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By Geoffrey Smith
Investing.com -- FedEx's drastic cost-cutting measures and weak revenue update put stocks on course for their lowest weekly close in two months as fears for the global economy grow. The yuan falls through 7 to the dollar as China's housing slump and consumer bust continue. Sterling slumps to its lowest since 1985 on dismal retail sales data, and the government is taking over Rosneft's refineries in Germany, as Berlin tries to ward off a looming fuel supply emergency. Here's what you need to know in financial markets on Friday, 16th September.
1. As FedEx goes, so goes the world economy
Global growth fears have a name, and its name is FedEx (NYSE:FDX). The delivery and logistics company’s stock plunged nearly 20% in after-hours trading on Thursday after its new chief executive announced it will close 90 locations around the globe, park some cargo aircraft and freeze hiring. While the company didn’t mention job cuts specifically, it will also close five corporate offices.
FedEx, with its global reach and its exposure to both businesses and households, is often taken as a loose proxy for global economic activity.
Its profit margins have been under pressure for months due to soaring fuel bills and rising labor costs due to tight job markets. But its top line is also now suffering, with economic weakness in Europe and Asia leaving its largest division, Express, $500 million short of forecasts in the last quarter, while the ebbing of the pandemic-driven surge in e-commerce deliveries left its Ground division $300 million short.
2. Weak Chinese data pressure local stocks, currency
China’s stock market benchmarks all fell by over 2% and the offshore yuan fell through the level of 7 to the dollar, as the economy put out a mixed bag of numbers that analysts said were weaker than they looked at first sight.
Growth in industrial production and retail sales accelerated, but largely due to targeted tax breaks for the domestic auto industry.
Other stimulus measures aimed at propping up a moribund real estate sector prompted an uptick in investment in fixed assets, but markets zeroed in on another, bigger annual decline in house prices, which were down 2.1% on the year in August. They’ve now been flat or in decline for 12 straight months.
Also of concern were private sector figures showing a 23% drop in tourism spending over the recent holiday weekend and a 26% year-on-year drop in movie attendances over the same period.
3. Stocks set for lowest weekly close in two months; Michigan consumer sentiment eyed
U.S. stocks are on course for their lowest weekly close in two months as the news out of FedEx, China, and Europe (see below) all darken the broader outlook for corporate earnings.