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Global Stock Sell-Off Intensifies Over Coronavirus Crisis | |
(about 1 hour later) | |
Panic in the stock market over the spreading coronavirus continued into a seventh day, with shares in Asia and Europe tumbling and the United States set for another steep decline. | |
The major sell-off is fueled mostly by worry that measures to contain the virus would hamper corporate profits and economic growth, and fears that the outbreak could get worse. | |
China, the site of the first cases and the world’s second largest economy, has grinded to a halt as it struggles to contain the infection. Its factory shutdowns and quarantines have disrupted the global supply chain. Companies like Microsoft have warned that this will affect their sales, and Wall Street analysts have begun to factor those warnings into their expectations for profit growth this year. | |
More countries are reporting outbreaks, with over 83,000 people worldwide in at least 53 countries sickened so far. Hundreds of companies have begun taking measures to try to prevent the illness from afflicting their workers, including restricting travel and asking employees to work from home. All of these could curtail productivity. | |
Investors are responding by selling stocks, as well as commodities like oil, as they anticipate the coming slump. The selling itself could help bring the slowdown along as it discourages spending by companies and individual investors alike. | |
If the virus spreads in the United States, the Federal Reserve might have to cut rates. The outbreak represents a significant test for President Trump, whose presidential success has been deeply tied to the economy and a rising stock market | |
Updated Feb. 26, 2020 | |
On Friday, the slide in Asia and Europe followed a 4.4 percent nose-dive in the S&P 500 index on Thursday, the worst day for American shares since 2011. | |
In Europe, the FTSE 100 in Britain fell 3 percent, and the DAX in Germany fell 3.4 percent. | |
In Asia, the Nikkei 225 in Japan closed down 3.7 percent, the KOSPI in South Korea dropped 3.3 percent and the Shanghai Composite in China dropped 3.7 percent. | In Asia, the Nikkei 225 in Japan closed down 3.7 percent, the KOSPI in South Korea dropped 3.3 percent and the Shanghai Composite in China dropped 3.7 percent. |
Oil prices continued a lurching drop, reflecting decreased demand as factories and transportation slow down. Brent crude, the international benchmark, fell as low as $50.05 a barrel. It was above $71 in early January. Money has poured into investments like gold and government bonds, which are generally considered safer. | |
Investment bank economists issued increasingly glum predictions of how much the coronavirus outbreak would hurt economies around the world. | |
More new infections are now being reported daily outside China, where the disease first appeared, than inside the country. | More new infections are now being reported daily outside China, where the disease first appeared, than inside the country. |
The S&P 500 is on track for the market’s worst week since the 2008 financial crisis, and other economic indicators are flashing warning signs. | |
Scott Clemons, the chief investment strategist for private banking at Brown Brothers Harriman, said the outbreak’s potential to alter American consumers’ habits was at the heart of the Wall Street sell-off. | |
“To the degree that consumers change their behavior — so they stop going out to eat, they don’t take the vacation, they cancel the business trip — that consumption, that spending, personal consumption is 68 percent of G.D.P.,” Mr. Clemons said. | |
Over the past few days, companies as varied as United Airlines, Anheuser-BuschInBev, Mastercard and Pfizer have said the outbreak poses a threat to their 2020 earnings. | |
The spread of the virus continued to reverberate through global companies on Friday. | |
Baker McKenzie, the law firm based in Chicago, shut its London office, which houses about 1,000 people, after a potential coronavirus case. “Our priority is the health and well-being of our people and our clients,” the firm said. “We have asked our London office employees to work from home for the time being while we are taking precautionary measures.” | |
The airline group IAG, which owns British Airways and Iberia, said that it expected earnings to be weaker because of the virus, but that it could not give accurate profit guidance for the year because of the uncertainty of the situation. And EasyJet, a British budget airline, said that it had seen a drop in demand for flights, particularly to northern Italy. It said it would cancel flights and try to save costs in other areas. | The airline group IAG, which owns British Airways and Iberia, said that it expected earnings to be weaker because of the virus, but that it could not give accurate profit guidance for the year because of the uncertainty of the situation. And EasyJet, a British budget airline, said that it had seen a drop in demand for flights, particularly to northern Italy. It said it would cancel flights and try to save costs in other areas. |
The Global Business Travel Association said that nearly two-thirds of the members it surveyed had canceled meetings and that most companies in Asia had put a hold on business trips in the region. “It is fundamentally affecting the way many companies are now doing business,” said Scott Solombrino, the group’s chief operating officer and executive director. “If this turns into a global pandemic, the industry may well lose billions of dollars.” | The Global Business Travel Association said that nearly two-thirds of the members it surveyed had canceled meetings and that most companies in Asia had put a hold on business trips in the region. “It is fundamentally affecting the way many companies are now doing business,” said Scott Solombrino, the group’s chief operating officer and executive director. “If this turns into a global pandemic, the industry may well lose billions of dollars.” |
The governor of the Bank of England, Mark Carney, said in an interview with Sky News that the central bank had detected a fall in business activity in Britain because of coronavirus, but that it was too soon to predict how badly the economy would be affected. | The governor of the Bank of England, Mark Carney, said in an interview with Sky News that the central bank had detected a fall in business activity in Britain because of coronavirus, but that it was too soon to predict how badly the economy would be affected. |
The Swiss government banned all gatherings of more than 1,000 people at least until March 15, forcing cancellation of the Geneva International Motor Show. European car companies are already dealing with plunging sales in China and supply chain problems, and now they are losing one of their premier marketing events in Europe. | The Swiss government banned all gatherings of more than 1,000 people at least until March 15, forcing cancellation of the Geneva International Motor Show. European car companies are already dealing with plunging sales in China and supply chain problems, and now they are losing one of their premier marketing events in Europe. |
The overall effect of the outbreak on global corporations could increase the chance of a broader economic slowdown, analysts say. | The overall effect of the outbreak on global corporations could increase the chance of a broader economic slowdown, analysts say. |
“The more countries that are faced with fighting a pandemic, the wider the potential for economic disruption and potential for increased recessionary risks,” Tai Hui, the chief market strategist for Asia at J.P. Morgan Asset Management, said in a research note on Friday. | “The more countries that are faced with fighting a pandemic, the wider the potential for economic disruption and potential for increased recessionary risks,” Tai Hui, the chief market strategist for Asia at J.P. Morgan Asset Management, said in a research note on Friday. |
The outbreak is also affecting outbound travel for American residents, with a steep decline of 19.3 percent in bookings in the five weeks to Feb. 17, according to the travel analytics firm ForwardKeys. | |
The United States is the world’s second-largest outbound market after China, which by early February had seen travel bookings more than cut in half. | |
“Now it’s not just China, but the world’s second largest and second-highest spending outbound travel market, the U.S.A., which is stalling,” said Olivier Ponti, vice president of insights at ForwardKeys | |
In the Asia Pacific region, bookings collapsed by nearly 88 percent compared to the same time period from last year, ForwardKeys said. The number of trips to Europe booked from the United States declined 3.6 percent. | |
Matt Phillips, Jack Ewing, Keith Bradsher, Alexandra Stevenson and Julie Cresswell contributed reporting. |