Stocks
remained under considerable pressure on Monday after a steep sell-off
late last week. Key indexes around the world continued to fall and
emerging markets lost more ground in the face of fears of capital
flight.
Wall
Street showed a few signs of stabilizing after its worst week since
June 2012, while markets slumped across Europe and especially in the
Asia-Pacific region.
“We’re
clearly favoring the developed world over emerging markets at the
moment,” Philippe Gijsels, the head of research at BNP Paribas Fortis
Global Markets, said. Investors had become cautious because of signs
that some countries, including India, South Africa and Turkey, were
having trouble.
On
Monday, the Dow Jones industrial average fell 41.23 points, or 0.3
percent, to close at 15,837.88. The Standard & Poor’s 500-stock
index declined 8.73 points, or 0.5 percent, to 1,781.56. The Nasdaq
composite index dropped 44.56 points, or 1.1 percent, to 4,083.61. All
three indexes lost 2 percent or more on Friday.
In Europe, the FTSE 100 index in London fell 1.7 percent, while the DAX index in Frankfurt slid 0.5 percent.
In
Asia, the Japanese benchmark Nikkei 225 dropped 2.5 percent to its
lowest close since November, while the Hang Seng in Hong Kong lost 2.1
percent. On Tuesday, the selling seemed to abate, as both indexes were
marginally higher in early trading.
Investors,
fretting about slowing growth in China and the prospect that the
Federal Reserve will continue to scale back its support of the United
States economy, bailed out of emerging market currencies.
Investors
in Japan were reacting to the additional concerns about a stronger yen,
which they fear may eat into earnings of Japanese exporters by making
goods more expensive for customers overseas and less competitive
globally.
The global sell-off started to gather pace on Thursday after weak data from the Chinese manufacturing sector
reinforced concerns about the strength of the Chinese economy. Although
China is still expected to expand more than 7 percent this year, its
growth is far less energetic than it once was.
“Our
baseline remains that China can avoid a hard landing, but the risk will
remain for the foreseeable future,” analysts at Société Générale said.
Events
in Turkey, Argentina and elsewhere have fanned fears about emerging
markets in general over the last few days. Political turmoil in Turkey
helped send the Turkish lira to a record low against the dollar last
week. This week, Turkey’s central bank said its monetary policy
committee would hold an emergency meeting “to take the necessary policy
measures for price stability.”
All
this has coincided with the prospect that the Federal Reserve will
further scale back its economic stimulus program that has helped keep
interest rates low worldwide. The prospect of waning stimulus has fanned
fears that emerging markets around the world will now see much reduced
inflows of cash as a result.
In
December, the Fed decided to cut back its monthly purchases of Treasury
and mortgage-backed for the first time, to $75 billion from $85
billion. It is widely expected to reduce the bond purchases by another
$10 billion at a two-day policy meeting that ends on Wednesday.
In
the American bond market, interest rates edged slightly higher. The
yield on the Treasury’s 10-year note rose to 2.75 percent, from 2.72
late Friday, while its price fell 9/32, to 100.
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