By Anora Mahmudova, MarketWatch
NEW YORK (MarketWatch) -- The U.S. stock market finished Monday
sharply lower amid a global push into safe havens as political
tensions in Ukraine and Russia over the Crimean peninsula
escalated.
News of an armed invasion over the weekend overshadowed several
better-than-expected economic reports in the U.S. The losses in the
blue-chips and large-caps were the worst in a month when investors
were worried about China and Turkey.
The S&P 500 index (SPX) finished the day 14.02 points, or
0.8%, lower at 1,845.43, after closing at record on Friday.
The Dow Jones Industrial Average (DJI) was down as much as 250
points at session lows, but ended the day 153.68 points, or 0.9%,
lower at 16,168.03.
The Nasdaq Composite (RIXF) lost 30.82 points, or 0.7%, to
4,277.30.
As escalating military tensions in Ukraine dominated news on
Monday, better-than-expected economic reports did little to provide
relief from broad-based selling.
"The most surprising thing is how little anyone can do about
Russia's behavior in Crimea," said John Rutlege, chief investment
strategist at Safanad.
"This is the time to tighten the risk and stay away from
emerging markets," he added.
Nicholas Colas, chief market strategist at ConvergEx Group, a
global brokerage company based in New York described jittery
markets as being back to 'old normal', with a lot more volatility
than we grew accustomed to during the past year.
The implied volatility on the S&P 500 as measured by the
CBOE Vix index jumped 14% to 16, last seen on Feb. 3, when markets
sold off on fears over Turkey and China.
In economic news, consumers boosted spending in January, but a
good chunk of the money went to pay higher utility bills during an
unusually cold winter, according to government data released
Monday.
The final reading of Markit's U.S. purchasing managers index
accelerated in February, the economic information firm said Monday.
The final reading for February was the highest level in almost four
years. The report shows that output and new business picked up
sharply.
U.S. manufacturers expanded at a faster pace in February and
business would have been even better if not for severe winter
weather, according to a survey of executives.
Lorillard, Inc (LO) share jumped 9.3% on news reports in the
Financial Times that Reynolds is exploring a possible deal with its
smaller rival. Shares in Reynolds (RAI) rallied 4.8%.
Newmont Mining Corp. (NEM) shares gained 1.6% amid reports of
Indonesia's possible plan to reduce its export tax on mineral
concentrates for some mining companies that produce metal from the
ore in the country.
Darden Restaurants (DRI) shares fell 5.4% after the restaurant
chain on Monday offered downbeat guidance for its fiscal third
quarter, citing the impact of severe winter weather on sales and
costs.
Carnival Corp. (CCL) shares dropped 2.9%. The stock is pressured
by reports that Richard Branson's Virgin Group is looking to
expanding in the cruise industry, according to analyst Harry Curtis
at Nomura Securities.
Shares in Ford Motor Co (F) fell 1.2%, while shares in General
Motors (GM.XX) were mostly unchanged after the release of February
auto sales reports.
General Motors' February sales slid 1% from a year earlier in
February and Ford's dropped 6%, but Chrysler's rose 11% during a
month when cold weather likely kept sales below expectations.
European stocks suffered sharp losses, with the main Stoxx
Europe 600 index tumbling 2.3%. Most Asia markets fell, outside of
the Shanghai Composite Index , which gained nearly 0.9%.
The flight to safety pushed the yield on the 10-year U.S.
Treasury (10_YEAR) lower by 5.5 basis points, to 2.6%. April gold
(GCJ4) jumped more than 2% to settle at above $1,350 an ounce, a
level not seen since October for a front-running contract,
according to FactSet Research. Crude oil for April delivery (CLJ4)
jumped more than 2% to $104.67 a barrel, levels not seen since
September, according to FactSet Research.
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