Markets |
Wall Street tumbles to 2014 low as oil prices sink
DJ: 15,766.74 -249.28 NAS: 4,471.68
-5.27 S&P: 1,859.33
-22.00
(Reuters) Wall
Street's recent selloff deepened on Wednesday, with the S&P 500 closing at
its lowest in over a year as U.S. oil prices plummeted to 2003 lows. The equities rout was widespread, hitting nine of the 10 major S&P
sectors. The small-cap Russell's 2000 index .RUT fell 3.6 percent before
reversing its loss late in the session.
The beaten-down S&P energy sector .SPNY fell 2.93 percent, leading the
losers. Exxon (XOM.N)
dropped 4.21 percent and Chevron (CVX.N)
slumped 3.10 percent.
Collapsing oil prices and
fears of a slowdown in China, the world's second largest economy and a
key market for U.S. companies, have led the S&P 500 to drop 9 percent this year. In the past six months,
the energy sector has fallen 26 percent.
"The fear is, 'Is tomorrow going to bring more selling?'
People are not even thinking about today, they're thinking about
tomorrow," said Kim Forrest, senior equity research analyst at Fort Pitt
Capital Group in Pittsburgh.
U.S. crude sank 6.6 percent on Wednesday as a supply glut bumped
up against bearish financial reports that deepened worries over demand.
But a late-day bounce in
U.S. oil prices helped reduce losses in stocks.
"If you look at crude prices, they are shooting right back up,"
Randy Frederick, managing director of trading and derivatives for Charles
Schwab in Austin, said ahead of the close.
The S&P 500 .SPX ended down 1.17 percent at 1,859.33,
its lowest close since October 2014. It had fallen as low as 1,812.29. The Dow Jones industrial average .DJI ended 1.56 percent lower at 15,766.74
points. After a brief late-day rally
into positive territory, the Nasdaq Composite .IXIC lost steam and ended down 0.12 percent
at 4,471.69.
The CBOE volatility index .VIX, Wall Street's fear gauge, jumped 5.9 percent to
27.59.
Strength last year in Netflix, Facebook and a handful of other
technology stocks masked troubled sentiment in other S&P 500 components,
said R Squared portfolio manager Riad Younes.
“You had a crowded trade on a few names that kept the average
much higher than it should be,” Younes said. “It feels like a bear market for
the average stock.”
Netflix (NFLX.O) ended
down 0.14 percent despite better-than-expected growth in its subscriber base.
An unusually
high 12.5 billion shares changed hands on U.S. exchanges, well above the
7.8 billion daily average for the past 20 trading days, according to Thomson
Reuters data.
The New York Stock Exchange recorded 2,271 stocks advancing
stocks and 883 decliners. On the Nasdaq, 1,551 issues fell and 1,331 advanced.
The S&P 500 posted no new 52-week highs and 182 new lows;
the Nasdaq recorded 5 new highs and 728 new lows.
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