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Coronavirus fears push Australian dollar to 11-year low

The Australian dollar has fallen to its lowest point in more than a decade as fears over the deadly coronavirus outbreak spreads.

What exactly is the All Ordinaries Index?

The Australian dollar has dropped to fresh 11-year low as coronavirus fears continue to spread.

The dollar fell through $0.66, due largely to our position as a major exporter of commodities, leaving Australia exposed.

Australian stocks have plunged after investors were spooked by fears the spreading coronavirus outbreak will increasingly affect global economic activity.

The benchmark S & P/ASX200 index was a sea of red at midday AEDT as it fell 116.7 points, or 1.63 per cent, to 6988.8.

The broader All Ordinaries index was down 117.1 points, or 1.62 per cent, at 7,078 as all indices fell.

The biggest drags at noon were the energy, industrials, finance, info tech and consumer discretionary indices.

The dive follows sell offs in US and European markets on Friday on the back of increasing concerns over COVID-19 as more companies face disruptions and issue profit warnings.

Stephen Innes, Asia Pacific Market Strategist at AxiCorp, says markets were spooked by virus clusters breaking out “all over” Korea, with Japan not far behind.

There were also asymptomatic positive tests in Omaha from cruise passengers and an outbreak in Italy postponing a top-level football much, Mr Innes said. “But of all the alarming aspects of the rapidly spreading virus out Wuhan is that it’s showing up in patients with no connection to China or the city of Wuhan … suggesting things are about to get extremely problematic, and market conditions could get exponentially worse this week.” Oil prices also fell but gold jumped to its highest level in seven years as investors rushed to put their money in the save-haven metal. Spot gold was trading at $US6,938 per fine ounce at midday.

The Australian dollar has fallen to an 11-year low. Picture: iStock
The Australian dollar has fallen to an 11-year low. Picture: iStock

Gold stocks were the few bright spots on the trading board on Monday, with both Newcrest and Northern Star gaining more than four per cent respectively to $30.03 and $15.17.

Woodside and Wesfarmers both took a dive after going ex dividend. Wesfarmers dropped $1.88, or 4.09 per cent, to $44.14 but Woodside was off $1.99 or 5.99 per cent, at $31.21.

BlueScope Steel warned of a heavy impact from the virus and its shares were hammered, falling $1.12, or 8.17 per cent, to $12.59 after it posted a 70 per cent drop in interim profit.

Worley reported a 40 per cent first half profit jump, and its shares initially fell too. But they had recovered by noon to be up 11.5 cents at $14.195. Outdoor advertiser oOh! media talked of “unprecedented” media market softness, federal election fallout and a weak economy. Its shares declined 5.5 cents to $2.875.

Health insurer NIB posted a 23 per cent fall in first-half profit, blaming higher claims for the softer result. Its stocks fell 32.5 cents, or 6.1 per cent, to $5.005.

The Aussie dollar was buying 66.09 US cents at noon AEDT, up from 65.99 US cents on Friday.

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Original URL: https://www.news.com.au/finance/economy/australian-economy/coronavirus-fears-push-australian-dollar-to-11year-low/news-story/0b31b74c39c9030b38d4a6c143111309