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Small businesses will be concerned about the broader impacts of the $30 billion wiped off the Australian Securities Exchange yesterday, a leading economist says.
Mondayโs losses saw the S&P/ASX200 fall by 2% to 5066.2 points at the close of trade yesterday on the back of a poor showing from Wall Street.
On Saturday, the Dow Jones closed down 1.74%, falling 290.16 points to 16,384.58 points.
On Monday market analysts, such as chief market strategist at CMC Markets, Michael McCarthy, said the US Federal Reserveโs โno changeโ decision was a trigger ย for the share market to sell off locally.
US Fed Reserve chairman, Janet Yellen, acknowledged the decision to leave US rates untouched was due to jitters regarding Chinaโs slowing economy and concerns about global market turmoil.
The volatility comes as one chief economist, National Australia Bankโs Ivan Colhoun, reporting back from a trip to the UK, Europe and the Middle East, described the โoverwhelming negativityโ surrounding the outlook for Australiaโs economy.
He also said one foreign investor had called Australiaโs economy โtoastโ.
Paul Bloxham, chief economist at HSBC, told SmartCompany this morning the sell-off yesterday followed a global downturn on Friday on the back of the US Fedโs decision
ย โIt left interest rates steady but at same time pointed out why there werenโt prepared to lift rates was partly because of global risks,โ he says.
Bloxham says this in turn led to a sell-off in global equities.
โThatโs what weโve seen flow through to local markets yesterday,โ he says.
Bloxham says the sell-off could affect Australian small businesses, as part of the overall impact on the broader Australian economy.
โIn our view itโs not necessarily something that will dampen Australiaโs economic performance,โ he says.
Bloxham says the broader question here is whether the equity market is โsignalling whatโs going on in the broader economy or just increased volatilityโ.
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