By Dan Strumpf 

Stocks retreated Monday as manufacturing data overseas raised fresh fears of slowing economic growth, while a disappointing Black Friday weekend weighed on U.S. retailers.

Meanwhile, shares of many oil-related stocks continued to fall, even as crude prices staged a rebound.

The Dow Jones Industrial Average fell 22 points, or 0.1%, to 17807 early afternoon. The S&P 500 index fell 10 points, or 0.5%, to 2057. The Nasdaq Composite Index shed 49 points, or 1%, to 4742.

The slide in U.S. stocks comes on the heels of losses in markets globally. European stocks extended earlier losses, with the Stoxx Europe 600 index recently declining 0.5%.

Stocks globally were weighed Monday by signs of deepening trouble for the manufacturing sector in major economies overseas. Two factory readings in China showed only modest expansion for November, while similar readings for Germany, France and Italy indicated contraction.

The weak readings spurred declines among industrial stocks in the U.S., even as a similar reading from the Institute for Supply Management indicated more robust expansion domestically. Shares of General Electric Corp. posted the biggest loss among Dow components, shedding 1.9%.

Retail stocks also posted sharp losses following disappointing Black Friday sales. Retail spending over the Thanksgiving weekend fell 11%, according to the main industry trade group, a sign that early deals are losing their allure.

The weak turnout came as a surprise to many investors, who had been betting that an improving economy and falling gasoline prices would pad retailer profits during the holiday shopping season.

"It just doesn't add up," said Jim Paulsen, chief investment strategist at Wells Capital Management. "I look at the conditions surrounding the consumer and I would argue it's the best I've seen it in this recovery."

Shares of Dow-component Wal-Mart Stores Inc. declined 0.6%. Target Corp. shares retreated 1.5%.

Apple Inc. fell 2.3% in volatile trading. Shares of the company, the stock market's largest by market capitalization, fell as much as 6.4% shortly after the open.

Elsewhere, the rout in oil producers continued despite a sharp rebound in oil prices. U.S.-based oil producers were among the biggest decliners in the sector, amid concerns that a sustained drop in oil prices will weigh on their bottom lines. The S&P Oil & Gas Exploration & Production exchange-traded fund fell 3.1% in afternoon trade.

"People are finally starting to digest lower longer-term projections for oil prices for some of the exploration and production companies," said Eric Mustin, vice president of ETF trading solutions at broker WallachBeth.

Large, integrated energy companies held up better. Many investors expect bigger firms with more diverse assets such as refining and pipelines to be cushioned from the blow of falling oil prices. Shares of Exxon Mobil Corp., for example, rose 1.7%.

The 38% slide in oil prices since June has weighed heavily on the sector, leaving many investors reluctant to call a bottom. Morris Mark, president of Mark Asset Management, which manages more than $500 million, said he sold out of all his energy investments in the third quarter because of concerns over falling oil prices.

"I think this thing hasn't shaken out yet," said Mr. Mark, adding that oil prices need to stabilize before he feels comfortable buying shares again. "I'm not inclined at this point to indiscriminately short energy companies, but I'm not yet ready to re-buy the good ones."

Benchmark U.S. oil prices on the Nymex recently gained 1.5% to $67.19 a barrel.

Gold prices jumped 3.4% to $1214.50 an ounce, reversing an earlier loss after Swiss voters rejected a proposal to increase the central bank's gold holdings.

The yield on the 10-year Treasury note rose to 2.202% as prices fell. The Russian ruble--closely linked to oil because energy accounts for a big portion of the country's exports--slumped to a fresh record low of 52.67 to the dollar, nearly 5% weaker on the day.

Later in the week, investors will shift their focus to Thursday's European Central Bank meeting, with expectations rising that officials with signal intentions to expand their asset-purchase program in a bid to jump-start the region's flagging economy.

On Friday, the U.S. Labor Department will release its monthly jobs report for November. Employers are expected to have added 228,000 jobs last month, with the unemployment rate seen coming in at 5.8%.

A downgrade of Japan's credit rating by Moody's Investors Service briefly dented the performance of the yen, which quickly rebounded from a seven-year low against the dollar to rise 0.2%. The Nikkei stock index had closed for the day before the announcement, closing up 0.8% at a seven-year high.

Write to Dan Strumpf at daniel.strumpf@wsj.com

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