Deep Blue Group LLC: U.S. Stocks Retreat with Emerging Equities on China Data
U.S.
stocks declined with emerging-market equities
while base metals drove commodities lower as an unexpected drop in Chinese
exports fueled concern that growth in the world’s second-largest economy is
moderating.
The Standard & Poor’s 500
Index (SPX) fell less than 0.1 percent from a record close, while the Dow Jones
Industrial Average lost 0.2 percent. The MSCI Emerging Markets Index was down
1.2 percent by 4:52 p.m. in New York, the steepest drop in a week. China’s CSI
300 Index fell to a five-year low. Copper posted its biggest two-day drop in 28
months, while lead and zinc also retreated. Corn prices sank the most in three
months while 10-year U.S. Treasuries rose for the first time in five days.
China’s exports dropped the most
since 2009 in February, underlining the challenge faced by the government in
achieving the 2014 growth target of 7.5 percent with lawmakers meeting in
Beijing on economic policy. Japan’s economy grew less than estimated in
the fourth quarter and the current-account deficit widened to a record in
January. In Crimea, Ukraine began army drills as Russia’s Foreign Ministry
warned of “lawlessness” in the former Soviet republic’s eastern provinces.
“We’re just waiting to see what
goes on overseas with geopolitical situations and developments,” Stephen Carl,
principal and head equity trader at New York-based Williams Capital Group LP,
said by phone. “We need to keep an eye on overseas because we’re still waiting
on a concise agreement in the Ukraine, but markets, as we saw last week,
continue to grind higher despite that.”
Market Anniversary
The S&P 500 has surged more
than 177 percent since falling to a bear-market low, reached five years ago as
of yesterday. The measure rose 1 percent last week, buoyed by improving U.S.
hiring and manufacturing data. The S&P 500’s valuation rose to almost 16
times member companies’ projected earnings, the most expensive level of the
year.
Industrial stocks paced declines
today among U.S. equities. Boeing Co. dropped 1.3 percent after a 777-200 plane
disappeared with 239 passengers and crew during a Malaysia Airline System Bhd
flight to Beijing March 8. Cliffs Natural Resources Inc. slid 3.8 percent and
Freeport-McMoRan Copper & Gold Inc. lost 2.5 percent, among the biggest
declines in the S&P 500.
Chiquita Brands International
Inc. soared 11 percent after the owner of the namesake banana label agreed to
buy Dublin-based Fyffes Plc in an all-stock transaction that values Fyffes at about $526
million.
China Trade
China’s overseas shipments
plunged 18.1 percent in February, customs data showed March 8. Economists surveyed
by Bloomberg predicted exports would rise by 7.5 percent. Premier Li Keqiang
announced this year’s economic-growth goal at the opening of the annual meeting
of the National People’s Congress in the capital last week, a target unchanged
from last year.
“China is moderating but only
very modestly,” Donna Kwok, a Hong Kong-based senior China economist at UBS AG,
said in a Bloomberg TV interview. “Ultimately you need to wait for March data
to really get a true sense of the underlying outlook. The PBOC is very
consciously guiding the recent volatility. We see the default as a risk, as a
shift in investors’ mindset.”
The Shanghai Composite Index
(SHCOMP) fell 2.9 percent, the most since June and the lowest close since Jan.
20, to pace losses in emerging-market indexes. The Hang Seng China Enterprises
Index of mainland companies listed in Hong Kong slid 1.8 percent to a one-month
low.
Commodities Slump
Malaysian Airline System fell 4
percent in Kuala Lumpur after the disappearance of its jet.
Brazil’s Ibovespa fell 1.5
percent to the lowest level since July as commodity exporters including
iron-ore producer Vale SA tumbled. China is Brazil’s largest trading partner.
The S&P GSCI Index of
commodities slid 1 percent. Copper futures dropped 1.7 percent in New York
after touched the lowest level since June. The metal has fallen 5.8 percent in
the past two sessions, the biggest two-day slump since October 2011. Lead
retreated 0.6 percent and zinc fell 0.8 percent. China is the world’s largest
consumer of industrial metals.
Gold for April delivery rose 0.2
percent to settle at $1,341.50 an ounce in New York, trading near a four-month
high. West Texas Intermediate crude oil fell 1.4 percent to settle at $101.12 a
barrel.
Corn futures for May delivery
fell 2.2 percent to close at $4.7825 a bushel on the Chicago Board of Trade,
the biggest drop for a most-active contract since Nov. 18.
Soybean Futures
The U.S. Department of
Agriculture raised its outlook for world corn inventories before the 2014
Northern Hemisphere harvests by 0.7 percent to 158.47 million metric tons,
topping analyst estimates.
Soybean futures for May delivery
fell 2.7 percent to $14.1875 a bushel, the biggest decline since Jan. 21.
Futures have climbed 9.8 percent this year.
The MSCI All-Country World Index
dropped 0.4 percent today after completing a fifth weekly gain, the longest run
of weekly advances since August.
Investors are also watching
developments in Ukraine. The country’s armed forces are testing the
combat-readiness of troops, the Defense Ministry said today on its website,
reiterating the government’s desire for a peaceful end to the standoff in
Crimea.
Russia has vowed to defend the
ethnic Russians that dominate the Black Sea region. Crimea’s local government
may use a March 16 referendum to leave Ukraine and join Russia.
European Stocks
The Stoxx Europe 600 Index fell
0.5 percent after posting its first weekly decline since January. Rio Tinto
Group, the world’s second-largest mining company, fell 1.9 percent in London
and BHP Billiton Plc lost 1.4 percent. A gauge of mining stocks in the Stoxx
600 decreased 2.2 percent for the biggest decline among 19 industry groups.
Iliad SA (ILD) surged 11 percent
after Bouygues SA (EN) said it is in talks to sell some of its mobile-phone
assets to the operator of the Free brand. Bouygues jumped 8.7 percent.
The Australian dollar depreciated
0.5 percent to 90.19 U.S. cents after advancing to 91.33 cents March 7, the
strongest level since Dec. 11.
The People’s Bank of China
weakened the yuan’s reference rate by 0.18 percent. The currency declined 0.2
percent to 6.1385 per dollar, according to China Foreign Exchange Trade System
prices.
Spanish 10-year bonds advanced,
pushing the yield six basis points lower to 3.30 percent, the least since
January 2006. The yield on similar-maturity Portuguese securities tumbled for a
fifth day to 4.45 percent.
Taper Pace
Yields on U.S. 10-year Treasuries
fell one basis point to 2.78 percent, the first decline in five days.
Economists projected U.S. payrolls would rise by 149,000 last month, with the
bigger-than-expected 175,000-worker increase in data March 7 indicating the
economy is starting to bounce back from frigid winter weather.
Federal Reserve Bank of
Philadelphia President Charles Plosser, who votes on policy this year, said
recent encouraging economic reports aren’t enough to change the pace of
reductions in the central bank’s monthly bond purchases.
“The hurdle rate for change is
pretty high in either direction,” Plosser said in a Bloomberg TV interview with
Manus Cranny in Paris, referring to the Fed’s tapering of its stimulus program.
Fed Bank of Chicago President
Charles Evans said in a speech today that he expects the U.S. economy to expand
at a rate of 2.5 percent to 3 percent in 2014. Fed Chair Janet Yellen said last
month the economy is robust enough to withstand measured cuts to monetary
stimulus.
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