New York - World stocks came off 14-month lows on Friday on expectations
policymakers would take further action to ease the eurozone debt
crisis, while commodities fell broadly on worries about a global
economic slump.
Trading was highly volatile with stocks
seesawing between gains and losses, as investors jumped at buy or sell
buttons on any indications from policymakers that suggested additional
steps to support the economy.
South African stocks ended lower
but bounced off session lows as investors snapped up downtrodden stocks
such as
ArcelorMittal SA [JSE:ACL]. However, the overall mood remained
downbeat with gold miners leading the decline as the stronger dollar
pushed the yellow metal to a more than six-week low.
The JSE Top
40 (Tradeable) [JSE:J200] blue chip index was 0.8% lower at 26 834.39
after falling more than 2% during the session. The broader All-share
[JSE:J203] index lost 0.86% to 30 0061.21.
Gold miners fell the most on the blue chip index as bullion heads to its biggest weekly fall since December 2008.
Market
talk that the European Central Bank is considering stimulus measures to
cope with the region’s sovereign debt crisis helped boost sentiment,
though investors remained cautious as speculation of a Greek default
gathered pace.
Brent crude oil slid to a six-week low near $103 a
barrel and copper tumbled to its lowest price in more than a year on
concern slowing global growth may weigh on demand.
Gold slid to a six-and-a-half week low and headed for its sharpest weekly drop since December
2008. The steep losses in the precious metal and spike in volatility
have sparked renewed debate about gold's safe haven role.
“Again,
it’s all on the news out of Europe,” said Peter Cardillo, chief market
economist at Rockwell Global Capital in New York.
“We are also at
the end of the quarter next week and large institutions are selling
whatever they can to take profits, which is one of the reasons why gold
and silver are lower.”
Markets were jittery as Greece denied
reports that one option in the debt crisis would be an orderly default
with a 50% haircut, while Deutsche Bank warned European banks’
writedowns on Greek bonds could exceed 25%.
On Wall Street,
stocks were slightly up. The Dow Jones industrial average was up 2.23
points, or 0.02%, at 10,736.06. The Standard & Poor’s 500 Index was
up 4.43 points, or 0.39%, at 1,133.99. The Nasdaq Composite Index was up
15.38 points, or 0.63%, at 2,471.05.
Global stocks as measured
by the MSCI All-Country index slipped 0.1%, having fallen as low as
274.20, the lowest level since July 2010.
The index is now in bear
market territory - defined as a fall of 20% or more from its peak -
having tumbled 23% from their 2011 high in May.
Riskier assets
had staged a tentative recovery earlier after finance ministers and
central bankers from the Group of 20 said they would take “all steps
necessary” to calm the global financial system, and said central banks
were ready to provide liquidity. But scepticism grew that the G20
pledges would be followed up with action.
“It’s the usual
platitudes... but they don’t have the political capital to do what they
need to do, which is bail out the southern European countries and
recapitalise all the banks. I think it’s a complete nonsense,” Andrew
Lim, banks analyst at Espirito Santo said.
Spot gold fell to
$1 672.54 a troy ounce, having earlier hit its lowest level since August
8. Spot silver also fell sharply, dipping to its lowest level in nearly
seven months as commodities came under heavy pressure on growth fears.
The
Reuters-Jefferies CRB index, a 19-commodity global benchmark for the
asset class, slipped 0.7%, heading for its biggest weekly fall since
May.
Copper hit $7 115.75, its lowest since August 2010, having
dropped nearly 15% over the past couple of days, Brent crude was down 43
cents at $105.05. US crude declined 59c to $79.91.
The euro rose 0.4% to $1.3521. Ten-year US Treasury notes fell 20/32, yielding 1.7856%.