Wall Street moved lower. In New York trading at about 10.36am, the Dow Jones industrial average slid 0.90 percent. At about 10.22am trading, the Standard & Poor's 500 Index retreated 0.92 percent while the Nasdaq Composite Index gave up 0.89 percent.
"There is some caution on the consumer side and export-led sectors that comes from questions about the Chinese economy and emerging markets as a whole," Pierre Mouton, a fund manager at Notz, Stucki & Cie in Geneva, told Bloomberg. "The economic numbers from China are not very good for the time being."
In the Dow, slides in shares of IBM and those of Chevron, last trading 2.1 percent and 1.6 percent weaker respectively, led the decline.
US Treasuries fell, pushing yields on the 10-year note four basis points higher to 2.37 percent, the highest level in three months.
Following Friday's better-than-expected US jobs data, investors have increased bets the Fed will hike rates at its December meeting. To be sure, a strengthening US greenback could be a concern.
"The strong US labour market report is a signal they may hike rates, but they're not going to completely ignore the currency," Lutz Karpowitz, a senior currency strategist at Commerzbank AG in Frankfurt, told Bloomberg.
"If you push it too far, they're not going to hike rates. There will be gradual dollar strength over the next year but you have to be patient. That's why we see higher euro-dollar."
Meanwhile, copper, gold and nickel weakened as the stronger US dollar hurt demand for commodities denominated in it.
The euro zone might see additional stimulus next month to help stoke the region's economy.
Four policymakers at the European Central Bank said a consensus was forming around lowering its deposit rate in December, Reuters reported, without naming the officials.
The OECD said it expects the euro-zone economy to grow by 1.8 percent in 2016 and 1.9 percent in 2017.
Europe's Stoxx 600 Index finished the session with a 1.1 percent slide from the previous close. Just ahead of the close, the UK's FTSE 100 Index declined 0.7 percent, while both France's CAC 40 Index and Germany's DAX Index each shed 1.3 percent.