Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Markets plunge as bonds send recession warning

Long-term yields slide amid trade-war worries

- Janna Herron

The Dow lost 800 points Wednesday, posting its worst percentage drop of the year while the Standard & Poor’s 500 and the Nasdaq each lost about 3%.

Worrying economic indicators from overseas coupled with an ominous signal in the bond market sent stocks into a tailspin.

“There was this realizatio­n that the rest of the globe is slowing faster than people expected, which leads to part two, the yield curve inverting for the first time since the financial crisis,” said Ryan Detrick, senior market strategist for LPL Financial. “That, historical­ly, occurs ahead of a recession.”

Investors are worried about a mix of things, including the effect of the trade war between the United States and China, unrest in Hong Kong, uncertaint­y around the Brexit in Europe and the projected pace of interest rate cuts from the

Federal Reserve.

The Dow Jones industrial average fell 3.05% to finish at 25,479, while the Standard & Poor’s 500 index declined 86 points to close at 2,841. The techheavy Nasdaq composite ended at 7,774, down 242 points.

Investors poured money into government bonds Wednesday, triggering a troubling sign: The yield on the 10year Treasury dipped below the yield on the two-year one. That hasn’t happened since 2007 and historical­ly signals an economic downturn is coming.

A similar scenario unfolded in the U.K.’s bond market Wednesday.

The yield on the 30-year Treasury bond hit a new low Wednesday at 2.04%, also a warning, said J.J. Kinahan, chief market strategist at TD Ameritrade.

“It shows ... people are buying bonds as a protective mechanism,” he said.

Global slowdown

Stocks were poised for a sell-off even before the bell opened trading because two reports overseas renewed fears of a global economic slowdown.

Germany reported that its gross domestic product went negative in the second quarter.

In China, the country’s industrial output in July hit a 17-year low, Detrick said. Retail sales and investment in real estate and other fixed assets weakened, an indication the world’s second-biggest economy is feeling pressure.

“We like a worldwide economy when it comes to buying cheap shoes,” Kinahan said. “But it’s a worldwide economy on the bad things, too. It can come onto our shores.”

Trade war

Underpinni­ng these factors are the trade tensions between the United States and China, whose machinatio­ns have whipsawed markets.

Stocks rallied Tuesday after the Trump administra­tion postponed some tariffs on Chinese imports until Dec. 15, instead of enacting them in September. Still, that’s temporary, said Kathy Bostjancic, chief U.S. financial economist at Oxford Economics.

“In no way is this a resolution or truce in the trade war with China,” she said.

Geopolitic­al concerns

Other issues add to the anxieties about economic growth: unrest in Hong Kong, the Brexit drama and Argentina’s recent surprise election and recordmaki­ng stock market crash Monday.

“It heightens the uncertaint­y and tensions when those are already quite high,” Bostjancic said.

 ?? JOHANNES EISELE/AFP/GETTY IMAGES ?? A board at the New York Stock Exchange reflects stocks’ tumble Wednesday.
JOHANNES EISELE/AFP/GETTY IMAGES A board at the New York Stock Exchange reflects stocks’ tumble Wednesday.

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