Market Updates

China Recovers, Japan Dips

Ivaylo
28 Feb, 2001
New York City

    The Shanghai Composite Index rebounded on Wednesday, supported by continued interest from individual investors, comments from government officials and signs that the largest decline in a decade was not indicative of the underlying health of Chinese economy. The drop in US markets overnight weighed on market sentiment in the rest of Asia as all markets ended in negative territory. Only Taiwan bucked the trend and gained.

[R]9:00AM Asia closes lower on Wednesday on weak performance from US market.[/R]
Asian markets closed lower on Wednesday. The Shanghai Composite Index rebounded 3.9%, adding 109.28 points to finish at 2,881.07 on Wednesday. On Tuesday, the Shanghai index plunged 8.8%. The drop followed fears that government would undertake measures to slow the fast-moving index. Premier Wen Jiabao tried to steady investor sentiment by issuing a comment through state press late Wednesday in order to allay the fears.

Other markets around the region plunged on the pooe performance by US markets overnight. Japanese Nikkei 225 stock index lost 515.80 points, or 2.9%, to 17,604.12. Australian stocks settled down 2.7% after shedding 3.5%, while Singapore Straits Times Index was off 3% to 3,136.58 points, after sagging 5.6% earlier. Philippine stocks nosedived 7.9%, their worst drop since 1997, at the height of the Asian financial crisis. Many Asian markets were in correction mode after their recent spectacular performance. Benchmark indexes in China, Australia and Singapore had all hit records in February. Before the plunge this week, Malaysian stocks had advanced 17% this year, while Philippine shares had climbed about 12%.

[R]6:30AM European markets declined following global sell-off.[/R]
European markets were lower on Wednesday. By mid morning, Frankfurt Xetra Dax fell 1.6% to 6,712.13, the CAC 40 in Paris shed 1.7 % to 5,494.49 and London’s FTSE 100 slid 1.6% to 6,187.9. Of the emerging markets, Turkish Istanbul share index fell more than 3%, while Russian RTS index was off 2.7%.

Advancers

There were no prominent advancers.

Decliners

Rodamco Europe, the Dutch shopping centre owner, fell 4.3%. The company earlier in the week reported quarterly earnings that missed market expectations. Also in the sector, French Unibail fell 3.5 % and Spanish Metrovacesa shed 2.1%.

Stocks connected with emerging markets were lower and Raiffeisen International, the Austrian bank which owns assets across Russia and eastern Europe, fell 3.2%. EFG Eurobank, which has exposure through its Turkish assets, fell 3.5%. Swiss bank Julius Baer, the best performing stock on the SMI index this year, fell 3.8%. Eon, the German utility fell 4.2% after further doubts were cast on its 41billion euros bid to takeover Spanish Endesa.

Munich Re, the German reinsurer, fell 1.4% after it reported record full-year earnings of 3.5 billion euros, but added that it expected a general tendency towards a somewhat softer market.

Oil and gold

Crude oil for April delivery shed $1.54, or 2.5%, to $59.92 a barrel in after-hours electronic trading on the New York Mercantile Exchange, the biggest intraday drop since Feb. 20. It traded at $60.96 in early trade in London.

Brent crude for April settlement lost as much as $1.12, or 1.8%, to $60.24 a barrel on the ICE Futures exchange and traded at $61.14 a barrel in early trade in London.

Gold rose as investors sought a haven following a rout in global equities sparked by the biggest decline in Chinese share prices in a decade and amid tension over Iranian nuclear research. Gold for immediate delivery rose as much as $9.30, or 1.4%, to $672.65 an ounce and traded at $671.95 in early trade in London.

Currenciers

The euro was lower against the U.S. dollar Wednesday as fears of a worldwide slump in markets weighed on the common currency. The euro bought $1.3188, compared with the $1.3243 it bought in New York late Tuesday. The British pound fell to $1.9552 from $1.9632 the day before. The dollar rose to 118.58 Japanese yen from 118.22 yen.

[R]5:00AM Gold declines as Chinese stock market plunges on Tuesday.[/R]
Gold futures for April delivery closed down $2.60 at $687.20 an ounce, while May silver managed to almost recover from a decline to $14.42 an ounce to end at $14.69, down 14.2 cents. May copper lost 1.6%, or 4.5 cents, to close at $2.825 a pound. June palladium fell by $4.90 to close at $356.60 an ounce but April platinum closed $11.30 higher at $1,253.30 an ounce.

Crude oil futures closed at two-month highs. The front-month April crude contract settled up 7 cents at $61.44 a barrel, the highest for a front-month contract since Dec. 22. Front month March gasoline added 3.84 cents to end at $1.8161 a gallon. March heating oil settled up 2.31 cents at $1.7793 a gallon and March natural gas lost 17 cents to finish at $7.533 a million British thermal units.

On the New York Board of Trade, Arabica coffee futures closed weaker but industry buyers curbed a speculative-led slide to three-day lows. March closed down 0.55 cent at $1.1730 a pound, with May off 0.60 cent at $1.1830. Futures on raw sugar in foreign ports for March reached a two-month high, as they settled up 0.43 cent at 11.45 cents a pound, with May up 0.11 cent at 10.80 cents.

Annual Returns

Company Ticker 2023 2022 2021 2020 2019 2018 2017 2016 2015 2014 2013 2012 2011 2010 2009 2008

Earnings

Company Ticker 2023 2022 2021 2020 2019 2018 2017 2016 2015 2014 2013 2012 2011 2010 2009 2008