www.bloomberg.com
U.S. stocks halted a two-day rally as renewed declines in the price of
crude set the tone on global financial markets, dragging down
currencies of resource exporters and stoking demand for havens from gold
to Treasuries.
The Standard & Poor’s 500 index extended
declines in late-morning trading as American crude’s slide approached 5
percent, undoing part of a 21 percent surge to end last week. U.S. and
European followed oil lower after rising in its wake at the end of last
week, while yields on 10-year Treasury notes fell three basis points
2.02 percent. The Russian ruble fell against all of its 31 major
counterparts, while gold futures jumped 1 percent.
Even after last week’s recovery, crude has fallen about 16 percent
this year amid brimming U.S. stockpiles and the prospect of additional
Iranian exports. Lower oil prices have amplified concern global growth
is slowing as they also point to weaker industrial demand. With energy
and commodity companies sliding, a measure of the correlation between
global stocks and oil prices over the past 120 days has climbed to 0.5,
the highest since 2013.
“A
weaker oil market to start the day is going to take a little bit of the
bloom off the rose from last week’s rally,” said Michael James, managing
director of equity trading at Wedbush Securities Inc. in Los Angeles.
“The market’s going down with the price of oil, that’s been the way it’s
been trading. We’re certainly due for a little pullback given the
massive upside we saw.”
Stock
The S&P 500 fell 0.8
percent at 11:17 a.m. in New York, after a 2 percent rally on Friday.
Equities are on track for their worst January since 2009 amid worries
that China’s slowdown will weigh on global growth, with plunging oil
prices exacerbating those concerns. The S&P 500 sank to a 21-month
low last week before rallying.
Halliburton Co. declined Monday
after posting a quarterly loss, and Exxon Mobil Corp. slide following
crude’s biggest two-day rally in more than seven years. McDonald’s Corp.
gained after the fast-food giant’s earnings beat analysts’ forecasts.
Tyco International Plc surged 8.6 percent after Johnson Controls Inc.
agreed to merge with the company.
In
Europe, Banca Monte dei Paschi di Siena SpA was little changed after a
47 percent rally in the previous two sessions. Greece’s ASE Index
climbed 0.6 percent after Standard & Poor’s upgraded the country to
B- from CCC+, with a stable outlook.
Commodities
West Texas
Intermediate dropped as much as 4.1 percent. Saudi Arabian Oil Co. is
maintaining investment in oil and natural gas projects as it studies
options to sell shares in its parent company and refining and chemical
operations, Chairman Khalid Al-Falih said
Monday. The state-run producer, known as Saudi Aramco, can sustain low
oil prices for “a long, long time,” he told reporters in Riyadh.
Gold
advanced as investors weighed the prospects of the metal as a haven.
Bullion for immediate delivery rose 0.6 percent to $1,104.40 an ounce,
according to Bloomberg generic pricing. The metal climbed 0.8 percent
last week as turmoil in global stocks renewed interest in the metal as a
store of value.
Copper in London added 0.2 percent to $4,451.50 a metric ton, while nickel dropped 0.7 percent to $8,640 a ton.
Currencies
The
yen halted a two-day decline after Bank of Japan Governor Haruhiko
Kuroda showed little appetite for an immediate expansion of stimulus as
the central bank prepares to set policy this week.
Japan’s
currency has gained versus all its 16 major counterparts since the start
of the year as a China-led stock selloff and a tumble in oil prices
spurred demand for haven assets. Hedge funds and other large speculators
raised net bullish yen positions to the highest in almost four years
last week. The BOJ is scheduled to meet Jan. 28-29 and announce its
monetary-policy decision on Jan. 29.
Kuroda said in an interview
on Jan. 22 in Davos, Switzerland, that “we don’t think the current
market situation has been affecting corporate behavior unduly.”
The
Canadian dollar and Mexico’s peso declined with the ruble as currencies
of commodity producers fell with crude. South Korea’s won strengthened
0.5 percent before data forecast to show South Korea’s economic growth
quickened.
Bonds
U.S. Treasuries rose for the first time in
three days. The Federal Open Market Committee is set to announce its
next rate decision on Jan. 27, though traders aren’t pricing in the
probability of the next increase until September.
“We saw a pretty
simultaneous slump in oil and equity futures,” said John Davies, an
interest-rate strategist at Standard Chartered in London. “U.S.
Treasury
yields took the cue accordingly and the curve has bull flattened in
response,” he said referring to longer-dated bond yields falling faster
than those on shorter-maturity debt.
The 10-year note yield fell
two basis points to 2.03 percent, according to Bloomberg Bond Trader
data. The 30-year bond yield declined three basis points to 2.80
percent. The yield on 10-year German bonds was one basis point lower at
0.48 percent.
The cost of insuring investment-grade corporate debt
was little changed, with the Markit iTraxx Europe Index of
credit-default swaps holding at 93 basis points. The non-investment
grade Markit iTraxx Europe Crossover Index was also little changed at
371 basis points.
Emerging Markets
The MSCI Emerging Markets
Index rose 0.8 percent. Benchmarks in Taiwan, Indonesia and the
Philippines climbed more than 1 percent while shares in the Gulf fell
with oil.
The Shanghai Composite Index advanced 0.8 percent
and the Hang Seng China Enterprises Index of mainland shares in Hong
Kong also climbed 0.8 percent. The Shanghai gauge, whose gyrations at
the start of the year sparked the global selloff, ended up 1.3 percent
on Friday as China signaled it would curb overcapacity in industries
such as coal that have been dragging down economic growth.
China
has lowered steel production by about 90 million tons “in recent years”
and will push to cut a further 100 million to 150 million tons, while
“strictly controlling” steel capacity increases and halting new coal
mine approvals, according to a Sunday statement on the Chinese
government’s website, citing a State Council meeting on Jan. 22 chaired
by Premier Li Keqiang. No time line was mentioned.
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