Paris has gone into lockdown with a surge in COVID and that has awakened us Americans to the fact that, though there is optimism here, that has not yet infected most of the rest of the world. This realization caused panic selling today sending the Dow down 153 and the Nasdaq sharply down 409. Data showing an increase in unemployment claims and the 10-year Treasuries hitting a 14 month high also didn’t help. The transfer from tech to value continues though. Dollar General which has benefitted from the pandemic fell. AMC, which is reopening its theaters on the hopes of recovery, climbed. Volume remains well below average at 12.8 billion.
THU MARCH 18, 2021 4:19 PM
Wall Street ends sharply lower, hit
by bond yields and COVID-19 worries
DJ: 33,015.37 +189.42 NAS: 13,525.20 +53.64 S&P: 3,974.12 +11.41 3/17
DJ: 32,862.30 -153.07 NAS: 13,116.17 -409.03 S&P: 3,915.46
-58.66 3/18
(Reuters)
- Wall Street ended sharply lower on Thursday, with the Nasdaq tumbling 3%, hit
by rising Treasury yields and fresh worries about the coronavirus pandemic in
Europe. Losses in U.S. stocks
accelerated after France’s prime minister imposed a month-long lockdown on
Paris and several other regions due to the health crisis. It was the Nasdaq’s
steepest one-day drop since Feb. 25. The
S&P 500 energy sector index tumbled 4.7% as oil prices fell, in part due to
worries about rising COVID-19 cases in Europe.
“That last hit was from news of the Paris lockdown. It wasn’t
received that well,” said Joe Saluzzi, co-manager of trading at Themis
Trading in Chatham, New Jersey. “Here in the United States, we anticipate this big reopening and
the virus is looking good,
but we are not looking outside
of the U.S., and it’s not all good.”
The Russell 1000 value index, which is
heavily comprised of cyclical stocks such as financials and energy, lost 0.6%,
while the Russell 1000 growth index, which includes technology stocks, dropped
more than 2%. The yield on the benchmark
10-year Treasuries crossed
1.75% to hit a 14-month high a day after the Fed projected the strongest
growth in nearly 40 years as the COVID-19 crisis winds down. The Fed also
repeated its pledge to keep its target interest rate near zero for years to
come. “The Fed just saying they are not
going to raise rates until 2023 really means nothing,” said Tim Ghriskey, chief
investment strategist at Inverness Counsel in New York. “The Fed is on the sidelines, but
if bond yields keep going up, that is what really hurts the economy.”
Apple Inc and Amazon.com Inc both
dropped more than 3%. Tech and other growth stocks are particularly sensitive
to rising yields because their value rests heavily on earnings far into the
future, which are discounted more deeply when bond yields rise. A recent $1.9 trillion spending stimulus sparked fears of rising
inflation and contributed to the jump in longer-end Treasury yields. Underscoring the staggered recovery in the
labor market, data showed the number of Americans filing for jobless benefits unexpectedly
rose last week. A separate report
indicated the Philly Fed business index jumped more than expected, to its
highest level since 1973.
The
Dow Jones Industrial Average fell 0.46% to end at 32,862.3 points, while the
S&P 500 lost 1.48% to 3,915.47. The
Nasdaq Composite dropped 3.02% to 13,116.17.
The S&P 500 and the Dow both closed at record highs on Wednesday.
Accenture rose 1% after the IT
consulting firm raised its full-year revenue forecast and reported
second-quarter revenue above analysts’ estimates, as more businesses used its
digital services to shift operations to the cloud. Dollar General Corp dropped 4.65% after the retailer forecast
annual same-store sales and profit below estimates, indicating that a pandemic-fueled rush for
lower-priced goods may be waning faster than expected. AMC Entertainment climbed more than 3% after the movie theater operator
said it would have 98% of its U.S. locations open from Friday.
Declining issues outnumbered advancing
ones on the NYSE by a 3.69-to-1 ratio; on Nasdaq, a 3.42-to-1 ratio favored
decliners. The S&P 500 posted 85 new
52-week highs and no new lows; the Nasdaq Composite recorded 213 new highs and
28 new lows.
Volume on U.S. exchanges was 12.8 billion shares, compared with the 14.2 billion average for the full session over the last 20 trading days.
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