The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

stocks akid amid fears about tech

U.S. may cut exports of some high-tech products to China.

- By Marley Jay

U.S. stocks

NEW YORK — skidded Monday as investors grew concerned that technology companies could be pulled into the broadening trade dispute between the U.S. and China. Indexes in

Europe and Asia also fell. Stocks sank after the Wall Street Journal and Bloomberg News reported that the administra­tion intends to limit exports of some high-tech products to China, and will limit investment in technology firms by companies with substantia­l Chinese ownership. Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin suggested the investment restrictio­ns wouldn’t be limited to China and the losses deepened. The Dow Jones Industrial Average lost as much as 496 points.

The market recovered some of those losses after Peter Navarro, one of Pres- ident Donald Trump’s top trade advisers, told CNBC there was no plan for invest- ment restrictio­ns and that the administra­tion’s probe into alleged technology theft is limited to China.

“We hear one thing one hour and something that contradict­s it the next hour or the next day,” said Randy Frederick, vice president of trading and derivative­s for Charles Schwab. “Nobody knows what to think or what to believe. It makes it really

tough to invest.”

All but one of the 72 technology companies listed on the S&P 500 index fell Monday. Those companies have done far better than the broader market over the last year and a half and investors had considered them to be less vulnerable to tariffs than other sectors like manufactur­ing.

Taxes by the U.S. on tens of billions of dollars in imports from China, and retaliator­y taxes by China on U.S. goods, are set to take effect in less than two weeks. While few investors expect a full-blown trade war, Frederick said talks appear to be going in the wrong direction.

“Every day you get closer to those particular dates it gets more worrisome,” he said. Frederick said that is likely to lead to more market volatility.

The S&P 500 index shed 37.81 points, or 1.4 percent, to 2,717.07, its worst loss since April 6. The Dow Jones Industrial Average lost 328.09 points, or 1.3 percent, to 24,252.80. The Nasdaq composite fell 160.81 points, or 2.1 percent, to 7,532.01. The Russell 2000 index of smaller-company stocks slid 28.07 points, or 1.7 percent, to 1,657.51.

Elsewhere, Harley-Davidson said it would move some production overseas to avoid tariffs the European Union is placing on motorcycle­s made in the U.S. Those tariffs were a response to taxes the U.S. placed on steel and aluminum from Europe. Its stock fell 6 percent to $41.57.

China is attempting to become a global leader in biotechnol­ogy, electric vehicles and other industries, and the reports said the administra­tion wants to slow Beijing’s progress in those areas. President

Donald Trump has threatened to put tariffs on hundreds of billions of dollars in Chinese imports over complaints Beijing steals or pressures foreign companies to hand over tech- nology. He’s also pressuring China to buy more U.S.- made goods.

Chipmaker Micron Technology, which gets half its revenue from China, lost 6.9 percent to $53.16 and Advanced Micro Devices fell 4.4 percent to $15.11. Nvidia sank 4.7 percent to $239.12.

Germany’s DAX fell 2.5 percent and London’s FTSE 100 gave up 2.2 percent. France’s CAC 40 shed 1.9 percent. Hong Kong’s Hang Seng lost 1.3 percent. Tokyo’s Nikkei 225 shed 0.8 percent

and in South Korea the Kospi was little changed.

Retailers and other com- panies focused on consumers fell as investors sold some of the stocks that have done the best this year. Amazon lost 3.1 percent to $1,663.15 and Netflix dropped 6.5 percent to $384.48.

The S&P 500 index of technology companies and the index of consumer-focused companies are both up 10 percent this year. The S&P 500 is up 1.6 percent.

Bond prices rose. The yield on the 10-year Trea- sury note fell to 2.87 percent from 2.89 percent.

‘Nobody knows what to think or what to believe.’

Randy Frederick

Vice president of trading and derivative­s for Charles Schwab

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