Dow futures open up 100 pts after historic rout


102937118-GettyImages-457534476.530x298 The Dow Jones industrial average futures opened up more than 100 points Monday evening. Futures for both the S&P 500 and the Nasdaq 100 climbed, as well. Still, since the futures are trading below fair value, stocks still point to a slightly lower opening.

The rise followed a historic trading day when U.S. stocks plunged more than 3.5 percent, closing off session lows in high volume trade as fears of slowing growth in China pressured global markets. The Dow dropped 588 points after swinging wildly throughout the day.

http://www.cnbc.com/2015/08/24/dow-futures-open-up-100-pts-after-historic-rout.html

Alibaba sinks amid US rout


ea75cb8a-a73b-41db-bbca-8fd58c6d5494 Alibaba Group Holding’s stock price almost fell below the offering price set in the largest IPO in history as slow growth in its earnings rattled investors last week, said analysts.

Shares of the NYSE-listed Alibaba closed down $2.14 at $68.18 on Friday, leaving the stock just pennies above its 2014 IPO price of $68.

The fall in Alibaba’s stock came amid a plunge in the overall US stock market. The Dow Jones Industrial Average plummeted 530.9 points on Friday, concluding its worst week since 2011.

Alibaba’s arch-rival Baidu Inc slid by 2.85 percent to $152.9 on the NASDAQ. High-profile US tech company Twitter Inc fell below its 2013 IPO price on Thursday.

“The economic slowdown around the world, especially in China, worries global investors,” Lu Zhenwang, founder of Shanghai Wanqing Commerce Consulting, told the Global Times on Sunday.

In addition, investors have been bracing for the US Federal Reserve’s planned move to raise its benchmark interest rate in September. The Fed, however, has been sending mixed signals that have added uncertainty to the market, reports said.

“Besides the macroeconomic factors, Alibaba’s share slide is taking place because investors cannot see fast growth in either its core e-commerce business or fledgling operations,” said Lu.

http://www.globaltimes.cn/content/938609.shtml?

World’s Richest People Lose $182 Billion in Market Rout


-1x-1 The world’s 400 richest people lost $182 billion this week from their collective fortunes as weak manufacturing data from China and a rout in commodities sent global markets plunging.

The weekly drop for the Bloomberg Billionaires Index, a group that includes Warren Buffett and Glencore Plc’s Ivan Glasenberg, was the biggest since tracking of the expanded list began in September 2014. The combined net worth of the index members fell by $76 billion on Friday alone, when the Standard & Poor’s 500 Index of U.S. stocks ended its worst week since 2011.

“For them that’s a fractional percentage, even though $182 billion is a big number,” said John Collins, director of investment advisory at Aspiriant, which oversees more than $8 billion for high net worth clients. “A week like this feels really bad, but when you take a step back, in a big picture view it’s not a disaster by any means.

http://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2015-08-21/world-s-richest-people-lose-182-billion-as-market-rout-deepens