thu
MARCH 1, 2018 / 5:51 pm
Wall
Street drops more than 1 percent on Trump tariff comments
DJ: 24,608.98 -420.22 NAS: 7,180.56 -92.45 S&P: 2,677.67
-36.16 3/1
NEW
YORK (Reuters) - The Dow and S&P 500 registered a third straight day of
more than 1 percent declines on Thursday after President Donald Trump said the
United States would impose import tariffs on steel and aluminum, raising
concern about higher prices and a trade war.
The declines put the Dow into negative territory for the year and drove
the Cboe Volatility Index .VIX to its highest close since Feb. 13, denting
the market’s recent recovery from deeplosses in early February.
Shares of auto makers and other big consumers of steel
and aluminum added to their session losses after Trump said the U.S. would impose tariffs of 25 percent on
steel imports and 10 percent on imported aluminum next week, while
shares of U.S. steel and aluminum companies jumped.
On the day, General Motors Co (GM.N)
shares lost 4
percent, while Ford Motor
Co (F.N) was down 3.0 percent. U.S. Steel (X.N) shares rose 5.7 percent,
while shares of Nucor (NUE.N)
climbed 3.3 percent. Industrial
heavyweights like Boeing (BA.N) and Caterpillar
(CAT.N) also fell as
investors worried about higher raw material costs and trade barriers elsewhere. Boeing was down 3.5 percent and
Caterpillar was down 2.8 percent. “It’s
always a concern about what’s the retaliatory response to this. Underlying all
of these trade issues here, when you have trade wars, is again fueling inflation, because
presumably prices are going to be higher,” said Chuck Carlson, chief
executive officer at Horizon Investment Services in Hammond, Indiana.
Rising inflation and bond yields were the main concerns as Wall Street ended a turbulent February
on Wednesday, with the Dow and S&P 500 capping their worst month since
January 2016.
The Dow Jones
Industrial Average .DJI fell 420.22
points, or 1.68 percent, to 24,608.98, the S&P 500 .SPX lost 36.16
points, or 1.33 percent, to 2,677.67 and the Nasdaq Composite .IXICdropped 92.45
points, or 1.27 percent, to 7,180.56.
The S&P 500 is
down 3.7 percent since Monday’s close. Thursday’s fall marked its third straight
day of declines of at least 1 percent, the
first such streak for the index since January 2016. Last month confirmed a 10-percent correction
for the S&P, which is
still down more than 6 percent from its Jan. 26 record high. Stocks had mostly traded lower before Trump’s
announcement.
Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell
tried to temper remarks he made on Tuesday that raised concerns about the
potential for four interest rate hikes this year rather than the Fed’s forecast of three, but New York Fed President William Dudley, speaking in Sao
Paulo, Brazil, was a bit more pointed and said four rate hikes would be
“gradual.”
Indexes edged lower following Dudley’s remarks, but
investors said it was the tariff issue that drove the afternoon selloff. “We got in and out of monetary policy
concerns pretty well and this caught us by surprise,” said Art Hogan, chief
market strategist at B. Riley FBR in New York.
Declining issues outnumbered advancing ones on the NYSE
by a 1.47-to-1 ratio; on Nasdaq, a 1.42-to-1 ratio favored decliners. The S&P 500 posted two new 52-week highs
and 25 new lows; the Nasdaq Composite recorded 43 new highs and 100 new lows.
About 9.0 billion
shares changed hands on U.S. exchanges. That
compares with the 8.4 billion daily average for the past 20 trading days,
according to Thomson Reuters data.
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