NEW YORK – Oil prices tumbled yesterday on weak manufacturing data from China, while global growth worries also weighed on US equities even as Asian and European bourses advanced.
Leading oil futures contracts fell more than 3% after Chinese factory activity weakened in July to its lowest level since the start of the pandemic.
While the 50.4 figure was worse than many forecasts, it was still above the 50-point mark that separates growth from contraction.
China has also been confronted with a worsening resurgence of Covid-19.
China’s outbreak now spans 14 provinces, the most widespread in several months, challenging the country’s early success in tackling the disease after it was first detected in the city of Wuhan in late 2019.
“A slowdown in the world’s second-largest economy would be a big blow for the region at a time when numerous countries are struggling to get to grips with the latest Covid-19 wave,” said Craig Erlam, an analyst at Oanda.
China has put more than one million people under lockdown and reinstituted mass testing campaigns.
Still, European and Asian equity markets pushed higher, but a rally on Wall Street petered out.
The yield on the 10-year US Treasury note, a proxy for medium-term growth expectations, sank below 1.2% in a sign of jitters over the economy’s recovery.
The drop followed last week’s US data that showed strong second-quarter growth, but at a level below analyst’s expectations.
Data released yesterday from the Institute for Supply Management also showed manufacturing industry growth below market expectations due to ongoing supply shortages and bottlenecks.
“Investors are turning cautious, fearing growth could be slowing,” said Peter Cardillo of Spartan Capital.
DataTrek Research pointed to Google search data that showed an uptick in searches about Covid-19 as the Delta variant has spread, as well as Apple Mobility data that showed people walking and driving less.
Those figures are “a worrisome combination”, amounting to a “classic recipe for a growth scare,” DataTrek said in a note.
On the corporate front, shares in Sydney-listed Afterpay surged by nearly 19% after US digital payments platform Square, led by Twitter founder Jack Dorsey, said it would purchase the buy-now, pay-later company for US$29 billion (RM122.52 billion).
Square surged 10.2%. – AFP, August 3, 2021