Traders work during the opening bell at the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) on February 27, 2020 at Wall Street in New York City. (AFP photo)
Wall Street stocks were in free-fall again on Friday morning, suffering another steep decline as fears of an economic slowdown due to coronavirus again pummeled global markets.
There were fresh signs of the economic hit, with United Airlines announcing it was grounding more flights to Asia, and survey results suggesting a big impact on shopping malls if the virus grows in the US.
"The risk of pandemic is rising and the human toll as well as the economic cost are not knowable," said FHN Financials Chris Low. "Investor fear is understandable when earnings are in doubt."
Near 1545 GMT, the Dow Jones Industrial Average was down nearly 1,000 points, a drop of another 3.8 percent to 24,783.81. The index already had shed more than 11 percent this week heading into Fridays session.
The broad-based S&P 500 sank 3.5 percent to 2,875.33, while the tech-rich Nasdaq Composite Index plunged 2.8 percent to 8,324.14.
US stocks were poised to conclude their worst week since 2008, reflecting diminishing expectations for the global economy due to the COVID-19 epidemic in China and the spread of the illness to other countries.
The number of new coronavirus cases in the world rose to 83,853, including 2,873 deaths, across 56 countries and territories, according to data from official sources.
"It is becoming clear that this years high earnings growth expectations are unlikely to be met, so stretched valuations ... are being reined in and speculative excess is being wrung out of stock prices," said Briefing.com analyst Patrick OHare.
But some investors are also eyeing the pullback as a potential buying opportunity.
"There is significant evidence mounting there is likely to be a sharp oversold rally," said a note from Canaccord Genuity equity strategist Tony Dwyer.
"For now, just expect a sharp snapback rally that will likely be tested, which should prove a terrific buying opportunity given the fundamental backdrop of an easy Fed, historically low rates, full employment, and widely available credit."
Losses were broad-based, with Dow members Boeing, Coca-Cola, Johnson & Johnson and Walmart all off more than five percent.
United Airlines dropped 2.6 percent as it announced it was reducing flights to Tokyo, Singapore and other leading markets, and extending a grounding to airports in China.
(Source: AFP)
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