Week Ahead: Risk-Off Grips Markets, Treasuries Rise As New COVID Variant Emerges

 | Nov 28, 2021 14:49

  • Omicron variant pressures global markets; seen as the most heavily mutated yet
  • S&P 500 suffers worst post-Thanksgiving selloff on record
  • Oil plunges more than 12%, drops below $70
  • Fears of the latest COVID variant, dubbed Omicron, will likely dominate market sentiment in the upcoming week, overshadowing positive US economic data including better than expected initial jobless claims figures, released ahead of Thursday's Thanksgiving holiday. Though scientists don't yet know a lot about the rapidly spreading B.1.1.529 Omicron variant—first detected in South Africa—the World Health Organization (WHO) declared on Friday it was "a 'variant of concern,' indicating that it carries higher risks than other virus strains."

    Panicked investors dumped everything from risk to haven assets as the trading week came to a close. Equities, gold and the dollar all sold off. It appeared the only thing being bought were Treasuries.

    h2 US, European Indices All Plunge To Finish The Week/h2

    The S&P 500 plunged 2.27% on Friday, its sharpest daily drop on a percentage basis in nine months. However, the move, which came the day after the Thanksgiving holiday, occurred during thin holiday trading. That's something that exaggerates price action given there were few counter-trades available.

    Still, Friday saw the biggest post-Thanksgiving selloff for the S&P 500 index, the market's broadest representative gauge, since 1941, when President Franklin D. Roosevelt issued a proclamation establishing the holiday on the second to last Thursday of November.

    However, it was the economically sensitive benchmarks that were hit hardest. The oldest Wall Street index, the blue chip, mega cap Dow Jones Industrial Average, shed 905 points, or 2.5% of value, its worst day since October of last year.