Bloodbath strikes Australia’s sharemarket – amid global recession fears

The Australian share market has suffered its biggest two-day plunge in more than two years as investors feared the American economy sinking into recession.

The first Japanese interest rate rise in 17 years has also hit tech stocks because investors had to continue borrowing the yen to buy American shares cheaply.

Jessica Amir, a market strategist with Moomoo, said technology stocks were bleeding as investors also worried about the United States, the world’s biggest economy, plunging into recession.

‘The US market is probably going to have manic Monday,’ she told Daily Mail Australia. 

The first hour of trade on Monday saw the benchmark S&P/ASX200 index plunge by 2.7 per cent to 7,729.2, as the broader All Ordinaries dropped or 2.8 per cent, to 7,946.9 by 11am Sydney time.

It followed the ASX finishing 2.1 per cent lower on Friday, meaning a 4.8 per cent dip for the bourse over the past two days of trading.

Tech stocks were the worst performers with Block Inc, previously known as the Square payment app, diving by 9.6 per cent to $90.50 by lunchtime as buy now, pay later app Zip fell by 7.2 per cent to $1.75.

Ms Amir said the first Japanese interest rate rise since 2007 meant tech stocks were suffering the biggest fall on Monday. 

The Australian share market has suffered its biggest two-day sell-off in more than two years as investors feared the American economy sinking into recession

‘A lot of investment managers in the US, they’ve been borrowing money from Japan to buy US tech stocks so when Japan increase their interest rates, that meant that that trade, the unwinding of the carry trade, began,’ she said. ‘That’s a big deal.’ 

Ms Amir said investors were now expecting three US rate cuts in 2024, amid fears a slower reaction from the US Fed would spark a recession.

‘We’ve got slowdown concerns,’ she said. 

‘There’s a little bit of worry that the Fed has come too late the party.

‘All of a sudden last week, we saw punters or whatever you want to call it fully price in, completely, three rate cuts.’ 

AMP chief economist Shane Oliver said investors were worried the US Federal Reserve would be cutting interest rates too late to ward off a recession. 

‘I think we’re in a fairly messy position here,’ he told Sky News.

‘It looks to me like the inflation scare we saw earlier in this year in the US and more recently in Australia, has unnecessarily delayed monetary easing. 

‘And now, of course, the financial markets are starting to worry about that higher risk of recession.’

On Wall Street, the Dow Jones Industrial Average fell by more than 1.5 per cent on Friday, while the S&P500 slipped 1.84 per cent, after US unemployment jumped to a near three-year high of 4.3 per cent.

Jessica Amir, a market strategist with Moomoo, said technology stocks were bleeding as investors also worried about the United States, the world's biggest economy, plunging into recession

Jessica Amir, a market strategist with Moomoo, said technology stocks were bleeding as investors also worried about the United States, the world’s biggest economy, plunging into recession

Every Australian Securities Exchange sector was in the red in early trading, with tech stocks falling by 4.5 per cent.

BHP was down 2.2 per cent, while the Big Four banks were between 3.4 and 3.9 per cent lower.

Monday’s hiccup amounted to the biggest two-day fall since the ASX plunged 4.28 per cent over June 14-15, 2022, amid anticipation of super-sized US central bank rate hikes.

But there were surprises with sleep apnea machine market Resmed up 4.1 per cent to $33.10 as Domino’s pizza rose 2.9 per cent to $30.41.

Ms Amir said bargain hunters were advised to focus on defensive stocks like healthcare. 

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