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MARCH 23, 2018 / 5:45 pm
Wall Street nosedives as investors flee on trade war fears
DJ: 23,533.20 -424.69 NAS: 6,992.67 -174.01 S&P: 2,588.26
-55.43 3/23
NEW
YORK (Reuters) - Wall Street tumbled on Friday with more than 1,000 points
knocked off the Dow in two days as investors, increasingly nervous about a
potential U.S. trade war with China, shied away from risk ahead of the weekend
and sought shelter from further losses. In a volatile session, the S&P 500 came within a hair
of its 200-day moving average, a key technical level. The benchmark index also nudged closer to its February
low, which marked a correction, ending 9.9 percent lower than its Jan. 26
record.
“There is concern what the trade war
could look like. Investors want to manage their risk. If it escalates rapidly,
it could be a major headwind for the market,” said Peter Kenny, senior market
strategist at Global Markets
Advisory Group, in New York.
President Donald Trump’s plans for tariffs on up to $60
billion in Chinese goods moved the world’s two largest economies closer to a
trade war as China
declared plans to levy duties on up to $3 billion of U.S. imports including
fruit and wine even as it urged the United States to “pull back from the
brink.”
The Dow Jones
Industrial Average .DJI fell 424.69
points, or 1.77 percent, to 23,533.2, the S&P 500 .SPX lost 55.43
points, or 2.10 percent, to 2,588.26 after hitting an intraday low that was
barely above its 200-day moving average of 2585.22. The Nasdaq Composite .IXIC dropped
174.01 points, or 2.43 percent, to 6,992.67.
For the week, the
Dow was down 5.67 percent, the S&P 500
was down 5.95 percent and the Nasdaq was down 6.54 percent, marking their
biggest weekly percentage falls since January 2016. The Dow was down 11.6 percent since its Jan.
26 high, and hit its lowest close since confirming a correction in February.
The Cboe Volatility Index .VIX, the most widely followed barometer of
expected near-term volatility in the S&P 500, finished up 1.53 points at 24.87,
its highest close since Feb. 13. The
S&P’s financial sector
.SPSY was the S&P’s biggest
percentage loser, at 3 percent, after a volatile session in which it was
whip-sawed by volatile
Treasury yields.
Bloomberg News cited China’s ambassador to the United
States saying that the country is “looking at all options” in response to
tariffs, which could include scaling back purchases of U.S. Treasuries.
Nasdaq was weighed
down by declines in momentum stocks such as
Facebook (FB.O), Amazon.com (AMZN.O), Microsoft (MSFT.O) and Google’s
parent Alphabet (GOOGL.O).
The semiconductor sector took a fall
after Micron Technology’s (MU.O)
quarterly report stoked fears about falling NAND prices. The Philadelphia
Semiconductor index .SOX slumped 3.3 percent.
Declining issues outnumbered advancing ones on the NYSE
by a 3.96-to-1 ratio; on Nasdaq, a 3.72-to-1 ratio favored decliners. The S&P 500 posted two new 52-week highs
and 42 new lows; the Nasdaq Composite recorded 23 new highs and 93 new lows.
Volume on U.S.
exchanges was 8.11 billion shares, above the
7.3 billion average for the last 20 trading days.
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