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Surge ends in slump with $35b sell-off

THE sharemarket has shed $35 billion in the biggest one-day loss in nine months as the strong surge of 2013 came to an abrupt end.
By · 22 Feb 2013
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22 Feb 2013
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THE sharemarket has shed $35 billion in the biggest one-day loss in nine months as the strong surge of 2013 came to an abrupt end.

The benchmark S&P/ASX 200 closed at the day's low, down 118.6 points, or 2.3 per cent, to 4980.1, while the broader All Ordinaries dropped 115.8 points, or 2.3 per cent, to 4998.6.

All sectors finished lower, contributing to the biggest selloff since May last year, with energy stocks slumping 4.6 per cent, materials sliding 3.4 per cent and financials falling 2.4 per cent.

"I'm not overly alarmed, this is probably a healthy break for the market after a strong run," said Mike Kendall, executive director of JBWere. "Pretty much everyone knows that things just won't go up in a straight line."

Another factor contributing to the selloff was comments from the US Federal Reserve, which, citing a risk of inflation, hinted at the winding back of its quantitative easing program.

Miners suffered heavy losses, with BHP falling 3.8 per cent to $37.17, Rio Tinto sliding 3 per cent to $67.30 and Fortescue Metals dropping 2.4 per cent to $4.80.

Mr Kendall said resource companies had been feeling the pressure of capital expenditure coupled with rising labour costs and investor expectations.

"I think a few investors are taking a view that the challenges in that part of the market are probably greater than what's being priced into a stock price," he said.

The financial sector, which had been responsible for a large part of the positive run this year, also felt the wrath of the pull-back. NAB dropped 3.7 per cent to $29.42, CBA fell 3.1 per cent to $64.81, Westpac slipped 2.8 per cent to $29.49 and ANZ lost 2.6 per cent to $27.98.

Origin Energy was one of the biggest losers of the day, down 8.5 per cent to $11.33, after the company's half-year net profit fell more than $200 million from the corresponding period.

Whitehaven Coal shares dived 6.1 per cent to $2.94 as managing director Tony Haggarty stepped down after rumoured difficulties in dealing with Nathan Tinkler since he became a major shareholder.

Qantas was one of the few that bucked the downward trend. The airline reported it had more than doubled its first-half net profit to $111 million. Its shares finished up 2.8 per cent to $1.66.

IAG shares jumped 2.8 per cent to $5.57 after the insurer reported a more than tripling of its first-half earnings to $461 million, citing as a major factor fewer natural disaster claims than in previous earnings.
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Frequently Asked Questions about this Article…

The sharemarket suffered the biggest one-day loss in nine months, shedding about $35 billion. The S&P/ASX 200 fell 118.6 points (‑2.3%) to 4,980.1, and the All Ordinaries dropped 115.8 points (‑2.3%) to 4,998.6.

All sectors finished lower, with energy down about 4.6%, materials sliding roughly 3.4% and financials falling about 2.4%—making them the hardest‑hit parts of the market that day.

Yes. The US Federal Reserve signaled a risk of rising inflation and hinted at winding back its quantitative easing program, and those comments were cited as a contributing factor to the sell‑off.

Miners suffered heavy losses: BHP fell 3.8% to $37.17, Rio Tinto slid 3.0% to $67.30 and Fortescue Metals dropped 2.4% to $4.80.

According to JBWere executive director Mike Kendall, resource companies faced pressure from capital expenditure commitments, rising labour costs and elevated investor expectations—factors some investors believe aren't fully priced into stock values.

The financial sector pulled back after driving much of the year's gains. NAB fell 3.7% to $29.42, CBA dropped 3.1% to $64.81, Westpac slipped 2.8% to $29.49 and ANZ lost 2.6% to $27.98.

Qantas bucked the trend after reporting first‑half net profit more than doubled to $111 million, with shares up 2.8% to $1.66. Insurer IAG jumped 2.8% to $5.57 after first‑half earnings more than tripled to $461 million, helped by fewer natural disaster claims.

Origin Energy was one of the biggest losers, down 8.5% to $11.33 after its half‑year net profit fell by more than $200 million year‑on‑year. Whitehaven Coal shares dived 6.1% to $2.94 after managing director Tony Haggarty stepped down amid reported difficulties dealing with major shareholder Nathan Tinkler.