This certainly has been a slow market to react to the issue of how to pay for this relief bill. This should have happened a couple weeks ago but today was the day that investors finally decided to become worried about higher taxes and the cost of infrastructure plans, exacerbated by the already high alert on too-high valuations. The panic sellers took over bringing the Dow down 308 and the Nasdaq 149. The elevated valuations have also created a sense of urgency in a potential selloff with traders trying to get ahead of this curve. But tech has declined so sharply as bond yields rise that there are plenty of bargain hunters out there scooping up stocks that have gone into 10 to 20% corrections. Volume remains below average at 12.1 billion.
TUE MARCH 23, 2021 4:22 PM
Stocks slide as stimulus,
infrastructure costs spook investors
DJ: 32,731.20 +103.23 NAS: 13,377.54 +162.31 S&P: 3,940.59 +27.49 3/22
DJ: 32,423.15 -308.05 NAS: 13,227.70 -149.85 S&P: 3,910.52
-30.07 3/23
NEW
YORK (Reuters) -U.S. stocks tumbled on Tuesday as concerns about the cost of
infrastructure spending and potential tax hikes to pay for President Joe
Biden’s $1.9 trillion relief bill weighed on investors who also fear further
downside in the market. Remarks by
Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen that the U.S. economy remains in crisis from
the pandemic as she defended developing plans for future tax increases to pay
for the new public investments put investors on alert.
Yellen spoke at a hearing of the House
Financial Services Committee where Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell also
addressed the committee. Talk of the government’s
infrastructure plans unnerved investors who are concerned the stock market is
trading at elevated valuations, said Rick Meckler, partner at Cherry
Lane Investments in New Vernon, New Jersey.
“There’s a little bit of concern of getting out ahead of a potential selloff that could be
on the horizon,” Meckler said. “Any feeling that it could be on the
horizon is causing people
to pull the trigger pretty quick on these down moves.” Stocks had been trading near break-even in
seesaw trade before turning
sharply lower about 45 minutes before the close.
Powell told U.S. lawmakers that a coming
round of post-pandemic price hikes will not fuel a destructive breakout of
persistent inflation - fears that had sparked a recent rise in yields and
caused technology shares to sell off. Oil
prices that slumped more than 3% on worries that new pandemic curbs and slow
vaccine rollouts in Europe will slow a recovery in demand helped push the
energy sector lower. [O/R] Falling yields on 10-year U.S.
Treasury notes from a 14-month highs last week have deflated this year’s
outperformance in the financial and energy sectors.
Conversely,
technology-related shares that had recently declined sharply on the rising rate
environment had recuperated a bit as yields eased, said Peter Tuz, president of Chase Investment Counsel
in Charlottesville, Virginia. “A lot of
these (tech) stocks have seen 10% to 20% corrections and interest rates have backed off a
bit,” Tuz said. “The money seems to be going back into them and out of the
groups that did extremely well the last three months, specifically financials
and energy.” The benchmark S&P
500 and the blue-chip Dow have rallied about 80% from their pandemic lows
of a year ago, while the tech-heavy Nasdaq more than doubled in value. Small cap stocks, which had outperformed this
year, along with financials, energy and international stocks, fell 3.5% in the
biggest single-day decline since Feb. 25.
The CBOE volatility index eased to its lowest level in 13 months
before jumping about 11% on the day. Wall Street’s so-called fear gauge
still hovers near pandemic lows.
The
Dow Jones Industrial Average fell 308.05 points, or 0.94%, to 32,423.15 and the
S&P 500 lost 30.07 points, or 0.76%, to 3,910.52. The Nasdaq Composite
dropped 149.85 points, or 1.12%, to 13,227.70.
Volume
on U.S. exchanges was 12.10 billion shares, compared with the 14.04 billion average for the full
session over the last 20 trading days.
Shares of GameStop Corp dropped 6.5% ahead of the company’s
fourth-quarter results due later on Tuesday. The videogame retailer announced
the exit of its chief customer officer in the latest sign of a broader overhaul
into an e-commerce firm. ViacomCBS Inc
tumbled 9.1% after the media firm launched $3 billion stock deals to raise
capital for investments in streaming. U.S.-listed shares of Chinese internet
search provider Baidu Inc slid 1.7% following a flat Hong Kong debut as
investors were wary of a fundraising flurry in the city and questioned the
company’s growth plans.
Declining issues outnumbered advancing ones on the NYSE by a 3.42-to-1 ratio; on Nasdaq, a 6.64-to-1 ratio favored decliners. The S&P 500 posted 11 new 52-week highs and no new lows; the Nasdaq Composite recorded 45 new highs and 99 new lows.
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