close
MENU
3 mins to read

While you were sleeping: Wall Street slides again on oil, China trade drops

UPDATED Stocks fall further as oil hits seven-year low.

Margreet Dietz
Wed, 09 Dec 2015

Equities on both sides of the Atlantic fell after a worse-than-expected trade report on China fuelled concern about weakening global economic growth, at a time when the US Federal Reserve is widely expected to start hiking its target interest rate.

Oil prices, still reeling from Friday's decision by Opec to keep production at current excess levels at a time of increasingly questionable demand, fell further after touching a seven-year low earlier in the day.

West Texas Intermediate for January delivery settled at $US37.51 a barrel on the New York Mercantile Exchange after earlier falling as low as $US36.64.

The world benchmark Brent settled at $US40.71 on ICE Futures Europe, after earlier sliding below $US40 a barrel for the first time since February 2009.

"Opec has lost control of the oil market and, unless something fundamental changes that causes demand to overtake the oversupply in the market, the path of least resistance is the 2008 lows of $US35-38," Michael Hewson, chief market analyst at CMC Markets, told Reuters.

Weaker China trade figures
Data showed China's exports weakened more than expected in November, while imports declined for a record 13th straight month. That doesn't bode well for commodity prices and shares of commodity producers.

"China is moving more toward consumption and, in this transition, it is the miners that get hurt the most," Andreas Nigg, head of equity and commodity strategy at Vontobel Asset Management in Zurich, told Bloomberg. "As long as economic data disappoint, you are going to have reactions like this."

The commodity slump is taking its toll. Morgan Stanley will take a severance charge of about $US150 million in the fourth quarter, Bloomberg reported, citing a person briefed on the matter.

The charge will cover the cost of cutting 1200 workers worldwide, including about 470 traders and salespeople in its fixed-income and commodities business. Morgan Stanley shares last traded 1.9% lower.

Cuts at Anglo American
Meanwhile, Anglo American announced broader cost cuts as it seeks to pare down the company, lowering assets by 60% and its workforce to about 50,000 from 135,000. It also suspended its dividend. Shares of Anglo American sank 12.3% in London.

"Together with the additional material capital, cost saving and productivity measures announced today, we are setting out an accelerated and more aggressive strategic restructuring of the portfolio to focus it on our 'Priority 1' assets, being those assets that are best placed to deliver free cashflow through the cycle and that constitute the core long-term value proposition of Anglo American," Anglo American chief executive Mark Cutifani said in a statement.

"While we have continued to deliver our business restructuring and performance objectives across the board, the severity of commodity price deterioration requires bolder action," he noted.

The market is already on tenterhooks for next week's meeting of the Federal Open Market Committee, which is widely expected to lift its key rate for the first time since 2009.

"The market is expecting a rate hike and the Fed will reintroduce uncertainties and lose credibility if they fail to raise rates," Ryan Larson, head of US equity trading at RBC Global Asset Management in Chicago, told Reuters.

On Wall Street, the Dow Jones Industrial Average closed 162.51 points, or 0.9%, lower at 17,568.00. The Standard & Poor's 500 Index fell 0.6% to 2063.59, while the Nasdaq Composite Index eased 0.07% lower at 5098.24.

Slides in shares of Caterpillar and those of Boeing, last trading 2.5% and 2.3% lower respectively, led the decline in the Dow.

In Europe, the Stoxx 600 Index finished the day with a 1.8% drop from the previous close. The UK's FTSE 100 Index slid 1.4%. France's CAC 40 Index gave up 1.6%, while Germany's DAX Index declined 2%.

UPDATED to include Wall St close, 10am NZ time

(BusinessDesk)

Margreet Dietz
Wed, 09 Dec 2015
© All content copyright NBR. Do not reproduce in any form without permission, even if you have a paid subscription.
While you were sleeping: Wall Street slides again on oil, China trade drops
54182
false