S&P 500 futures tumble with global stocks in China-fueled rout

U.S. stock-index futures sank, earlier falling the most since September, amid a China-led rout that continued to spread to equities around the globe.

Contracts on the Standard & Poor’s 500 Index slid 2 percent to 1,947.25 at 9:08 a.m. in New York, trimming a drop of as much as 2.8 percent. Dow Jones Industrial Average contracts lost 329 points, or 2 percent, to 16,509 after the underlying index yesterday capped its worst three-day start to a year since 2008.

Equity markets worldwide tumbled after Chinese stock exchanges closed less than a half hour after opening, as a more than 7 percent plunge triggered a market-wide halt for the second time this week. European stocks tumbled as much as 3.6 percent.

“I hope we do not see the same like in August,” said Christian Zogg, head of equity and fixed income at LLB Asset Management in Vaduz, Liechtenstein. “The drop in the S&P futures would be quite a lot for the U.S. market in one day. Other markets are looking at that figure and moving in the same direction, with the same speed.”

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A flight from risky assets in the first week of the new year has wiped more than $2.5 trillion from global equities, made worse by China’s central bank cutting its yuan reference rate for an eighth straight day. China’s tolerance for a weaker yuan is being seen as evidence policy makers are struggling to revive an economy that’s the world’s biggest consumer of energy, metals and grains.

The move revived the angst that sent financial markets into turmoil last summer, driving U.S. stocks to three-month lows yesterday in a selloff led by commodity producers. Comments by billionaire George Soros exacerbated market jitters after he told an economic forum in Sri Lanka today that global markets are facing a crisis and investors need to be very cautious.

A weaker yuan would support China’s flagging export sector, but it also boosts risks for the nation’s foreign-currency borrowers, and heightens speculation that the slowdown in Asia’s biggest economy is deeper than official data suggest.

The rout is spreading to metals prices, hurting premarket trading in Freeport-McMoRan Inc. and Alcoa Inc., which fell at least 3.5 percent. West Texas Intermediate crude futures slumped 3 percent, below $33 a barrel, sending Chevron Corp. down 2.1 percent after the shares slid 4 percent Wednesday, the steepest since August. Apple Inc., Facebook Inc. and Citigroup Inc. lost more than 1.8 percent.

While investors cope with the turbulence sparked by China, another source of consternation is looming as the corporate earnings season for 2015’s final quarter soon begins. Alcoa Inc., JPMorgan Chase & Co. and Intel Corp. are scheduled to report results next week. Analysts forecast profits for companies in the S&P 500 fell 6.1 percent last quarter.

“The market has been in denial,” said Michael Ingram, a market strategist at BGC Partners in London. “The broader issue is that growth dynamics are weak pretty much everywhere. Make no mistake, what happens in China this year will shape the market dynamic for the next five.”

Federal Reserve Bank of Richmond President Jeffrey Lacker reiterated in a speech this morning that the pace of interest- rate increases is expected to be gradual, but dependent on the economic outlook. He also expressed confidence inflation will move back to the Fed’s 2 percent goal “over the near term.” Chicago Fed President Charles Evans also due to deliver remarks on the outlook this afternoon.

A report today showed fewer Americans filed applications for unemployment benefits last week, a sign the U.S. labor market remained robust entering 2016. The government’s December jobs report is due tomorrow, with economists surveyed by Bloomberg forecasting a 200,000 gain and the unemployment rate holding at 5 percent.

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