It has finally happened — coronavirus fears have taken over and panic has set in.
Global stocks are plunging on Monday after the number of virus cases outside China surged over the weekend, particularly in Italy, South Korea and Iran.
The Dow Jones Industrial Average DJIA, -3.56% fell 3% - 880 points - in early trading. European stocks also plummeted, with Italy’s FTSE MIB I945, -5.43% leading the descent, falling 5.9%.
However, in our call of the day, Warren Buffett told investors not to buy or sell stocks, which he referred to as businesses, based on the day’s headlines.
“The real question is: ‘Has the 10-year or 20-year outlook for American businesses changed in the last 24 or 48 hours?’” the billionaire investor said on CNBC.
“You’ll notice many of the businesses we partially own, American Express AXP, -4.97% , Coca-Cola KO, -2.46% — those are businesses and you don’t buy or sell your business based on today’s headlines. If it gives you a chance to buy something you like and you can buy it even cheaper then it’s your good luck,” the chairman and CEO of Berkshire Hathaway BRK.B, -3.33% added.
In his annual investor letter over the weekend, Buffett said equities would outperform bonds for years to come due to low tax rates.
“If something close to current rates should prevail over the coming decades and if corporate tax rates also remain near the low level businesses now enjoy, it is almost certain that equities will over time perform far better than long-term, fixed-rate debt instruments,” he said.
The market
U.S. stocks tumbled early on Monday as the spread of the coronavirus outside China sparked a global sell-off. The Dow fell 3%, while the S&P 500 SPX, -3.35% declined 2.9% and the Nasdaq COMP, -3.71% slipped 3.3%. The Italian FTSE MIB led the European fallers, sliding almost 6% as the number of virus cases in Italy rose above 150 from just three on Thursday. Asian markets also slumped, with South Korea’s Composite Stock Price index 180721, +1.18% down 3.87% and Hong Kong’s Hang Seng HSI, +0.16% falling 1.8%. Gold futures GC00, -2.17% surged 1.8% to $1,678 per ounce as investors flocked to the safe-haven asset.
The buzz
Italy led the global sell-off in stocks on Monday as the coronavirus spread rapidly outside China, with cases surging in South Korea, Iran and Italy over the weekend.
Bookkeeping-software company Intuit INTU, -3.74% is closing in on a deal to buy personal finance portal Credit Karma for about $7 billion in cash and stock, The Wall Street Journal reported.
U.S. President Donald Trump said on Sunday he has never been briefed about Russian efforts to help Bernie Sanders win the Democratic presidential nomination.
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February 25, 2020 at 03:07AM
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Warren Buffett says ‘don’t buy or sell’ on the headlines as coronavirus sends stocks plunging - MarketWatch
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