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Turmoil continues on US, Asian exchanges

February 9, 2018

US stock markets went through more chaos on Thursday, with the latest losses only slightly behind the record-breaking Monday trimming as concerns mount over inflation and interest rate hikes.

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Japan Börse in Tokio
Image: Getty ImagesAFP/B. Mehri

The Dow Jones plunged by more than 1,000 points on Thursday as turmoil continued on the New York stocks in what will likely be its worst week in two years.

The trouble continued into Friday on Asian markets, with Tokyo, Hong Kong and Shanghai exchanges all falling by more than three percentage points as investors ploughed into safe haven assets such as gold in the wake of the American sell-off.

The losses in China were particularly striking, with the Shanghai Composite Index falling by six percent and the bluechip CSI300 exchange tumbling by a similar margin.

After more losses on Thursday, European stock markets fell further in early trading on Friday, with London's FTSE 100 index dropping 0.5 percent to 7,134.51 points. In the eurozone, Frankfurt's DAX 30 lost 0.3 percent to 12,224.8 points and the Paris CAC 40 lost 0.4 percent to 5,129.65, when compared with Thursday's closing levels.

Stocks sell-off hits Europe, but no panic

The Dow loss of more than 1,000 points equated to more than 4 percent for the day itself and was the third fall of more than 500 points in the space of five days. The Dow Jones is now down 10 per cent from its peak on January 26.

Read more: Central bankers seek to soothe nerves after market turmoil

Other US exchanges such as the tech-centered Nasdaq and the S&P 500 have also fallen sharply this week, with concerns over possible US interest rate hikes and inflation spooking investors and prompting much fevered selling.

Blue Monday, Blue Thursday

In a reflection of the dramatic week that has transpired on the exchanges, Thursday's Wall Street losses — while being the third worst in the last five years — still only rank second for this week, with Monday's battering the worst in percentage terms in the last five years.

The losses, euphemistically referred to as a "correction", come in sharp contrast to the bullish trends of the market throughout 2017 and in January of this year.

The early euphoria of 2018, driven by optimism over US tax cuts, has receded in the face of mounting concerns over forthcoming changes in Federal Reserve interest rate policies.

"The sellers remain in clear control right now as a lot of the excess froth we saw in January, has now been unwound or erased," Adam Sarhan of 50 Park Investments said.

USA Börse in New York
Image: Getty Images/AFP/B. R. Smith

Another significant trigger was a strong US jobs report on Friday, which prompted fears over inflation and increased borrowing costs.

 "The market had gotten way ahead of itself," Nancy Tengler, chief investment officer of Heartland Financial, said. "When we were going up faster than we should, nobody questioned that," she said. "When the market recalibrates, everyone becomes somewhat nervous and concerned."

Believing in the fundamentals

Political reaction to the ongoing turbulence has been reserved.

US President Donald Trump has been notably quiet on the recent losses, having made much of the stock market surge throughout 2017, while EU Economic and Financial Affairs Commissioner Pierre Moscovici said he was not concerned by the global stock market slump this week as he believes in the economic "fundamentals".

"You can have volatility in the markets, or corrections, but I am very confident in the fundamentals of the global economy and particularly the European economy," the Frenchman said at an event in Athens.

"The reforms we've made in recent years have left us more solid," he added.

aos/hg (AFP, Reuters)