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OCTOBER 5, 2018 / 5:38 pm
Wall Street falls as solid jobs report boosts bond yields
DJ: 26,447.05 -180.43 NAS: 7,788.45 -91.06 S&P: 2,885.57
-16.04 10/5
(Reuters) - U.S. stocks
dropped for a second straight day on Friday, weighed down by another rise in
Treasury yields in the wake of a solid jobs report that capped off a week of
robust data. The losses were led by
heavyweight stocks in the technology
and communication services sectors including all members of the so-called FAANG
group – Facebook (FB.O), Amazon (AMZN.O), Apple (AAPL.O), Netflix (NFLX.O) and Alphabet (GOOGL.O). Online retailer Amazon, part of the
consumer discretionary sector, lost 1 percent.
Nonfarm payrolls
increased less than expected
in September, likely due to the effect of Hurricane Florence, though data for
July and August was revised higher, and the unemployment rate fell to 3.7 percent, a Labor
Department report showed. “There’s no
question the job market
in the United States is possibly at its best in a generation - there’s no question or
debate about that,” said Russell Price, senior economist at Ameriprise Financial Services Inc in Troy, Michigan. “The jobs report has become an inflation report.”
The report pushed longer-dated U.S. Treasury yields higher, with the 10-year
US10YT=RR note touching 3.248
percent. That piled more
pressure on U.S. stocks, which are trading near record-high levels,
raising concerns about valuations in the pricier names with the corporate
earnings reporting season on tap.
After the data, interest rate futures traders were still largely
expecting a Fed rate hike in December while the bond market’s gauges on
investors’ inflation outlook rose. “Equities will have no choice because if they
don’t remain competitive with the risk-free rate of return people will stop buying
them anyway and they will
start going into bonds,” said Walter Zimmerman, chief technical analyst
at ICAP in Jersey City, New Jersey. “How does the stock market adjust for that? By lowering
the price and therefore increasing the rate of return.”
The
Dow Jones Industrial Average .DJI fell 180.43 points, or 0.68 percent, to
26,447.05, the S&P 500 .SPX lost 16.04 points, or 0.55 percent, to
2,885.57 and the Nasdaq Composite .IXIC dropped 91.06 points, or 1.16 percent, to
7,788.45. For the week, the S&P fell 0.98 percent,
the Dow slipped 0.04 percent and the Nasdaq dropped 3.2 percent. It was the biggest weekly decline for the
Nasdaq since March.
Still, equities closed off session lows.
The S&P found support at its 50-day moving average at 2,877 and the Nasdaq
at its 100-day moving average of 7,778. The
technology sector
.SPLRCT sank 1.27percent,
dropping for the second day in a row on a fall in Intel (INTC.O) and Microsoft (MSFT.O).
Apple fell 1.6
percent after David Einhorn’s Greenlight Capital said it sold its remaining
shares in the company on growing fear of “Chinese retaliation against America’s
trade policies”. The recently
constituted communication
services sector .SPLRCL, which houses Netflix, Facebook and Alphabet, dropped 1.04 percent.
The only
gainer among the 11 major S&P sectors were defensive utilities .SPLRCU, which advanced
1.57 percent. Tesla slumped 7.05 percent
after CEO Elon Musk stirred nerves about the settlement of his securities fraud
lawsuit by mocking the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission on Twitter.
Einhorn said his Tesla short was the second biggest winner last quarter. Declining issues outnumbered advancing ones
on the NYSE by a 2.15-to-1 ratio; on Nasdaq, a 2.27-to-1 ratio favored
decliners. The S&P 500 posted 10 new
52-week highs and 24 new lows; the Nasdaq Composite recorded 17 new highs and
118 new lows.
Volume on U.S. exchanges
was 7.62 billion shares,
compared to the 7.16 billion average for the full session over the last 20
trading days.
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