US stock market off to worst ever start to year – prices back to June 2014

While South Africans have started the new year been engrossed in their own, global asset prices have been tumbling. The US’s S&P 500 index, which tracks the performance of Wall Street’s most valuable companies, has fallen sharply in the first four trading sessions of the year as investors fret about the continued economic slump in China and a host of other worries. This index is back to the level it traded at 18 months ago – and with the Fangs (Facebook, Amazon, Netflix and Google) joining the slide instead of repeating their 2015 trick of pulling the index higher, Mr Market looks to be heading back into one of his depressions. As always this is the kind of pullback that long-term investors will welcome as an opportunity to acquire a slice of high quality companies at a better price. For South Africans who have invested abroad, there is also some comfort that for them a weaker Rand is offsetting much of the Wall Street gloom. – Alec Hogg  

By Jeremy Herron and Oliver Renick

(Bloomberg) — The Standard & Poor’s 500 Index capped its worst-ever four-day start to a year, while gold rallied with the yen as turmoil in China spread around the world and billionaire George Soros warned that a larger crisis may be brewing.

The U.S. equities benchmark ended the first four days of 2016 lower by 4.9 percent, while the Dow Jones Industrial Average has erased more than 900 points so far this year. A measure of global shares wrapped up a four-day slide of 5.2 percent, its worst start in records back to 1998. Selling in global equities began in China after the central bank weakened the yuan an eighth day. Crude settled at a 12-year low, and copper dipped below $2 for the first time since 2009. The yen reached a four-month high.

NEW YORK, NY – APRIL 30: The Financial Times CEO John Ridding and Editor Lionel Barber ring the Closing Bell at the New York Stock Exchange on April 30, 2013 in New York City. (Photo by Dario Cantatore/NYSE Euronext)

“China devaluing its currency sparks concern that the global growth engine is starting to slow and that creates a dump of any high-flying stocks or anything people perceive as risk,” said Yousef Abbasi, a market strategist at JonesTrading Institutional Services in New York. “When you start to worry about growth, you have crude oil down and it all ties together. It’s the new year and people are scratching their heads, they’re not quite ready to buy the dip.”

Fresh concern that China’s slowdown will hamper global growth has wiped $2.5 trillion off the value of global equities this year, as the nation’s tolerance for a weaker currency is viewed as evidence policy makers are struggling to revive an economy that’s the world’s biggest user of resources. U.S. crude’s tumble toward $30 a barrel heightened fears of disinflation and fueled concern that junk-rated energy producers won’t be able to stay solvent.

Concern briefly eased after the China Securities Regulatory Commission announced the suspension of a new stock circuit- breaker that forced local exchanges to shut for the second day this week before the move gave way to anxiety that policy makers are struggling with how to contain the months-long turmoil in its financial markets.

Read also: Not just JSE – Chinese contagion hammers Emerging Market stocks worldwide

“Chinese equity markets are highly volatile right now and anything they do to potentially stabilize that market improves the outlook for U.S. equities,” Krishna Memani, chief investment officer at Oppenheimer Funds Inc. in New York, said by phone. “They don’t have a whole lot of experience controlling and monitoring markets and they’ve been going about it ham-handedly making the situation far worse than it needs to be.”

Stocks

The Standard & Poor’s 500 Index slid 2.4 percent at 4:15 p.m in New York. The index is down 4.9 percent this year, its worst start in data going back to 1928. The MSCI All-Country World Index fell for a fourth day, bringing its slide this year to 5.2 percent.

China’s devaluation revived the angst that sent financial markets into turmoil last summer, driving U.S. stocks to three- month lows Wednesday in a selloff led by commodity producers. Comments by Soros exacerbated market jitters after he told an economic forum in Sri Lanka today that global markets are facing a crisis and investors need to be very cautious.

The Stoxx Europe 600 Index slid 2.2 percent. The rout this year in Europe surpassed 5 percent, as Germany’s DAX fell below 10,000 for the first time since October. The MSCI Asia Pacific Index retreated 2.1 percent. Benchmark stock indexes in Australia, Japan, Singapore and Thailand all lost more than 2 percent.

Read also: Global stocks cap loses at $5tn in August – worst since May 2012

China

The Hang Seng China Enterprises gauge of mainland shares listed in Hong Kong tumbled 4.2 percent, its lowest close since October 2011. The Shanghai Composite Index tumbled 7.3 percent before trading was suspended. New circuit breakers, which kicked in on Monday, have been criticized by analysts for exacerbating declines as investors scramble to exit positions before getting locked in by the halts.

After the halt, the securities regulator announced rules to limit selling by major shareholders when a ban expires this week. Later, the regulator suspended a new stock circuit- breaker, signaling that the country’s leadership may reconsider or change the system.

Currencies

The dollar slumped, snapping its longest streak of gains since September, as the upheaval in China weighed on the outlook for higher rates in the U.S. The greenback reached its lowest since August versus the yen.

The yen, which has been the best-performing major currency so far this year amid the demand for safe-haven assets, rose 0.6 percent to 117.77 per dollar, after touching 117.33, the strongest since Aug. 24.

Read also: China capitulates after losing $400bn supporting its currency, share market

Commodities

Oil dropped to the lowest in 12 years as turmoil in China’s markets pushes crude closer to $30 a barrel on concern that the economic slowdown in the world’s biggest commodity consumer is worsening. West Texas Intermediate crude fell 2 percent to $33.29 a barrel.

Copper futures fell below $2 a pound for the first time in more than six years as a slump across industrial metals deepened. The metal for March delivery tumbled as much as 4.7 percent to $1.99 a pound before settling at $2.022, down 3.2 percent. A gauge of world mining companies tumbled to the lowest since 2004 on Thursday, led by Freeport-McMoRan Inc. and Anglo American Plc.

Cocoa for March delivery fell for a fifth day to an eight- month low on ICE Futures U.S. in New York. The Bloomberg Commodity Index rose 0.1 percent, rebounding from what would have been the lowest close since 1999 as crude erased losses.

Bonds

Treasuries fluctuated as speculation that China will sell U.S. debt and the prospect of more Federal Reserve interest-rate increases limited the securities’ appeal as a haven. Yields on 10-year notes fell two basis points to 2.15 percent after touching the lowest since October. Global economic weakness has boosted government debt to start 2016, pushing yields back below levels from when the Fed lifted rates Dec. 16.

Benchmark 10-year municipal-bond yields extended their steepest decline in almost four years. The appeal of munis and other fixed-income assets may grow after concerns that China’s slowdown will hamper global growth have wiped $2.5 trillion off the value of global equities this year.

Emerging Markets

Developing-nation stocks sank to the lowest since 2009, with the MSCI Emerging Markets Index tumbling 2.9 percent. South Africa’s rand weakened to a record low against the dollar. The Ibovespa tumbled for a second day as a plunge in Brazilian industrial production added to concern that demand for the nation’s exports will weaken further as China’s economy slows.

Benchmark gauges in South Africa, Thailand, the Philippines and Abu Dhabi slid more than 2.5 percent and those for Saudi Arabia, Dubai and Qatar tumbled at least 3 percent. Russian markets were closed for a holiday.

A gauge tracking 20 emerging-market currencies dropped for a fifth day, capping its longest losing streak since October.

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