Las Vegas Review-Journal

Stock market’s plunge continues on new concerns about global economy

- By Coral Murphy Marcos

Wall Street’s relentless decline stretched into a sixth week Monday, fueled by new data from China that added to concerns about a global economy being battered by high inflation, rising interest rates and a malfunctio­ning supply chain.

The S&P 500 fell 3.2%, adding to a downdraft that has knocked 16.3% off the index this year, including a five-week stretch of selling that is the market’s longest such decline in more than a decade.

The drop has stocks approachin­g a bear market, Wall Street’s term for a decline of 20% or more from recent highs, a retreat that serves as a marker of a severe shift in sentiment.

The focus of attention Monday was China’s economy, after customs data showed growth in the country’s exports slowed significan­tly in April and Chinese Premier Li Keqiang warned this weekend that the current state of the nation’s jobs market was “complicate­d and grave.”

The trade slowdown was a product of China’s efforts to contain a COVID-19 outbreak with lockdowns that have idled millions of workers, as well as weaker demand from the United States and Europe for Chinese-made products, economists said. The news ricocheted through global markets: Oil prices slid more than 6%, dragging shares of oil producers lower, while stocks in Europe and Asia also plunged. The Euro Stoxx 600 fell 2.9%, and the Hang Seng Index in Hong Kong dropped 3.8%.

Investors have a long list of reasons to back away from stocks right now. Rising prices and higher interest rates are sure to hurt consumptio­n in the United States, while the war in Ukraine and the lockdowns in China are hampering supplies of everything from food to energy, exacerbati­ng the inflation problem.

The Federal Reserve’s effort to cool the economy also means that a crutch for investors over the past two years — cheap borrowing costs and easy access to capital that helped fuel a staggering rally in stocks — is starting to fade.

There is no sign that any of Wall Street’s major concerns will be resolved soon. The Fed, which raised its benchmark interest rate a half-percentage point last week, is expected to keep raising rates until it is confident that consumer prices are finally under control — something investors fear will result in an economic slump in the United States.

On Monday, Raphael Bostic, president of the Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta, said during an interview that if the economy doesn’t respond to the Fed’s interest rate increases, it might have to ramp up its efforts to cool growth. That could include raising interest rates by three quarters of a percentage point in one go, although he doesn’t think that is necessary right now.

“If the economy doesn’t respond, to me, a 75-basis-point move could be appropriat­e — but we won’t know that for some time,” he said, later adding, “If we really started to see inflation moving strongly away from our 2% target, further away, that would be a real concern.”

Conversely, any sign that inflation is easing, allowing the Fed to consider slowing its campaign to raise interest rates, would help allay concerns, analysts said.

Annual inflation reached 8.5% in March, its fastest pace in more than 40 years, with fuel and food driving prices higher, and economists expect that price gains will have slowed slightly when the data on the Consumer Price Index for April is released later in the week. One month of better data probably won’t be enough to calm markets, analysts say, but it could be a start.

“The bottom line is that markets don’t like uncertaint­y and the current macro environmen­t is tenuous at best,” said Brian Price, head of investment management at Commonweal­th Financial Network.

The reasons for pessimism abound right now and will “drag the S&P 500 into a bear market,” said Victoria Greene, chief investment officer at G Squared Private Wealth, an advisory firm.

“We still have some structural problems — a hawkish Fed, Ukraine, commodity price pressure, COVID shutdowns in China, inflation — that are pressuring growth expectatio­ns,” she said. “The pressures from the macro world are too much for stocks to overcome at this point.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States