Markets |
Wall St. tumbles on global slowdown concern; Disney slumps
DJ: 16,990.69 -358.04 NAS:
4,877.49 -141.56 S&P: 2,035.73
-43.88
REUTERS/BRENDAN
MCDERMID
The S&P 500 tumbled to a more than six-month low on
Thursday, closing in negative territory for the year, on concern a decelerating
Chinese economy will translate into
slower global growth.
Consumer stocks led the
decline on Wall Street with Disney down 6 percent after a brokerage downgrade,
while Apple fell 2 percent after a report that overall smartphone
sales in China fell in the second quarter.
Concern about the Chinese economy was underscored by a near 8 percent slide in the
Shanghai stock index .SSEC so far this week and after the Commerce
Ministry said Wednesday exports could continue falling in coming months.
"The largest issue is certainly the fact that we don't know
how much the Chinese economy is slowing," said Art Hogan,
chief market strategist at Wunderlich Securities in New York.
"That's manifesting
itself in lower oil prices," he said, pointing to the correlation
between stocks and crude futures.
U.S. crude CLc1
edged higher after earlier hitting its lowest since March 2009, while Brent
LCOc1 dropped 2.3 percent to its lowest since January.
The 14-day correlation between the S&P 500 and Brent prices is at a five-month
high.
The Dow Jones industrial
average .DJI fell 358.04 points, or 2.06 percent, to
16,990.69, theS&P 500 .SPX lost 43.88 points, or 2.11 percent, to
2,035.73 and the Nasdaq Composite.IXIC dropped 141.56 points, or 2.82 percent,
to 4,877.49.
The drops in the S&P 500 and Dow were the largest daily
percentage declines since Feb. 3, 2014, while the Nasdaq fell the most since April 10, 2014.
The S&P 500 is now down 1.1 percent year-to-date.
It also traded below its 200-day moving average for the full session, for the
first time since last October.
At its session low on Thursday, the S&P 500 was down 4.6 percent from its record
intraday high set in late May.
"We've had a lot of things go wrong today both fundamentally
and technically. Fundamentally, there's continued concern about global growth
slowing and weakness in the price of oil. The market was unable to hold the
200-day moving average from a technical standpoint," said Bucky Hellwig,
senior vice president at BB&T Wealth Management in Birmingham, Alabama
"For tomorrow, ideally we could see some stabilization and
a move back toward the 200-day moving average. The risk is if there's something
that investors don't like, it will be really easy to sell going into the
weekend."
The CBOE Volatility
index .VIX rose 25.5 percent to close at 19.14, the highest in six
weeks, as traders paid more for protection against a further slide in the S&P 500.
Disney (DIS.N)
slumped 6 percent to $100.02 and Time Warner (TWX.N) fell
5 percent to $73.90, leading a rout in media stocks after a Bernstein downgrade
that cited a massive structural upheaval in the industry.
"The pattern didn't change overnight, but it got called by
Disney for the first time on their earnings," said Hogan.
Disney shares have fallen 17.8 percent since the company
reported earnings earlier this month.
Apple (AAPL.O) fell
2.1 percent to $112.65 after a Gartner report said China smartphone sales fell in the second quarter
for the first time ever on a quarterly basis. Apple counts Chinaas a key growth market.
One bright spot in tech stocks was NetApp (NTAP.O), up
3.4 percent to $30.78 after the data storage equipment maker's results beat
expectations.
NYSE declining issues outnumbered advancers 2,612 to 457, a
5.72-to-1 ratio; on theNasdaq, 2,396 issues fell and 437 advanced, for a
5.48-to-1 ratio favoring decliners.
The S&P 500 had four new 52-week highs and 40 new
lows; the Nasdaq Composite had 16 new highs and 208 new
lows.
About 8
billion shares changed hands on U.S. exchanges, above the 6.7 billion
daily average so far this month, according to BATS Global Markets data.
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