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Stocks sink with bond yield and dollar on economic crisis worries

International equities suffered heavy losses on Monday as Wall Street joined a worldwide stock thrashing that began in Japan while the dollar tumbled against the yen and U.S. Treasury yields dropped on concerns about an economic crisis in the United States.

Oil costs likewise fell in an unstable session on Monday, hit by recession worries, but decreases were buffered by concerns that escalating Middle East dispute might hit unrefined products.

CBOE's volatility index, known as Wall Street's worry gauge, pared gains and was last up 12.5 points at 35.98 after leaping 42 points earlier to 65.73, its highest level since March 2020, during the international COVID-19 pandemic.

Earlier Japan's benchmark Nikkei average had actually closed down 12.40% for its largest one-day fall because October 1987.

A weaker than anticipated U.S. payrolls report for July had began a Wall Street sell-off on Friday when investor bets for a Federal Reserve September rate cut had actually doubled to 50 basis points. The weak report on Friday had followed frustrating profits updates from some megacap technology business.

It's truly a confluence of things, said Eric Wallerstein, chief market strategist at Yardeni Research in Los Angeles.

He said whatever from unwinding of yen-funded trades and the escalation of Middle East stress to the frustrating U.S. profits updates and the weak U.S. jobs report, contributed in the sell-off.

Nevertheless U.S. stocks pared losses rather after the Institute for Supply Management (ISM) stated on Monday that services sector activity rebounded from a four-year low in July with increasing orders and work, relieving recession fears.

Its non-manufacturing buying managers (PMI) index rose to 51.4 from 48.8 in June, ahead of economist expectations for 51.0. A PMI reading above 50 suggests growth in services, which accounts for more than two-thirds of the U.S. economy.

On Wall Street, the Dow Jones Industrial Average was down 1,090.72 points, or 2.74% at 38,646.54 at 10:40 a.m. (1440. GMT). The S&P 500 lost 165.63 points, or 3.10%, to. 5,180.93 and the Nasdaq Composite lost 590.17 points, or. 3.52%, to 16,185.99.

MSCI's gauge of stocks around the world fell. 26.19 points, or 3.33%, to 761.02 after earlier hitting a low of. 756. Europe's STOXX 600 index was down 2.29%.

In U.S. Treasuries, yields dropped to more than 1 year. lows and a closely-watched part of the Treasury yield curve. turned favorable for the very first time in 2 years on increasing. concerns that the U.S economy may be heading into an economic crisis.

The yield on benchmark U.S. 10-year notes fell. 2.3 basis points considering that late Friday to 3.773%, while the 30-year. bond yield fell 3.4 basis points to 4.0772%.

The 2-year note yield, which usually relocates. step with interest rate expectations, increased 0.9 basis indicate. 3.8811%.

In currencies, the Japanese yen surged to seven-month highs. versus the dollar as traders aggressively unwound carry trades. translating last week's U.S. financial information as raising the. potential customers for a U.S. economic crisis and steeper Fed rate cuts.

The dollar index, which measures its performance. against a basket of currencies including the yen and the euro,. fell 0.53% to 102.60. The euro was up 0.5% at $1.0962.

Versus the Japanese yen, the dollar compromised 2.12%. to 143.44.

In energy markets, U.S. crude lost 0.71% to $73 a. barrel and Brent was up to $76.39 per barrel, down 0.55%. on the day.

In rare-earth elements, gold appeared to lose some of its safe. haven appeal. Area gold lost 1.98% to $2,394.99 an ounce. U.S. gold futures fell 1.51% to $2,389.00 an ounce.

(source: Reuters)