Sign into fxTrade

Don't have an account? Register now

Stocks, Oil Decline After Earthquake Hits Japan

Stocks continued to fall today in the wake of yesterday’s sell-off and news of a strong earthquake hitting Japan. The largest earthquake in a hundred years, the news added to a market already jittery with fighting in the mid-east and continuing debt problems in Europe.

The Stoxx Europe 600 Index slid 0.6 percent at 8:47 a.m. in New York while futures on the Standard & Poor’s 500 Index lost 0.2 percent after the gauge yesterday slumped 1.9 percent. Japan’s Nikkei 225 Stock Average tumbled 1.7 percent as the quake caused a 10-meter tsunami that inundated towns north of Tokyo. The yen strengthened 0.9 percent against the dollar, after depreciating 0.4 percent following the temblor. The yield on the German 10-year bund declined four basis points, falling for a third day. Oil slid below $100 a barrel in New York.

Source: Bloomberg

Recent Articles

Posted by Staff at 7:16 am UTC, 05/24/2012
Posted by Dean Popplewell at 6:32 am UTC, 05/24/2012
Posted by Dean Popplewell at 9:37 am UTC, 05/23/2012

Forex Insights »

Posted under USD, EUR, GBP, CHF, JPY, AUD, CAD at 11:29 am UTC, 05/24/2012
Posted under USD, EUR, CHF at 9:58 am UTC, 05/24/2012
Leave a Comment

Latest Articles

Posted by Staff at 7:16 am UTC, 05/24/2012
Posted by Dean Popplewell at 6:32 am UTC, 05/24/2012
Posted by Dean Popplewell at 9:37 am UTC, 05/23/2012
Forex Rates
Interest Rates

Some of OANDA's currency tools require Adobe's Flash Player.

May
24
Today’s Global
Market Events
8:30am

CAD
Corporate Profits q/q
9.0%
USD
Core Durable Goods Orders m/m
1.1% vs. -0.8%
USD
Unemployment Claims
372K vs. 370K
USD
Durable Goods Orders m/m
0.5% vs. -4.0%
9:00am

EUR
ECB President Draghi Speaks
EUR
Belgium NBB Business Climate
-10.6 vs. -10.7
10:30am

USD
FOMC Member Dudley Speaks
USD
Natural Gas Storage
77B vs. 61B
1:00pm

USD
FOMC Member Dudley Speaks
3:00pm

USD
Treasury Sec Geithner Speaks
7:30pm

JPY
Tokyo Core CPI y/y
-0.5% vs. -0.5%
JPY
National Core CPI y/y
0.1% vs. 0.2%