Stock markets in Europe opened lower on Monday after their Asian peers sank amid new coronavirus concerns. The negative sentiment comes after Wall Street suffered its worst weekly performance in nearly three months.
Japan’s benchmark Nikkei shed over three percent, making it one of the worst performers in Asia as the week began. South Korea’s Kospi fell even lower, losing more than four percent.
Chinese stocks were mostly down, with the Shanghai Composite shedding around one percent, while Hong Kong’s Hang Seng index declined around two percent.
Also on rt.com IMF warns most countries are doing worse than projected & says it will likely further lower its forecastElsewhere in the Asia-Pacific, both S&P/ASX 200 in Australia and India’s Mumbai Sensex shed around two percent.
European investors also weighed the potential resurgence of the deadly virus. Stocks in London, Frankfurt and Paris joined the global sell-off, with the British FTSE 100, Germany’s DAX and France’s CAC 40 opening more than two percent lower.
Wall Street is set to extend last week’s sharp losses, when the Dow Jones Industrial Average recorded a weekly loss of 5.55 percent, making for the worst weekly results since March. Futures on the Dow Jones fell over 900 points on Monday, while other key indices’ futures – S&P 500 and Nasdaq 100 – also pointed to opening declines.
Also on rt.com Stock market will hit new highs if Trump wins 2020 presidential election, chief strategist tells Boom BustMarket turbulence comes as the number of coronavirus infections globally continues to rise. In a troubling development, China has reported dozens of new cases, including 36 in Beijing, making it the highest daily figure in the country since April. The new outbreak in the Chinese capital was linked to the Xinfadi food market, which was shut down on Saturday, along with several other markets in the area.
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