It was yet another day rushing to take profits from tech and transferring them to value with the Dow up over 350 points in mid-session only to come crashing down to close even. But at a flat close, value was way ahead of growth which tumbled 1.4% during the session. All of this was triggered by Powell and Yellen giving rosy forecasts for the coming year’s economy, which is what value holders want but tech does not. But investors remain on the sidelines given the expectation that Q2 is going to bring great news, though evidence of this is still wanting, which explains the lull. Everyone remains bullish about the recovery. Volume is picking up and getting close to the 4-week average at today’s 12.7 billion.
WED MARCH 24, 2021 4:23 PM
S&P 500 slips as tech stocks pull
market lower
DJ: 32,423.15 -308.05 NAS: 13,227.70 -149.85 S&P: 3,910.52 -30.07 3/23
DJ: 32,420.06 -3.09 NAS: 12,961.89 -265.81 S&P: 3,889.14
-21.38 3/24
NEW
YORK (Reuters) - The S&P 500 closed lower on Wednesday as optimism about
the economic recovery by Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell and Treasury
Secretary Janet Yellen was unable to halt a decline in technology shares for a
second straight day. The remarks by the
top two U.S. economic officials mirrored what they told Congress the day
before, with Powell saying on Wednesday the most likely case is 2021 will be “a
very, very strong year.” While the three
major indexes closed lower, investors sold last year’s big performers, the
technology shares that doubled the Nasdaq index from year-ago lows, and bought
the underpriced value-oriented stocks poised to do well in the recovery.
Wall Street has seesawed this week as a
months-long rotation into economically sensitive energy and financial shares,
which have gained on an outlook for economic growth, was briefly upended by
falling bond yields that prompted beaten-down technology stocks to rise. The 10-year yield fell to about 1.6%, a slide that in recent
days had propped up tech stocks that rely on low-cost capital. Value-oriented shares on
Wednesday closed flat, outpacing a 1.4% decline in growth stocks, which include
tech shares.
Investors have focused on the yield on
the benchmark 10-year Treasury note, pondering whether there is room for
long-term interest rates to run, said David Kelly, chief global strategist at
JPMorgan Asset Management. “We’re in a
little bit of a lull here.
We know that the economy
is primed to begin to really accelerate in the second quarter,” Kelly
said. “But we haven’t seen that acceleration yet so that’s what we’re waiting for.”
Adding to an upward bias for most of the
session was data showing U.S. factory activity picked up in early March amid strong growth in
new orders. But supply chain disruptions continued to exert cost pressures on
manufacturers, keeping inflation fears in focus. “Everybody’s bullish about the prospects of a recovery right now,”
said David Yepez, lead equity analyst and portfolio manager at Exencial Wealth
Advisors. “In order for the market to bottom we need to have more fear, and I
don’t feel like the market has fear right now.”
Financials gained 0.4% and industrials rose 0.7%, while energy jumped
2.5% as crude prices rebounded from a 6% fall in the last session. [O/R]
The
Dow Jones Industrial Average fell 3.09 points, or 0.01%, to 32,420.06. The
S&P 500 lost 21.38 points, or 0.55%, to 3,889.14 and the Nasdaq Composite
dropped 265.81 points, or 2.01%, to 12,961.89.
Volume
on U.S. exchanges was 12.72 billion shares, compared with the 14.0 billion average for the full
session over the last 20 trading days.
Apple Inc, Tesla Inc, Amazon.com Inc,
Facebook Inc and Microsoft Corp led decliners on the S&P 500 and the
Nasdaq. Intel Corp retreated 2.3% after
earlier gains as the company, in its efforts to expand chipmaking capacity,
announced plans to spend as much as $20 billion to build two factories in
Arizona and open its factories to outside customers. U.S.-listed shares of Taiwan Semiconductor
dropped 5.2%, while semiconductor equipment makers Lam Research Corp, Applied
Materials Inc and ASML Holding rose. Applied Materials was the third-biggest
boost on the S&P 500, after oil giants Chevron Corp and Exxon Mobil Corp. Bitcoin gained after Tesla’s founder, Elon
Musk, said the company’s electric vehicles can now be bought using bitcoin and
the option will be available outside the United States later this year. GameStop Corp tumbled 33.8% after the
videogame retailer said it might cash in on a meteoric rise in its share price
to fund its e-commerce expansion.
Declining issues outnumbered advancing ones on the NYSE by a 1.32-to-1 ratio; on Nasdaq, a 3.17-to-1 ratio favored decliners. The S&P 500 posted 15 new 52-week highs and no new lows; the Nasdaq Composite recorded 42 new highs and 128 new lows.
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