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US markets continued to decline on Monday, with the tech-heavy Nasdaq hitting its lowest point in two years led by a sharp sell-off in chip stocks, amid a policy change by President Biden to limit US companies from selling advanced semiconductor and other equipment to China. Tech stocks have also been hit hard lately from their relatively high valuations and the rising cost of borrowings. The Dow Jones industrials index closed just 0.05% lower, the S&P500 lost 0.75% and the Nasdaq fell 1.04%. Stocks extended on last week’s sell-off after JP Morgan warned that the US would likely slump into a recession in 2023 and that it may not just be a mild economic contraction as some economists have projected.
Over in Europe, the global sell-off continued amid growing concerns over economic growth and tightening monetary policy ahead of key inflation data due out next week. Investors are also keeping a close eye on escalations in tension between Russia and Ukraine as the war in the region has intensified in recent days. Germany’s DAX closed Monday’s session flat, the French CAC lost 0.45% and, in the UK, the FTSE100 also ended the day down 0.45%.
On the commodities front, the price of most commodities across the board are down, with brent crude oil trading 2.14% lower at US$95.86 per barrel, natural gas is down 3.5% to US$6.5 per Million British Thermal Units, coal is down 3.75% to US$385 per ton, gold is down 1.54% at US$1668.14 per ounce and iron ore is trading flat at US$98 per ton.
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