The Wall Street Journal - 22.02.2020 - 23.02.2020

(Axel Boer) #1

THE WALL STREET JOURNAL. ** Saturday/Sunday, February 22 - 23, 2020 |B13


stocks and haven investments
this year underscore the jitters
that have rattled markets. Typ-
ically, investors ditch haven as-
sets like gold and government
bonds as stocks crest to fresh
highs. This year, they have
bought risky and safe assets
alike as they have navigated a
murky economic outlook.
“It’s absolutely unusual
from a longer-term historical
perspective,” said Katrina
Lamb, head of investment
strategy and research at MV
Financial.
“There’s a concern in terms

of wondering if we may be
heading into a stretch of trou-
ble after this very long, gentle,
benign rally.”
Cracks in the growth story
dented some of investors’ con-
fidence this week.Appleon
Monday became the first ma-
jor U.S. company to say that it
won’t meet its revenue projec-
tions for the current quarter
because of the coronavirus,
warning the epidemic limited
iPhone production and
crimped demand for its prod-
ucts in China. Apple shares
dropped 3.7% this week.

demand goes beyond OPEC.
The International Energy
Agency warned Feb. 13 that
demand for oil is likely to be
435,000 barrels a day less in
the current quarter compared
with a year ago. Vitol Group,
the world’s largest indepen-
dent oil trader, cut its forecast
demand for the quarter to 98.3
million barrels a day, down 2.2
million barrels a day from its
previous forecast for the pe-

has compared the virus’s ef-
fect on oil demand to a fire
that needs to be put out, ac-
cording to a person familiar
with the matter. In one option
under consideration, Saudi
Arabia and its two Persian
Gulf neighbors would reduce
production without coordinat-
ing with a group of 10 non-
OPEC nations led by Russia.
The divergence of opinion
over coronavirus’s effect on oil

ter said. Russian delegates say
business activity in China is
recovering and the impact of
the virus on oil demand is lim-
ited, the people said.
Saudi exports to China have
remained stable since the crisis
began, though sales from other
OPEC members have shown
weakness, according to com-
modities-data provider Kpler.
Saudi energy minister
Prince Abdulaziz bin Salman

where it aims to reach a con-
sensus on how much crude to
deliver to an already oversup-
plied market.
At an emergency meeting
earlier in February, Russia re-
jected a Saudi push to deepen
the alliance’s existing oil pro-
duction curbs by 600,000 bar-
relsaday.
Russian officials still don’t
see a need for reductions, the
people familiar with the mat-

ing the challenge many inves-
tors face in trying to time the
market.
In one sign of the tug-of-
war across financial markets,
the two best-performing sec-
tors in the S&P 500 this year
have been technology and util-
ities. That’s unusual because
the two groups often move in
opposite directions—tech
stocks tend to rally when in-
vestors feel confident taking
on riskier investments, while
utilities tend to advance when
investors grow more uneasy
about the economic outlook.
Markets have swung in re-
cent weeks based on the num-
ber of new coronavirus cases
that have emerged. Unlike cor-
porate earnings or cut-and-
dried economic data, the social
and commercial implications of
the virus can be tough to pin-
point, leaving investors uneasy
about the depth and length of
its ramifications.
Fears that the domestic
economy would tip into a re-
cession had ebbed earlier this
year as the U.S. and China ap-
peared to reach a trade truce.
Since then, lackluster eco-
nomic data and the uncertainty
about the impact of the virus
have clouded the outlook for
growth, sending investors into
assets they think will perform
well in times of uncertainty.
The concurrent gains in

Procter & Gamblefollowed
Thursday, saying the virus will
have a material impact on its
sales and earnings for the cur-
rent quarter because of
weaker store traffic in China
and disruptions to its supply
chain. Its shares ended the
week 0.4% higher.
Lackluster economic data
added to those concerns. IHS
Markit’s flash reading for an
economic indicator measuring
manufacturing and services
business activity fell Friday to
its lowest level in more than
six years. Additionally, new
data showed that sales of pre-
viously owned U.S. homes
sputtered in January. Existing-
home sales decreased 1.3% in
January from December.
The manufacturing data
drove government-bond yields
sharply lower. The yield on the
10-year Treasury note also
traded below the three-month
yield this week as investors
sought longer-dated govern-
ment bonds as a safe haven
asset. Gold prices rose 3.9%
this week.
The intraday yield of the
benchmark 30-year bond fell
to a record of 1.889%, well be-
low the previous all-time low
of 1.905% in late August, ac-
cording to data from
Tradeweb. The bond yield
later rebounded to close at
1.917%, still down from 1.971%

on Thursday.
“The bond market was
clearly the expression of the
fear,” said Alicia Levine, chief
strategist at BNY Mellon In-
vestment Management. “Peo-
ple are piling into fixed in-
come because of the concerns
out there.”
The anxiety in the bond and
precious-metals markets could
eventually trickle into stocks.
Goldman Sachs Group Inc. an-
alysts warned in a research
note this week that “the risks
of a correction are high,” re-
ferring to the chance of a pull-
back of 10% or more among
stock indexes. The analysts
also cautioned that equity in-
vestors may be too upbeat
about corporations’ ability to
withstand the epidemic.
Other investors are more
optimistic and say they still
expect bigger gains ahead for
stocks, particularly among
shares of tech companies,
which have outperformed the
broader market for much of
the bull market.
“People are desperately
looking for organic growth,”
said Dev Kantesaria, founder of
Valley Forge Capital Manage-
ment, who says he’s optimistic
about the prospects for soft-
ware companies. “High-growth
stocks should prosper.”
—Matt Wirz
contributed to this article.

points, or 1.1%, Friday to
3337.75, while the Dow Jones
Industrial Average shed 227.57
points, or 0.8%, to 28992.41.
The technology-laden Nasdaq
Composite fell
174.37 points, or
1.8%, to 9576.59.
All three indexes
suffered declines of at least
1.2% for the week but have
posted double-digit gains over
the past year and set repeated
highs in 2020.
Even now in the midst of
the epidemic, few economists
are calling for an imminent re-
cession, and many investors
are wary of calling it quits on
a decadelong bull run in
stocks. The Federal Reserve’s
three interest-rate cuts last
year have also boosted opti-
mism that the central bank
can help buoy the current ex-
pansion. Recession fears came
to the forefront last year, only
to subside shortly after, help-
ing the S&P 500 finish its best
year since 2013 and highlight-


Continued from page B1


Stocks Fall


On Virus


Worries


MARKETS NEWS


strategies. The plan attracted
opposition from a variety of
critics who said it would harm
investors and unfairly discrim-
inate against some market
participants in favor of others.
Asset managers BlackRock
Inc. and T. Rowe Price Group
Inc., electronic trading giant
Citadel Securities and the
SEC’s Office of the Investor
Advocate, among others, urged
the commission to reject the
plan.
“We believe that it will in-
troduce needless complexity
and have a detrimental effect
on U.S. equity markets,” Black-
Rock told the SEC in a letter in
August.
The SEC first gave the
green light to speed bumps on

U.S. exchanges in 2016 when it
allowed IEX Group Inc.—the
startup market operator fea-
tured in Michael Lewis’s book
“Flash Boys: A Wall Street Re-
volt”—to become a full-
fledged stock exchange.
In June, Cboe proposed to
add a speed bump to EDGA,
the smallest of the four equi-
ties exchanges it runs. The
Wall Street Journal first re-
ported that Cboe was consid-
ering introducing the speed
bump in 2018.
Cboe’s proposed speed
bump would have been differ-
ent from IEX’s. IEX imposes a
brief delay on all orders to
buy or sell shares. But Cboe’s

delay would have applied
only to orders that come to
EDGA seeking to be immedi-
ately executed. Incoming or-
ders that are posted on EDGA
so they can wait for a buyer
or a seller wouldn’t have
been subject to the delay.
Cancel messages, in which a
trader withdraws an order
that has already been posted,
also wouldn’t have been sub-
ject to the delay.
Such a design was intended
to benefit market makers—
firms that quote prices for
stocks—by giving them a split-
second pause to cancel or ad-
just their quotes in response
to market-moving information.
Currently, market makers’
quotes are often picked off by
speedy trading firms that zip
in and execute against the
slightly out-of-date quotes, a
strategy known as “latency ar-
bitrage.”
Cboe’s proposal won sup-
port from some electronic
trading firms and academics,
who argued that it would re-
duce latency arbitrage.
Critics, however, said the
Cboe speed bump would un-
fairly benefit market makers
at the expense of other firms.
They argued that if a market
maker expected the price of a
stock to change, it could can-
cel its quotes just as another
firm—for instance, a pension
fund or other large investor—
was trying to access the
quotes. In that scenario, the
pension fund would be subject
to Cboe’s four-millisecond de-
lay while the market maker
wouldn’t be, allowing the mar-
ket maker to yank its quote
and block the fund from exe-
cuting its order.
An SEC spokeswoman de-
clined to comment.

The Securities and Ex-
change Commission rejected a
hotly disputed proposal to add
a new “speed bump,” or split-
second trading delay, to the
U.S. stock market.
In an order posted on its
website on Friday, the SEC
disapproved a plan from Cboe
Global Markets Inc. to intro-
duce a four-millisecond speed
bump to one of its exchanges.
The regulator called Cboe’s
proposal “discriminatory” and
said Cboe hadn’t provided
enough evidence to show that
it would benefit the markets
by curbing ultrafast trading
strategies.
Speed bumps work by forc-
ing traders to wait a fraction
of a second before their orders
to buy or sell stocks are exe-
cuted at an exchange. That can
trip up certain ultrafast strate-
gies that depend on getting
trades executed as quickly as
possible.
By turning down the plan,
the SEC has put the brakes—at
least for now—on the prolifer-
ation of speed bumps on U.S.
stock exchanges.
“We are extremely disap-
pointed that the SEC has dis-
approved our proposal to in-
troduce Liquidity Provider
Protection,” Cboe said in a
statement, using its term for
the proposed speed bump.
Cboe “will continue to work
closely with our regulators
and industry to develop inno-
vative products that benefit
the marketplace,” the com-
pany added.
Cboe, the country’s No. 3
stock-exchange operator by
trading volume, had said its
proposal would help curb the
impact of high-speed trading


BYALEXANDEROSIPOVICH


SEC Rejects ‘Speed Bump’ Proposal


Some strategies rely on the ultrafast execution of trades. A transmission tower near a trading platform.

DANIEL ACKER/BLOOMBERG NEWS

riod. Under either scenario, a
quarterly decline would be the
first since the height of the
global financial crisis.
However, Moscow says
weakened demand would be
offset by reduced supply re-
sulting from Libya’s oil shut-
down and new sanctions tar-
geting Venezuela’s crude sales,
one person familiar with the
matter said.
Libya’s oil output has fallen
to 120,000 barrels a day from
1.2 million daily barrels since a
renegade general shut pipe-
lines and oil ports in January
in a dispute with the central
government.
The U.S. on Tuesday im-
posed sanctions on a subsid-
iary of Russian state-run com-
pany Rosneft Oil Co. that had
become the main marketer of
banned Venezuelan crude. The
new restrictions could cut Ven-
ezuelan exports by 600,000
barrels a day, said energy con-
sulting firm FGE, which sees
the market tightening by June
as a result of the Libyan and
Venezuelan disruptions.
“Russia’s arguments for do-
ing nothing may have some
validity,” it said.
—Sarah McFarlane
contributed to this article.

Saudi Arabia is considering a
break from its four-year oil-pro-
duction alliance with Russia, ac-
cording to people familiar with
the matter, as China’s coronavi-
rus outbreak contributes to a
drop in global oil demand.
The Saudi kingdom, Kuwait
and the United Arab Emir-
ates—which collectively repre-
sent over half of OPEC’s pro-
duction capacity—are holding
talks to discuss a possible
joint output cut of as much as
300,000 barrels a day, the
people said.
The coronavirus outbreak
hascreatedariftinthepart-
nership between Russia and
the Saudi-led Organization of
the Petroleum Exporting
Countries. The two sides have
collaborated since December
2016 in an effort to balance
global oil supply amid a surge
of crude from U.S. shale pro-
ducers. If the Saudis, Kuwait
and the U.A.E. break with the
Russians, the split could fur-
ther weaken OPEC’s ability to
influence oil prices.
The new tensions come
ahead of the group’s early
March gathering in Vienna,


BYSUMMERSAID
ANDBENOITFAUCON


Saudis Weigh Breaking With Russia Over Outlook for Oil


Precious Metal
Rally Presses On

Gold and silver prices ex-
tended a recent surge Friday,
capping off a strong week for
safe-haven assets amid inves-
tors’ con-
cerns that
the corona-
virus will have a long-lasting
impact on global growth.
Front-month gold futures
advanced 1.7% to $1,644.60 a
troy ounce on the Comex divi-
sion of the New York Mercan-
tile Exchange, continuing a run
that began last summer and
has sent the metal to seven-
year highs. Prices are up 8.2%

so far this year.
In another sign of investor
enthusiasm for precious metals,
front-month silver futures ral-
lied 1.2% to $18.521, also post-
ing an outsize weekly gain.
Recent signs that the
deadly coronavirus is spreading
around the world and could dis-
rupt global supply chains have
powered the rally, with inves-
tors seeking shelter in assets
considered safer including pre-
cious metals and bonds. A syn-
chronous decline in global bond
yields has in turn supported
gold and silver because lower
yields make the metals more
attractive to yield-seeking in-
vestors. Yields fall as bond
prices rise.
The drop in bond yields and

gains for precious metals accel-
erated Friday after IHS Markit
Ltd. said its U.S. composite pur-
chasing managers index fell to
its lowest level since October
2013, a sign that tepid activity
in the travel and tourism indus-
tries due to the coronavirus
could dent growth this year.
Stocks around the world fell
Friday, and some analysts
warned that a prolonged de-
cline in equities could add more
fuel to the surge in safe-haven
assets.
In another positive sign for
precious-metals bulls, the dollar
pared some of its recent gains,
making commodities denomi-
nated in the U.S. currency
cheaper for overseas buyers.
The WSJ Dollar Index, which

tracks the dollar against a bas-
ket of 16 other currencies, fell
Friday after closing at a three-
year high a day earlier.
Investors will be closely moni-
toring coming economic data
points and signals from global
central banks, with some expect-
ing interest rates globally to fall
in response to the coronavirus.
Elsewhere in commodities
Friday, oil pared some of its
weekly rebound on the fresh vi-
rus concerns, sending U.S.
crude futures down 0.9% to
$53.38 a barrel and Brent
crude, the global gauge of
prices, 1.4% lower to $58.50 a
barrel. Concerns about weaker
fuel demand due to the virus
have kept prices well below a
peak hit in early January.

COMMODITIES


Regulator nixes plan
from Cboe to add
trading delay to one
of its exchanges.

FRIDAY’S
MARKETS


The top-performing sectors of the S&P 500 this year are utilities
and technology—one group that is generally associated with
safety and the other with risk.

Source: FactSet

Utilities
Informationtechnology
Real estate
Consumer discretionary
Communication services
S&P500
Consumer staples
Industrials
Health care
Financials
Materials
Energy

8.3%
8.2
8.1
4.5
4.1
3.3
2.7
2.4
1.3
–0.3
–1.8
–11.1
Free download pdf