Tuesday 5th August 2008 |
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The Dow Jones industrial average fell 42.17 points, or 0.37%, to 11,284.15. The Standard & Poor's 500 Index slid 11.30 points, or 0.90%, to 1,249.01, while the Nasdaq Composite Index dropped 25.40 points, or 1.10%, to 2,285.56.
Shares of Exxon Mobil paced the decline, shedding 3.9% to $76.60. Chevron fell 1.8% to $82.80. The S&P 500 Energy Index lost 4.9%, the steepest decline since March 19, and sank to its lowest level since February 8.
Nymex crude futures fell 5.9% since the energy index reached its record on May 20 and are down 16% from the July 3 high. The so-called crack spread, or hypothetical profit margin for processing three barrels of crude into two barrels of gasoline and one of heating oil, has tumbled 39% since May 20 to $9.90, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.
Part of the reason for oil’s slide on Monday was good news: Tropical Storm Edouard wasn’t expected to cause disruption to most offshore oil facilities in the Gulf of Mexico.
Commodities Slide
Concerns about rising inventories of other commodities contributed to a sharp reversal. Copper futures hit a six-month low. Gold dropped more than 1%.
Financials also took it on the chin on Monday after HSBC Holdings Plc, Europe's largest bank by market value, said its first-half pretax loss in North America was $2.9 billion, compared with profit of $2.4 billion in the year-earlier period.
Ahead of the start of the two-day Fed policy meeting on Tuesday, traders priced in 92% odds that the Fed will hold its benchmark interest rate unchanged at 2% tomorrow. The focus will clearly be on what the Fed has to say about the economic environment.
The benchmark 10-year Treasury note's price, which moves inversely to its yield, traded down 3/32 for a yield of 3.95%, versus 3.94% late Friday.
A US government report released on Monday showed the core PCE price index for June rose 0.3%, more than economists' forecast for a rise of 0.2%. The core year-over-year rate was 2.3%, above the Fed's presumed comfort zone.
The dollar traded at $1.5576 per euro at 6am in Tokyo. It touched $1.5515 on August 1, the strongest since June 24. The yen was at 108.25 per dollar, after falling 0.5% yesterday. Japan's currency traded at 168.64 per euro, following a 0.7% drop.
The New Zealand dollar climbed from near the weakest in 10 months as technical charts signaled the more than 2% loss in the currency of the past week was excessive. The kiwi strengthened 0.4% to 72.97 US cents.
The yen fell 0.2% versus the Australian dollar on Monday and 0.7% against the New Zealand dollar as investors resumed carry trades. In carry trades, investors borrow in low-interest-rate countries to buy assets in higher- yielding nations.
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