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Stocks are plunging as traders pile into havens after a drone strike slashed Saudi oil output

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Trader Peter Tuchman works on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange, Friday, Aug. 16, 2019. Stocks are opening broadly higher at the end of a turbulent week. (AP Photo/Richard Drew)

  • US and European stocks slumped on Monday after a drone attack on a Saudi Arabian oil facility slashed global output by nearly 6%.
  • Traders dropped equities in favor of gold and other haven assets after Brent crude spiked as much as 20% — its biggest intraday move on record, Bloomberg said.
  • "The genie is out of the bottle in terms of risk premium," one analyst said.
  • View Markets Insider's homepage for more stories.

European equities and US futures plunged on Monday after a drone attack on a Saudi Arabian oil facility slashed global output by nearly 6%. Brent crude spiked as much as 20% — its biggest intraday move on record, according to Bloomberg— spurring traders to drop stocks in favor of gold and other haven assets.

"The implications of these attacks are far-reaching and lasting, going well beyond the immediate disruption to albeit a very large portion of global output," Neil Wilson, chief market analyst for Markets.com, said in a morning note. "The genie is out of the bottle in terms of risk premium."

Here's the market roundup as of 11:34 a.m. in New York:

  • Oil prices have spiked with Brent crude up 11.8% at $67.30, and West Texas Intermediate up 11% at $60.80.
  • Gold jumped 0.7% to $1,510 as traders bought more of the haven asset.
  • US stocks opened lower with the Dow Jones Industrial Average down 0.5%, and the S&P 500 and Nasdaq down 0.3%.
  • European equities slumped with Germany's DAX and Britain's FTSE 100 down 0.7%, and the Euro Stoxx 50 down 0.9%.
  • Asian indexes were mixed with China's Shanghai Composite flat, Hong Kong's Hang Seng down 1%, and Japan's Nikkei up 1.1%.

Saudi Arabia is racing to restore about a third of the affected production by the end of Monday. The US is prepared to release emergency oil reserves, and President Donald Trump tweeted the nation is "locked and loaded" to retaliate for the attack. 

Signs of slowing growth in China also weighed on market sentiment. Industrial output rose 4.4% in August, according to Reuters, falling short of a median estimate of 5.2%.

SEE ALSO: Attacks wiped out half of Saudi Arabia's oil production — and it could lead to higher gas prices

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