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MARCH 19, 2018 / 4:36 pm
Wall
Street drops as regulation worry sinks tech shares
DJ: 24,610.91 -335.60 NAS: 7,344.24 -137.74 S&P: 2,712.92
-39.09 3/19
NEW YORK (Reuters) - U.S. stocks dropped on Monday,
with the S&P and Nasdaq suffering their worst day in just over five weeks,
as concerns over increased regulation for large tech companies was spearheaded
by a plunge in Facebook shares. Facebook
shares tumbled 6.8 percent as Chief Executive Mark Zuckerberg faced calls from
both U.S. and European lawmakers to explain how a consultancy that worked on
President Donald Trump’s election campaign gained access to data on 50 million
Facebook users.
The stock had its
worst day since March 2014 and was down 10.8 percent from its closing record hit on Feb. 1, to put the stock
squarely in correction territory, a drop of 10 percent from its high. Facebook’s plunge weighed heavily on the
S&P technology sector, down 2.11 percent, as well as the Nasdaq, off more
than 2 percent. Both indexes had their worst daily performance since Feb. 8.
Other major
companies with large tech businesses also dropped as recent concerns over regulation in the arena increased. Apple lost
1.53 percent while Alphabet fell 3 percent and Microsoft declined 1.8 percent.
“What’s chilling to an investor is whether Facebook will
be able to get advertisers to pay for the rich data
they pay for today,” said Kim Forrest, Senior Portfolio manager, Fort Pitt
Capital, Pittsburgh. “Investors are not
only concerned about losing advertising dollars. They’re also concerned these
companies might come under relatively heavy regulation.”
The Dow Jones
Industrial Average fell 335.6 points, or 1.35 percent, to close at 24,610.91,
the S&P 500 lost 39.09 points, or 1.42 percent, to 2,712.92 and the Nasdaq
Composite dropped 137.74 points, or 1.84 percent, to 7,344.24.
The S&P once again fell below its
50-day moving average, seen as a technical support level, for the first time
since early March. The Nasdaq came about 2 points from its 50-day before paring
losses. Investors were also cautious ahead of a two-day
monetary policy meeting at the U.S. Federal Reserve starting on Tuesday.
The
market believes the Fed is set to raise interest
rates on Wednesday as Thomson Reuters
data shows traders expect a quarter-percentage-point hike to be a certainty.
Investors are now grappling with the question of whether an improving economy
could lead to more hikes than anticipated.
“Some of the more salient questions investors have is, has the tone of the Fed,
which this time last year was certainly more skewed towards being dovish, has
it now extended to becoming
more hawkish?” said Eric Freedman, chief investment officer for U.S.
Bank Wealth Management in Minneapolis.
Industrials fell 0.82 percent against the backdrop of
worries about a global trade
war, which are set to dominate a two-day G20 meeting in Argentina. Selling was broad, with each of the 11 major
S&P sectors in the red. The CBOE Volatility index touched a high of 21.87
in one of its sharpest gains since the market sell-off in February.
Declining issues outnumbered advancing ones on the NYSE
by a 3.71-to-1 ratio; on Nasdaq, a 2.68-to-1 ratio favored decliners.
Volume on U.S.
exchanges was 6.9 billion shares, compared
to the 7.2 billion average over the last 20 trading days.
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