Global Stock Markets
U.S. stock index futures dropped on Monday, with reports of Facebook’s
user data being misused weighing on social media stocks and investors
bracing for signals from the Federal Reserve for the future path of
interest rate hikes.
While it is near certain that the Fed will raise rates by a
quarter basis point on Wednesday, investors are more focused on whether
policymakers think economic conditions are strong enough for four hikes
this year, one more than the markets expect.
Concerns
about faster rate hikes were at the heart of the stock market’s sell
off in early February, which saw the main U.S. indexes fall into
correction territory.
While the market has pulled back since, healthy economic data has done little to ease jitters of a fourth rate hike this year.
The Fed will raise rates this week, all 104 economists
polled by Reuters during March 5-13 said, with three more hikes to
follow this year, driven by a solid labor market underpinning optimism.
That is more than the three hikes, including one in March, that economists had expected, according to an earlier poll.
By
6:47 a.m. ET, Dow e-minis 1YMc1 were down 133 points and S&P 500
e-minis ESc1 fell 15 points, while Nasdaq 100 e-minis NQc1 declined 99
points.
Shares of Facebook (FB.O)
fell 3.7 percent in premarket trading in the wake of reports that the
personal data of 50 million users were misused by a political
consultant, prompting a review by the company and expressions of concern
by several U.S. lawmakers.
Twitter (TWTR.N) dropped 1.6 percent, while Snapchat-owner Snap (SNAP.N) was off 0.7 percent.
Apple (AAPL.O)
slipped more than 1 percent after brokerage Nomura Instinet said its
checks showed there was little improvement in demand for iPhones this
year and lowered estimate for the smartphone’s sales.
The
main U.S. indexes posted losses last week due to fears that President
Donald Trump’s tariff plans would spark retaliation from its trading
partners, especially China, and on political uncertainties after
high-profile White House exits.
The tariff
issues are likely to dominate a gathering of finance leaders at a
two-day meeting of the Group of 20 finance ministers this week.
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