Coronavirus headwinds are set to hammer stocks
The U.S. stock market is pacing for substantial losses this morning as the coronavirus outbreak worsens. With the death toll from the virus rising to more than 80 in China and a fifth confirmed case in the U.S., traders are taking a risk-off approach this morning, sending Dow Jones Industrial Average (DJI) futures more than 400 points below fair value. Similar losses are piling up for the S&P 500 Index (SPX) and Nasdaq-100 Index (NDX), with travel stocks in particular posting outsized pre-market moves. This comes after the Dow posted its worst week in months.
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Call traders are eyeing this software stock's earnings report. The Chinese travel stock that keeps moving lower. Plus, homebuilder shares strong results; ABBV outperforms; and BABA paces China stock sell-off.
Most markets in Asia remained closed for the Lunar New Year, but those that were open finished sharply lower. That includes Japan's Nikkei, which closed down 2%, with airline and travel stocks taking on steep losses as the coronavirus continues to spread rapidly. The Japanese yen - widely considered a safe-haven currency - surged against the dollar today as well.
Over in Europe, stocks are significantly lower amid the intensifying coronavirus outbreak. London's FTSE 100 is down 2.1%, with Tullow Oil a notable loser. The French CAC 40 and German DAX are both off by 2.2%, dragged lower by airliners Air France and Lufthansa.