Markets on Wall Street and around the world were in a mini-panic on Monday.
Worried about a slowing United States economy, investors sent the market in Japan to its worst day in decades and have sliced billions in market value off some of the world’s biggest technology companies. They’ve turned a relatively calm year in markets on its head.
For most of the year, investors worldwide drove stock markets higher, convinced that central banks were successfully, if haltingly, getting inflation under control, and buoyed by a healthy US economy and the promise of artificial intelligence.
By June, Nvidia, the leader in AI chipmaking, had joined Apple and Microsoft as US$3-trillion companies. In mid-July, the S&P 500, Nasdaq composite and Japan’s Nikkei 225 had risen to all-time highs. Investors believed that the high interest rates put in place by the US Federal Reserve were taming inflation without causing a sharp slowdown in the US economy, the world’s largest.
That confidence has taken a hit the past few days. Investors are listening to warnings that Nvidia and other Big Tech stocks have gotten too expensive, and that massive spending on artificial intelligence might not turn into profits for a while.
While technology stocks have been the biggest winners in the market’s runup this year, members of the highly influential group of stocks known as the ‘Magnificent Seven’ underwhelmed investors in their latest earnings reports.
Apple fell five per cent Monday after Warren Buffett’s Berkshire Hathaway disclosed that it had slashed its ownership stake in the iPhone maker
Sparked worries
Weak readings on the job market, manufacturing and construction last week sparked worries about a US recession and criticism that the Fed waited too long to cut rates. Meanwhile, the Bank of Japan has started raising rates, causing turmoil in Japan’s markets.
On Friday, the Nasdaq composite went into a correction, which is a 10 per cent decline from its most recent high. On Monday, the Nikkei plunged more than 12 per cent, its worst drop since 1987. By midday in the US, the S&P 500 was down 2.2 per cent and, the Dow Jones Industrial Average had dropped 2 per cent. Oil and other commodities prices fell because of the economic worries.
Traders in the US are betting the Federal Reserve will have to cut rates by half a percentage point in September instead of the usual quarter point. Some are calling for an emergency rate cut. However, there are opposing voices saying the sell-off is actually a good thing because stock prices had risen too high.
Though the Fed hasn’t raised its benchmark rate in a year, interest rates remain at more than two-decade highs after the US central bank raised them 11 times, beginning in 2022, in an effort to get inflation down to its 2.0 per cent target. Part of the Fed’s goal was to cool a red-hot labour market that rebounded after the pandemic recession with the rest of the US economy.
Investors thought the Fed and other central banks were on track, even though inflation remained somewhat above their targets. The European Central Bank and the Bank of England cut once, and the Fed has signalled it was prepared to start cutting rates in September.
There had been some pockets of weakness in the US economy, particularly spending by lower-income Americans, but overall the economy still grew at a rate of 2.8 per cent in the second quarter. Then came last week’s economic reports.
On Friday, the government’s monthly report on the job market showed a significant slowdown in hiring by US employers. Worries that the Fed may have kept the brakes on the economy too long spread through the markets. Reports on manufacturing and construction were also weak.
The Nikkei suffered its worst two-day decline ever, dropping 18.2 per cent in the last two trading sessions. The wave of selling hit all sorts of companies, including Toyota, Honda and computer chipmaker Tokyo Electron.
Share prices have fallen in Tokyo since the Bank of Japan raised its benchmark interest rate last Wednesday.
Analysts said one factor contributing to the falling share prices was carry trades. That’s when investors borrow money from a country with low interest rates and a relatively weak currency, like Japan, and invest those funds in places that will yield a high return. But the higher interest rates, plus a stronger Japanese yen, could force investors to selling stocks to repay those loans.
AP