The Nasdaq fell a little over 300 points and the Dow rose a little over 300 points as the migration from the tech pandemic stocks to recovery cyclical stocks continued in droves. The Nasdaq has now officially entered correction territory having today fallen 10.6% from the February high (but I suspect there’ll be another rally in tech tomorrow.) There remain concerns over inflation with the stimulus bill and recovery but Yellen today asserted that the stimulus would fuel a very strong recovery without dangers of the economy running too hot. High valuations have weighed heavily on the Nasdaq and rising bond yields have also contributed to the mass migration over to value. Volume was just over 14 billion.
MON MARCH 8, 2021 5:31 PM
Nasdaq hits correction, Dow advances
as stimulus bill nears finish line
DJ: 31,496.30 +572.16 NAS: 12,920.15 +196.68 S&P: 3,841.94 +73.47 3/5
DJ: 31,802.44 +306.14 NAS: 12,609.16 -310.99 S&P: 3,821.35
-20.59 3/8
(Reuters)
- Technology-related shares sold off on Monday in a big downturn that pushed
the Nasdaq into a correction and offset stocks that rose on hopes the $1.9
trillion COVID-19 relief bill will spur the U.S. economic recovery. The Dow hit a record intra-day high but the
big tech stocks that have led Wall Street to scale successive peaks over the
past year fell, with the Nasdaq closing down 2.41%. The Nasdaq is now down
10.6% from its Feb. 12 record close, or more than a 10% slide the market
considers a correction. Shares related
to finance, restaurants and travel rose on expectations those sectors will do
well when the economy reopens, but they were unable to offset the weight of the
bigger tech shares that dominate the U.S. stock market.
After the stimulus bill won U.S. Senate
approval on Saturday, President Joe Biden said he hoped for quick passage by
the Democrat-controlled House of Representatives so he could sign it and send
$1,400 direct payments to Americans. But
prospects of more
government spending and a growing economy have stoked fears of an inflation spike, sending
the benchmark 10-year Treasury yield to near one-year highs and weighing on
technology shares that rely on cheap funding for growth. U.S. Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen said on Monday the
package would fuel a “very
strong” U.S. recovery and she did not expect the economy to run too hot
because of the increased spending.
As bonds yields have moved up, concerns about equity valuations
for growth-oriented stocks and tech stocks specifically have weighed on the Nasdaq
relentlessly the last three weeks, said Michael James, managing director of
equity trading at Wedbush Securities in Los Angeles. Stocks that will do well once people start
traveling and eating out again have been leading the charge higher, James said. “People have been reallocating assets into those sectors.
It’s been coming out of
growth-tech to fund those purchases,” he said.
The
Dow Jones Industrial Average rose 306.14 points, or 0.97%, to 31,802.44, the
S&P 500 lost 20.59 points, or 0.54%, to 3,821.35 and the Nasdaq Composite
dropped 310.99 points, or 2.41%, to 12,609.16.
Volume
on U.S. exchanges was 14.03 billion shares.
The financial sector was the biggest
boost in the S&P 500, hitting a record as higher market rates and a steeper
yield curve helped banks. Industrials were right behind, also reaching a record
high, while the materials sector neared an all-time peak. The technology sector was deepest in
the red. The recent slide in the big tech stocks
continued, with Apple Inc, Nvidia Corp, Tesla Inc and Alphabet Inc’s Google
leading declining shares on Nasdaq. Tech
stocks are particularly sensitive to rising yields because their value rests
heavily on earnings in the future, which are discounted more deeply when bond
returns go up. The divergence between the tech stocks and non-tech stocks
explains trading today, said Joe Saluzzi, partner and co-founder of Themis
Trading in Chatham, New Jersey. “The stimulus package will be certainly helping
the bigger cap names,” Saluzzi said, referring to non-tech stocks. “The get-out
and non-stay at home stocks are doing better now,” he said.
Banks added about 2% as the yield on the
benchmark 10-year note stood near a 13-month high, while airlines jumped about
5%. Walt Disney Co jumped about 6% as
California health officials set new rules that would allow Disneyland and other
theme parks, stadiums and outdoor entertainment venues to reopen as early as
April 1. GameStop Corp surged about 42%
after the company said it had tapped shareholder Ryan Cohen to lead a transition
to an e-commerce business.
Advancing issues outnumbered declining ones on the NYSE by a 1.39-to-1 ratio; on Nasdaq, a 1.03-to-1 ratio favored decliners. The S&P 500 posted 124 new 52-week highs and no new lows; the Nasdaq Composite recorded 405 new highs and 28 new lows.
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