ADVERTISEMENT

Stocks Sink With Oil on Virus Woes; Havens Rally: Markets Wrap

Track the global equity, currency & commodity markets here.

Stocks Sink With Oil on Virus Woes; Havens Rally: Markets Wrap
A monitor displays an S&P 500 chart on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) in New York, U.S. (Photographer: Michael Nagle/Bloomberg)

U.S. stocks slid in a selloff across global markets amid growing fears a new coronavirus variant identified in South Africa could spark fresh outbreaks and scuttle a fragile economic recovery. Haven assets surged. 

It’s the worst post-Thanksgiving performance for the S&P 500 since 1941, when President Franklin D. Roosevelt signed a bill to officially establish the fourth Thursday in November as a national holiday.

The Russell 2000 sank 3.7% and the Nasdaq 100 was dragged to its lowest close in a little more than two weeks. Travel and leisure stocks tumbled, while stay-at-home shares gained. In Europe, the Stoxx 600 closed down 3.7%, the most since June 2020. Oil fell through $70 a barrel in New York for the first time since late September.

Treasuries jumped on haven bids, sending the 10-year yield down the most since March 2020 on a closing basis, while traders pushed back bets on the Federal Reserve hiking rates. The Japanese yen emerged as the main haven currency of the day, with the dollar falling.

The World Health Organization and scientists in South Africa were said to be working “at lightning speed” to ascertain how quickly the B.1.1.529 variant can spread and whether it’s resistant to vaccines. The new threat adds to the wall of worry investors are already contending with in the form of elevated inflation, monetary tightening and slowing growth.

“This is not trivial,” said Jay Hatfield, chief executive and founder of Infrastructure Capital Management. “So it makes sense for people to rebalance because there’s tons of uncertainty and that’s never good for buying stocks.”

Stocks Sink With Oil on Virus Woes; Havens Rally: Markets Wrap

Carnival Corp. and Royal Caribbean Cruises Ltd. dropped more than 10% while United Airlines Holdings Inc. dropped 9.6%. Zoom Video Communications Inc. and Peloton Interactive Inc. gained at least 5%, while Moderna Inc. jumped more than 20% and Pfizer Inc. climbed to a record. 

“It’s terrible news,” Ipek Ozkardeskaya, a senior analyst at Swissquote, said in emailed comments. “The new Covid variant could hit the economic recovery, but this time, the central banks won’t have enough margin to act. They can’t fight inflation and boost growth at the same time. They have to choose.”

The selloff comes after global markets adopted a Jekyll-and-Hyde posture for months, with equities rallying to newer records even as concerns intensified over a toxic combination of high inflation and slower growth. Investors poured almost $900 billion into equity exchange-traded and long-only funds in 2021 -- exceeding the combined total from the past 19 years. 

“At these valuations any sort of headline is going to cause this pullback,” Brian Vendig, MJP Wealth Advisors President, said in an interview with Bloomberg TV. “You definitely don’t want to be 100% in risk assets -- whether its interest rate risk, inflation risk, policy risk and now another cue for the health-care crisis letting us all know we’re not out of the pandemic.”

Stocks Sink With Oil on Virus Woes; Havens Rally: Markets Wrap

Rate Wagers Cut

Traders pushed back the expected timing of a first 25-basis-point rate increase by the Federal Reserve to September from June, while briefly pricing out any more hikes unit 2023. The rally in Treasuries pushed the 10-year yield down 16 basis points to close around 1.47%, its largest single-session decline since March 2020.

They also bet on less than a 10-basis-point hike by the Bank of England next month, compared with 35 basis points projected a month ago. They called for seven basis points of tightening by the European Central Bank by December 2022 as against nine basis points seen Thursday. 

The yen and Swiss franc found bids from safety-conscious traders, while the dollar posted a modest loss. A gain for the euro, the biggest component of the Bloomberg Dollar Spot Index, also curbed the greenback.

MSCI Inc.’s Asia-Pacific equity gauge slid to the lowest since early October. Some of the worst-hit assets were in emerging markets. The currency of South Africa, where the virus strain was identified, lost 1.8% and the Turkish lira dropped 2.9%.

Stocks Sink With Oil on Virus Woes; Havens Rally: Markets Wrap

While the selling continued unabated, some investors said it’s important not to get carried away by short-term jitters.

“We must not forget the backdrop that this was a market that was headed towards another 25% year,” said Cate Faddis, Grace Capital President. “When the market gets ahead of itself it finds a reason, any reason to come back down to earth. A 2% move is not very significant in light of the year we have had.”

For more market analysis, read our MLIV blog.

Some of the main moves in markets:

Stocks

  • The S&P 500 fell 2.3% as of 2:25 p.m. New York time
  • The Nasdaq 100 fell 2.1%
  • The Dow Jones Industrial Average fell 2.5%
  • The MSCI World index fell 2.2%

Currencies

  • The Bloomberg Dollar Spot Index fell 0.4%
  • The euro rose 0.9% to $1.1315
  • The British pound rose 0.1% to $1.3339
  • The Japanese yen rose 1.8% to 113.25 per dollar

Bonds

  • The yield on 10-year Treasuries declined 16 basis points to 1.47%
  • Germany’s 10-year yield declined eight basis points to -0.34%
  • Britain’s 10-year yield declined 14 basis points to 0.82%

Commodities

  • West Texas Intermediate crude fell 13% to $68.15 a barrel
  • Gold futures were little changed

©2021 Bloomberg L.P.