The Dow was about 150 points up most of the day until the last hour when it took a sudden drastic dive and closed down 121 points. Once again it was the ongoing flight from the tech stocks to the financial and industrial sectors and others that will do well in a recovering economy that ruled the day with rising interest rates continuing to erode growth stocks which sent major players like Microsoft, Apple, and Amazon down. There was also less hiring in February suggesting a struggling labor market and today the exclusion of high-income individuals from the relief bill. Volume was much closer to the 4-week average at 14 billion.
WED MARCH 3, 2021 5:03 PM
Wall Street drops as high-flying tech
stocks retreat
DJ: 31,391.52 -143.99 NAS: 13,358.79 -230.04 S&P: 3,870.29 -31.53 3/2
DJ: 31,270.09
-121.43 NAS: 12,997.75 -361.04 S&P: 3,819.72
-50.57 3/3
(Reuters)
- The Nasdaq ended sharply lower on Wednesday after investors sold high-flying
technology shares and pivoted to sectors viewed as more likely to benefit from
an economic recovery on the back of fiscal stimulus and vaccination programs. Microsoft Corp, Apple Inc and Amazon.com Inc
dropped more than 2%, weighing more than any other stocks on the S&P 500. The S&P 500 financial and industrial
sector indexes reached intra-day record highs. Most other S&P 500 sectors
declined.
“Today is the perfect encapsulation of
the big theme we’ve been seeing in the past couple of months: The vaccine
rollout is going well and the economy improving, and that is sending yields and rate expectations higher, which is
hurting growth stocks,” said Baird investment strategist Ross Mayfield,
in Louisville, Kentucky.
The
Dow Jones Industrial Average fell 0.39% to end at 31,270.09 points, while the
S&P 500 lost 1.31% to 3,819.72. The
Nasdaq Composite dropped 2.7% to 12,997.75. That left it at its lowest since
early January and reduced its gain in 2021 to less than 1%.
The U.S. economic recovery continued at a modest pace over
the first weeks of this year, with businesses optimistic about the months to
come and demand for housing “robust,” but only slow improvement in the job market, the Federal
Reserve reported. While the vaccine
distribution is expected to help the economy, data showed U.S. private employers hired fewer workers
than expected in February, suggesting the labor market was struggling to regain speed. Another report showed U.S. services industry
activity unexpectedly slowed in February amid winter storms, while a measure of
prices paid by companies for inputs surged to the highest level in nearly 12-1/2
years.
The U.S. 10-year Treasury yield ticked up to 1.47%,
pressuring areas of the market with high valuations. It was still off last
week’s peak of above 1.61% that roiled stock markets as investors bet on rising
inflation. Rising interest rates disproportionately
hurt high-growth tech companies because investors value them based on
earnings expected years into the future, and high interest rates hurt the value
of future earnings more than the value of earnings made in the short term. “There is a definite headwind for equity
markets if yields go above the 1.5% level with most investors keeping an eye on
the pace of yield growth,” said Michael Stritch, chief investment officer at
BMO Wealth Management. President Joe
Biden’s proposed $1.9 trillion coronavirus relief bill would phase out $1,400 payments to
high-income Americans in a compromise with moderate Democratic senators,
according to lawmakers and media reports.
Exxon Mobil Corp rose 0.8% after the oil
major unveiled plans to grow dividends and curb spending with projections that
were less bold than previous years.
Declining issues outnumbered advancing
ones on the NYSE by a 1.31-to-1 ratio; on Nasdaq, a 1.95-to-1 ratio favored
decliners. The S&P 500 posted 62 new
52-week highs and no new lows; the Nasdaq Composite recorded 284 new highs and
68 new lows.
Volume on U.S. exchanges was 14 billion shares, compared with the 14.9 billion average for the full session over the last 20 trading days.
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