Shinzo Abe asked schools to close for a month and Tokyo Disney Resort operator Oriental Land Co. 4661, +0.66% said it would close its theme parks for two weeks. The Stoxx Europe 600 SXXP, -3.84% pushed further into correction territory, sinking 4.6%.

The outbreak has the potential to become a pandemic and is at a decisive stage, the head of the World Health Organization said Thursday. The latest slide began late Wednesday as investors dismissed reassurances by President Donald Trump. Sentiment took another dive Thursday after California’s governor said 8,400 people were being monitored after traveling to China.

“This crisis has escalated to the point where the risk to the global consumer is the real problem. Starbucks and Apple can reopen their stores in China, but few people will go into them,” Michael O’Rourke, chief market strategist at JonesTrading, told clients in a note.

Read: 5 reasons stocks are seeing their worst decline since 2008, and only one is the coronavirus

“People are no longer worried about buying a house or a car, their primary concern is whether the virus will emerge in their area, will their children’ school close and will their family be quarantined,” he said.

Crude oil prices CLJ22, -1.42%  on Friday slid 3%, while gold, a traditional haven investment, was down 0.5%. The ICE Dollar Index DXY, -0.38%  fell 0.2%. Investors flocked to the yen, with the currency up 0.6% against the dollar at 108.87, while the New Zealand dollar NZDUSD, -0.9830%  plunged 1% on news of the country’s first infection.

The yield on the 10-year U.S. Treasury TMUBMUSD10Y, -6.53%  slid 13 basis points to 1.18% as investors scrambled to safety.

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2020-02-28 09:31:00Z
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U.S. stock futures point to further sharp declines as Asia follows Wall Street plunge - MarketWatch

U.S. stock futures fell sharply on Friday, a day after major benchmarks pushed into correction territory as investor fears heightened over just how much damage the fast-spreading coronavirus will wreak on the global economy.

How are major benchmarks trading?

Dow Jones Industrial Average futures YM00, -1.06%  slid nearly 300 points, or 1%, while S&P 500 futures ES00, -1.09%  dropped 1% to 2,926.75 and Nasdaq-100 futures NQ00, -1.22% fell 1.3% to 8,273. 

On Thursday, the Dow industrials DJIA, -4.42% lost 1,190.90 points, or 4.4%, to close below 26,000 at 25,766.60, while the S&P 500 SPX, -4.42%  slid 137.63 points, or 4.4%, to end at 2,978.76. The Nasdaq Composite COMP, -4.61% slumped 414.29 points, or 4.6%, finishing at 8,566.48.

Read: Dow’s weekly skid would rank within the top 15 worse in its 124-year history

All three benchmarks closed in correction territory, defined as a decline of at least 10%, but no more than 20%, from a recent peak. For the S&P 500 and Nasdaq, it marked the worst daily percentage drop since Aug. 18, 2011, but the steepest since Feb. 5, 2018 for the Dow.

The Dow is now down 9.71% for the year, while the S&P 500 is off 7.80% year-to-date, and the Nasdaq has lost 4.53%.

Read: Stock market slammed by fears coronavirus will deliver a ‘supply shock’ that central bankers can’t fix

What’s driving the market?

Investors have endured days of increasingly grim updates on fallout from the coronavirus, as new infections continue to rise even as countries enact stronger and stronger measures. New Zealand and Nigeria were among the latest countries to report their cases.

Asian markets took up the grim baton from Wall Street on Friday, with the Nikkei 225 index NIK, -3.67%  finished down nearly 3.7%, as Japan Prime Minister Shinzo Abe asked schools to close for a month and Tokyo Disney Resort operator Oriental Land Co. 4661, +0.66% said it would close its theme parks for two weeks. The Stoxx Europe 600 SXXP, -2.91%  tumbled 2.6% at the start of trading.

The outbreak has the potential to become a pandemic and is at a decisive stage, the head of the World Health Organization said Thursday. The latest slide began late Wednesday as investors dismissed reassurances by President Donald Trump. Sentiment took another dive Thursday after California’s governor said 8,400 people were being monitored after traveling to China.

“This crisis has escalated to the point where the risk to the global consumer is the real problem. Starbucks and Apple can reopen their stores in China, but few people will go into them,” Michael O’Rourke, chief market strategist at JonesTrading, told clients in a note.

Read: 5 reasons stocks are seeing their worst decline since 2008, and only one is the coronavirus

“People are no longer worried about buying a house or a car, their primary concern is whether the virus will emerge in their area, will their children’ school close and will their family be quarantined,” he said.

Crude oil prices CLJ22, -0.23%  on Friday slid 3%, while gold, a traditional haven investment, was down 0.5%. The ICE Dollar Index DXY, -0.22%  fell 0.2%. Investors flocked to the yen, with the currency up 0.6% against the dollar at 108.87, while the New Zealand dollar NZDUSD, -0.8245%  plunged 1% on news of the country’s first infection.

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2020-02-28 08:04:00Z
52780630255565

U.S. stock futures point to further sharp declines as Asia follows Wall Street plunge - MarketWatch

U.S. stock futures fell sharply on Friday, a day after major benchmarks pushed into correction territory as investor fears heightened over just how much damage the fast-spreading coronavirus will wreak on the global economy.

How are major benchmarks trading?

Dow Jones Industrial Average futures YM00, -0.65%  slid nearly 300 points, or 1%, while S&P 500 futures ES00, -0.61%  dropped 1% to 2,926.75 and Nasdaq-100 futures NQ00, -0.55% fell 1.3% to 8,273. 

On Thursday, the Dow industrials DJIA, -4.42% lost 1,190.90 points, or 4.4%, to close below 26,000 at 25,766.60, while the S&P 500 SPX, -4.42%  slid 137.63 points, or 4.4%, to end at 2,978.76. The Nasdaq Composite COMP, -4.61% slumped 414.29 points, or 4.6%, finishing at 8,566.48.

Read: Dow’s weekly skid would rank within the top 15 worse in its 124-year history

All three benchmarks closed in correction territory, defined as a decline of at least 10%, but no more than 20%, from a recent peak. For the S&P 500 and Nasdaq, it marked the worst daily percentage drop since Aug. 18, 2011, but the steepest since Feb. 5, 2018 for the Dow.

The Dow is now down 9.71% for the year, while the S&P 500 is off 7.80% year-to-date, and the Nasdaq has lost 4.53%.

Read: Stock market slammed by fears coronavirus will deliver a ‘supply shock’ that central bankers can’t fix

What’s driving the market?

Investors have endured days of increasingly grim updates on fallout from the coronavirus, as new infections continue to rise even as countries enact stronger and stronger measures. New Zealand and Nigeria were among the latest countries to report their cases.

Asian markets took up the grim baton from Wall Street on Friday, with the Nikkei 225 index NIK, -3.67%  finished down nearly 3.7%, as Japan Prime Minister Shinzo Abe asked schools to close for a month and Tokyo Disney Resort operator Oriental Land Co. 4661, +0.66% said it would close its theme parks for two weeks. The Stoxx Europe 600 SXXP, -3.75%  tumbled 2.6% at the start of trading.

The outbreak has the potential to become a pandemic and is at a decisive stage, the head of the World Health Organization said Thursday. The latest slide began late Wednesday as investors dismissed reassurances by President Donald Trump. Sentiment took another dive Thursday after California’s governor said 8,400 people were being monitored after traveling to China.

“This crisis has escalated to the point where the risk to the global consumer is the real problem. Starbucks and Apple can reopen their stores in China, but few people will go into them,” Michael O’Rourke, chief market strategist at JonesTrading, told clients in a note.

Read: 5 reasons stocks are seeing their worst decline since 2008, and only one is the coronavirus

“People are no longer worried about buying a house or a car, their primary concern is whether the virus will emerge in their area, will their children’ school close and will their family be quarantined,” he said.

Crude oil prices CLJ22, -0.23%  on Friday slid 3%, while gold, a traditional haven investment, was down 0.5%. The ICE Dollar Index DXY, -0.11%  fell 0.2%. Investors flocked to the yen, with the currency up 0.6% against the dollar at 108.87, while the New Zealand dollar NZDUSD, -0.8086%  plunged 1% on news of the country’s first infection.

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2020-02-28 07:02:00Z
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Stock markets plunge with coronavirus spread - CBC News: The National

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  1. Stock markets plunge with coronavirus spread  CBC News: The National
  2. Three Stocks That Went Up on Wall Street's Worst Day  Motley Fool
  3. Wall Street dips over growing coronavirus fears  ARIRANG NEWS
  4. China's Shenzhen stocks drop almost 5% as major markets enter correction territory  CNBC
  5. Asia stocks fall on virus fears after Wall Street plunge  The Associated Press
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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2020-02-28 03:13:03Z
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Kamis, 27 Februari 2020

Stocks Tumble Into Correction Territory On Coronavirus Fears - NPR

Traders work during the opening bell at the New York Stock Exchange on Thursday. Wall Street stocks opened sharply lower, amid fears the coronavirus will grow into a significant international health crisis. Johannes Eisele/AFP via Getty Images hide caption

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Johannes Eisele/AFP via Getty Images

Updated at 11:10 a.m. ET

Stocks continued their downward slide on Thursday, with major indexes falling into correction territory. Investors are worried about the economic toll of a widening coronavirus epidemic.

The Dow Jones Industrial Average tumbled more than 500 points in the opening minutes of trading. The blue chip index is down more than 10% from its recent peak on Feb. 12 — the technical definition of a "correction." The broader S&P 500 index has also lost more than 10% of its value in just over a week.

President Trump tried to project a note of calm in a news conference Wednesday evening, stressing that the United States is well prepared for any health crisis and predicting the stock market will recover, thanks in part to robust consumer spending. But investors were not immediately reassured.

A poll by Morning Consult this week found that 69% of U.S. adults are either "very" or "somewhat" concerned about the domestic economic impact of the epidemic, a 14 point increase from a few weeks ago.

Goldman Sachs lowered its forecast of corporate profits for this year and next. The firm expects zero growth in profits in 2020, as a result of reduced economic activity in both China and the U.S., reduced demand for American exports, supply chain disruptions, and increased uncertainty.

The steep drop in financial markets could put a dent in consumer confidence and spending — a major driver of the U.S. economy. It may also increase pressure on the Federal Reserve to lower interest rates. On Tuesday, the central bank's vice chairman, Richard Clarida, said the Fed is monitoring the outbreak closely but he cautioned it's too soon to assess the economic effects.

Health officials also reported the first known case of coronavirus in the U.S. with no apparent link to China or other sources, suggesting that the virus may be spreading domestically.

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2020-02-27 15:02:00Z
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Coronavirus is threatening to end the world air-travel boom - CNBC

Foreign travelers wearing masks walk past a departures information board at Beijing International Airport in Beijing, China as the country is hit by an outbreak of the new coronavirus, February 1, 2020.

Jason Lee | Reuters

The rapid spread of the new coronavirus is testing airlines and other travel companies with a risk that had been nearly unthinkable over the past decade: a broad decline in travel demand.

Air-travel demand had been growing at twice the pace of the global economy, but that bright spot is now at risk. U.S. airlines and other travel stocks have tumbled more than the broader market in this week's rout as big conferences were canceled and fears grew that customers may just opt out of trips because of the spreading COVID-19 outbreak.

The issue caps a difficult year for airlines that have been grappling with the nearly yearlong grounding of the Boeing 737 Max. Carriers need demand to stay robust, particularly in the lucrative spring and summer travel seasons, and analysts are warning that that looks unlikely.

The NYSE Arca Airline Index, which tracks 16 carriers in North America, Latin America and budget carrier Ryanair, has dropped more than 15% this week as of Wednesday's close, putting it on pace for its biggest weekly percentage loss since March 2009 — during the last recession. American Airlines shares on Wednesday closed the lowest since before its 2013 merger with US Airways and United Airlines, which suspended its full-year guidance this week because of the virus, fell to a more than two-year low.

"Every day we think we could be near a bottom, and every day we are not," Cowen airline analyst Helane Becker said in a note Thursday.

Deutsche Bank on Thursday downgraded American, Alaska, Delta, Spirit, JetBlue and United stocks to hold from buy, saying it "is becoming increasingly more likely that the spread of COVID-19 will disrupt travel patterns beyond China."

More than 81,000 people have been sickened with coronavirus and new cases are rising outside of China, where most of the cases have been reported. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention on Wednesday advised the public to avoid all nonessential travel to South Korea. Saudi Arabia it will temporarily suspend the entry of foreigners for pilgrimage and tourism purposes.

Airlines have already canceled more than 200,000 flights, mostly to, from and within China because of the virus. Now they are mulling other changes. Delta slashed its service to South Korea, home to the largest outbreak outside of China, to 15 weekly flights from 28. All three major U.S. airlines have suspended flights to mainland China and Hong Kong and waived cancellation and change fees for China and South Korea as demand collapsed.

U.S. airlines, which historically have experienced boom-and-bust cycles, have just posted their 10th consecutive year of profitability, but their future performance will hinge on whether demand declines sharply in the U.S.

Social media's effect

Some carriers are already preparing for flyers too worried to travel. The last global outbreak of this scale was SARS just under a decade ago, but the fast spread of information could lead travelers to change their plans more quickly now, analysts said.

"We didn't have Facebook and Twitter," said Darryl Genovesi, airline analyst at Vertical Research Partners.

The CDC on Wednesday reported the first possible case of "community transmission" of the coronavirus. The Northern California resident had no travel history or contacts that would have put the person at risk, the CDC said. While the number of confirmed cases in the U.S. is still relatively low, some airlines are preparing for passengers to be too scared to travel.

JetBlue Airways in a surprise move Wednesday, said it would waive fees for travelers who want to cancel or change the date of tickets they buy from Thursday through March 11, a measure that pressures other U.S. airlines to follow suit.

"The risk here for airlines is this triggers a broad slowdown in travel," said Samuel Engel, head of the aviation practice at consulting firm ICF. "Airlines are by their nature diversified enterprises. They can withstand a loss of traffic on a single route or region but where the airlines get hit is when the fear makes people cancel or postpone trips."

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2020-02-27 14:45:00Z
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