Fears of Slowing U.S. Growth Jolt Markets Around the World

Signs of a slowing U.S. economy sowed panic among investors on Monday, with a sell-off in markets that began last week turning into a global rout.

The declines followed a U.S. jobs report on Friday that showed significantly slower hiring, with unemployment rising to its highest level in nearly three years. This deepened fears that the world’s largest economy could be sliding into a recession and that the Federal Reserve may have waited too long on cutting interest rates.

In early trading on Monday, the S&P 500 dropped by more than 4 percent and the tech-heavy Nasdaq plunged by nearly 6 percent.

Some investors saw the sell-off as a sign that the economy was at risk of recession, while others said the move was more the result of a pullback from overextended bets on tech stocks and artificial intelligence. That, in turn, was set against a backdrop of the usual summer lull in trading volumes, which can lead to abrupt and severe swings in prices.

New York Times