ROUNDUP/Equities New York Conclusion: Economic worries are weighing on Wall Street

NEW YORK (dpa-AFX) – Concerns about an economic slowdown as a result of the Ukraine war have pushed Wall Street noticeably into the red. Major stock indices fell again on Wednesday after gains the previous day. Statements by Russian President Vladimir Putin that “enemy states” should pay for natural gas in rubles weighed on the mood. This news caused oil prices to rise again, which fueled fears of an overall increase in prices and thus of a significant economic downturn.

The leading US index Dow Jones Industrial (Dow Jones 30 Industrial) fell by 1.29 percent to 34,358.50 points. The market-wide S&P 500 dropped 1.23 percent to 4456.24 points. After strong fluctuations, the technology-heavy NASDAQ 100 index fell by 1.41 percent to 14,447.55 points.

US President Joe Biden has meanwhile arrived in Brussels. Summits of NATO, the group of seven important industrialized countries and the European Union will take place there on Thursday in order to organize further action against Russia at the highest level one month after the attack on Ukraine.

The talks are also said to be about new economic sanctions against Russia and the question of possible import bans on Russian crude oil. The USA have already decided that they no longer want to buy Russian oil.

Commodity expert Carsten Fritsch from Commerzbank commented on the current situation that resistance to import bans is still considerable in some EU countries that are highly dependent on Russian oil. A further escalation of the Russian warfare in Ukraine against the civilian population there could still persuade these countries to give in, said Fritsch.

In addition, US monetary policy remains an issue. At the beginning of the week, the head of the central bank, Jerome Powell, had already brought up the possibility of faster increases in the key interest rate in view of the “much too high” rate of inflation. Other high-ranking central bankers from the USA had recently made similar statements.

At the S&P 500 end, Adobe Systems (Adobe) shares fell more than nine percent. The software company had presented surprisingly strong quarterly figures, but was disappointed with the outlook.

In contrast, General Mills’ shares rose by 2.5 percent. The food manufacturer had raised its annual targets in view of higher prices for its products and strong demand.

The stocks of oil companies benefited from the renewed significant increase in oil prices. Chevron gained about 1 percent at the top of the Dow. ExxonMobil shares rose 1.6 percent.

The euro suffered from the deteriorating mood on the stock markets and was last listed at 1.1008 US dollars. The European Central Bank set the reference rate at 1.0985 (Tuesday: 1.1024) dollars. The dollar thus cost 0.9103 (0.9071) euros.

US Treasuries recovered somewhat from their recent losses. The futures contract for ten-year Treasuries (T-Note Future) rose by 0.46 percent to 123.31 points. The return on ten-year government bonds was 2.30 percent./la/jha/

— By Lutz Alexander, dpa-AFX —

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