Sorry, Were Closed

Stocks dropped after the coronavirus spread

Image source:

What's going on?

Investors ditched their stocks on Monday, as the deadly coronavirus continued to disrupt the Chinese and global economy.

What does this mean?

Chinese authorities confirmed on Monday that the virus has killed 80 people and infected almost 3,000 more. And they warned its spread could accelerate still, what with the millions of people traveling for Lunar New Year celebrations trips that’ve also taken the virus abroad.

To keep the situation from getting worse, the government is extending the New Year holiday. Many firms wont reopen until the end of next week, while shops, restaurants, and theme parks yes, even Disneyland have closed their doors.

Why should I care?

For markets: Bad for business.
Its hard to know how much financial harm the outbreak could do, but the 2003 SARS epidemic ended up costing the global economy about $50 billion. China-reliant luxury goods companies are particularly at risk, which might be why Burberry and Hermss shares slipped 5% on Monday. Restaurants could be hit hard too, says investment bank Goldman Sachs as could manufacturers like Honda and Groupe PSA (maker of Peugeot cars). Theyve had to suspend operations, which will impact their supply chain even when things get back to normal. Stocks across multiple industries could suffer as a result,though Goldman points out that after past epidemics, shares rebounded within four months (tweet this).

The bigger picture: Volatile reaction.
Investors afraid the virus might impact Chinas economic growth have started to panic. A measure of the US stock markets volatility shot up almost 30% on Monday, as investors sold off their stocks. The virus isnt entirely responsible: tensions between America and Iran also rose over the weekend after an attack on the US embassy in Iraq. That would normally lead to a spike in oil prices, but seeing as the virus is reducing travel and therefore oil demand oil producers are instead trying to keep the price from falling.

Originally posted as part of the Finimize daily email.

The top 2 financial news stories in 3 minutes. Join over one million Finimizers

Read next

Throwing Shade

Sign up to Finimize

Get the two most important global financial news stories each day. Sent at midnight UK time.

Get started with one email a day

The top financial news stories in 3 minutes.