Subscribe to Our Newsletter

Success! Now Check Your Email

To complete Subscribe, click the confirmation link in your inbox. If it doesn't arrive within 3 minutes, check your spam folder.

Ok, Thanks
Global Stocks Slump Amid Release of US Data
Image credit: Jeenah Moon/Stringer/Getty Images News via Getty Images

Global Stocks Slump Amid Release of US Data

Global stock markets tanked overnight Thursday into Friday following the release of a US manufacturing survey and jobs report — both of which fell below market estimates....

Improve the News Foundation profile image
by Improve the News Foundation
audio-thumbnail
0:00
/1861

Facts

  • Global stock markets tanked overnight Thursday into Friday following the release of a US manufacturing survey and jobs report — both of which fell below market estimates.[1][2]
  • According to a Thursday report from the Institute for Supply Management, US manufacturing — which makes up 10.3% of the economy — hit an eight-month low, with the Purchasing Managers' Index dipping to 46.8 from 48.5 in June. Any measure below 50 suggests a contraction in the market.[3][4]
  • Meanwhile, Friday's jobs report showed a slowdown in hiring in the economy and an unemployment rate of 4.3%, reportedly the highest in more than two years.[5][6]
  • End-of-day trading Thursday saw the Dow Jones Industrial Average lose over 494 points (1.2%), the S&P 500 decline 75.62 points (1.4%), and the Nasdaq dip 405.25 points (2.3%).[7]
  • Friday saw the second-largest drop in the history of Japan's Nikkei stock index, which reportedly fell over 2.2K points (5.81%) amid talk of more rate hikes in Japan.[8]
  • London's FTSE 100 was down 1.3% Friday, coming off the heels of the market's worst day in two years despite the Bank of England cutting rates for the first time since 2020.[9][10]

Sources: [1]The Telegraph, [2]Reuters (a), [3]Guardian, [4]Reuters (b), [5]CNN, [6]Bloomberg, [7]MarketWatch, [8]Kyodo News+, [9]Reuters (c) and [10]Verity.

Narratives

  • Narrative A, as provided by FT. Recent declines in the US stock market were an indication of a potential shift and the coming end of its boom. High interest rates have hurt debt-heavy companies and smaller businesses are facing declining revenues. Political and economic uncertainties do not create optimism. Most US stocks have not reflected the economy's once-exceptional economic growth for a while.
  • Narrative B, as provided by CNBC. A correction was only waiting to happen after the US market's bull run. Stock market crashes don't happen often, and the current situation doesn't suggest an imminent crash of a major kind. Investors should focus on maintaining diversification, balancing portfolios, and sticking to long-term plans, as history shows that market dips often present valuable buying opportunities.

Predictions

Improve the News Foundation profile image
by Improve the News Foundation

Get our free daily newsletter

Success! Now Check Your Email

To complete Subscribe, click the confirmation link in your inbox. If it doesn’t arrive within 3 minutes, check your spam folder.

Ok, Thanks

Read More