(Bloomberg) -- U.S. equities tumbled alongside stocks in Europe and Asia as authorities struggled to keep the coronavirus from spreading more widely outside China. Havens including Treasuries and gold surged.
In a dramatic day across markets, these were some of the standout moves:
- All three main U.S. stock benchmarks slumped more than 3%, with the S&P 500 Index tumbling the most on an intraday basis since August. The Dow Jones Industrial Average erased all of its gains for the year.
- The FANG cohort of megacap tech shares that led the year’s rally plunged more than 4%. AMD Corp. led losses in chipmakers exposed to China, at one point sinking more than 10%. High-flyers Virgin Galactic and Tesla (NASDAQ:TSLA) each fell about 7%. Alpha Pro Tech, maker of protective clothing and masks, surged 15%.
- The Stoxx Europe 600 Index slid 3.8% on trading volumes well above average for the largest drop since 2016 as investors fled travel and luxury-goods shares. A gauge of credit risk on the region’s high-yield companies jumped.
- The yield on 10-year Treasuries approached the 2016 record low.
- South Korea’s benchmark dropped 3.9%, leading declines across Asia, though Japan’s markets were shut for a holiday.
- Spot gold approached $1,700, while Brent crude oil tumbled about 5%.
“Stock markets around the world are beginning to price in what bond markets have been telling us for weeks -- that global growth is likely to be impacted in a meaningful way due to fears of the coronavirus,” said Chris Zaccarelli, chief investment officer for Independent Advisor Alliance.
Governments and companies are curbing travel and trade in an attempt to contain a novel pathogen that can be transmitted by people without symptoms. Today’s market moves follow on last week’s surge into havens after fresh warnings by companies over the potential impact of the virus on business and global supply chains. Adding to the anxiety Monday was China announcing an easing of the quarantine of Wuhan, only to retract the statement hours later.
“Markets hate uncertainty and the coronavirus represents the most uncertain macro risk markets have faced in years,” said Alec Young, managing director of global markets research at FTSE Russell. “Investors are also acutely aware that many misjudged the economic severity of the virus early on, making them more open to entertaining worst-case scenarios now.”
Elsewhere, Italian bonds dropped on concern that the spread of the coronavirus may push the economy into a recession. The Australian dollar weakened to an 11-year low and the offshore yuan held most of last week’s decline.
These are some key events coming up:
- Earnings keep rolling in from companies including: Home Depot Inc (NYSE:HD). on Tuesday; Peugeot SA (PA:PEUP) on Wednesday; Baidu Inc (NASDAQ:BIDU)., Best Buy Co (NYSE:BBY). Inc., Occidental Petroleum Corp (NYSE:OXY). and Dell Technologies Inc. on Thursday; and London Stock Exchange Group (LON:LSE) Plc on Friday.
- The Democratic presidential debate in South Carolina is on Tuesday.
- The Bank of Korea announces its policy decision on Thursday, with risks to the outlook growing amid a surge in coronavirus cases.
- U.S. jobless claims, GDP and durable goods data are out Thursday.
- Japan industrial production, jobs, and retail sales figures are due on Friday.