Small caps flat to lower on mixed feelings for slower global growth

After spiking into the green out of the gate, small caps have since plunged and are flickering in and out of the green and red midday after waning global economic growth weighed on oil, pushing the dollar and larger-cap equities higher.
At 12:30 p.m. ET, the Russell 2000 (NYSE:IWM) slipped 3.46, or 0.46%, to 750.91, while the Dow had gained 18.73, or 0.16, to 11634.66.
Crude has touched a low on today’s session, selling off $3 a barrel to roughly $111 midday and posting a three month low, after OPEC forecasted that global demand for energy continue to falter.
Higher oil prices have pushed input costs for all companies higher and have weighed on operations. A decline in global growth would mean a reduced thirst for oil, which would push down the escalating raw material costs for most firms. However, that slower growth means less demand for final products. So it’s a double edged sword keeping equities in check.
“The global economic race to the bottom appears to be over as the U.S. has hit bottom and the rest of the world is still falling,” Andy Busch wrote in an email today.
The potential slowing global growth’s effect on oil sent the dollar surging to $1.4686 against the euro and 110.47 against the yen midday. The surge in the dollar as of late all started with the European Central Bank’s dovish comments last Thursday followed by reported negative GDP growth in the euro zone.
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