By Sam Forgione
NEW YORK (Reuters) - Oil prices skidded to their lowest level in nearly seven years on Monday, knocking down shares of major oil companies on Wall Street as a global glut showed no signs of abating.
Brent crude prices
Exxon
Brent crude
"As a result of the collapse in oil and gas prices today, the market is worried that you're going to see less capital spending, you're losing a lot of a good-wage jobs in the oil patch, and people are worrying that we're going to see a snowball of defaults among high-yield energy issuers," said Scott Wren, senior global equity strategist at Wells Fargo Investment Institute in St. Louis.
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MSCI's all-country world equity index <.MIWD00000PUS>, which tracks shares in 45 nations, fell 0.5 percent.
The Dow Jones industrial average <.DJI> fell 0.7 percent to 17,730.51. The S&P 500 <.SPX> lost 0.7 percent to 2,077.07. The Nasdaq Composite <.IXIC> was off 0.8 percent, at 5,101.81.
The dollar rose on expectations the U.S. Federal Reserve is on track to raise interest rates next week in the wake of November's solid jobs report. The dollar index <.DXY>, which tracks the greenback against a basket of six major currencies, rose 0.39 percent, to 98.74.
A weaker euro helped boost European shares from three-week lows hit last week when the European Central Bank disappointed investors with its latest stimulus package. A weaker euro helps stocks by making European exports cheaper relative to competing imports.
An outlier among European stocks was Electrolux
Europe's broad FTSEurofirst 300 index <.FTEU3> added 0.45 percent to close at 1,464.4. The euro > was last down 0.5 percent, at $1.0831.
U.S. Treasury debt prices rallied as investors consolidated positions in a week that is generally thin on economic data after last Friday's stronger-than-expected U.S. November jobs report.
Benchmark 10-year Treasury notes > were last up 7/32 in price to yield 2.24 percent, from a yield of 2.28 percent late Friday.
Spot gold prices > fell from a three-week high and were last down $13.50, or 1.2 percent, at $1,071 an ounce after the gains in the dollar.
(Additional reporting by Tanya Agrawal and Richard Leong and Gertrude Chavez-Dreyfuss in New York; editing by Nick Zieminski and Bernadette Baum)