For the second day the market took a bath. Yesterday it was profit-taking. Today it was fear when the CPI report came out and did not quell investor anxieties about inflation, rather showing it to have spiked to a 31 year high. It says the report “hinted” that the global supply chain crisis “could” be the cause. I think there’s no doubt at all that the supply chain is the cause and that is why the Fed has been consistent in its position that this is transitory.
The supply chain problem will get worked out in the next several months and then prices will return to normal. And as was reported, why would today’s CPI report have come as a surprise to anyone? We all know what we’ve been paying for gas and groceries. We’ve all seen the empty shelves in stores. But all three indexes took a big hit. Does this mean there will be a buying opportunity tomorrow or Friday? Volume was above average at 11.7 billion.
WED
NOVEMBER 10, 2021 4:36 PM
Wall Street ends lower as economic
data raises long-term inflation threat
DJ: 36,319.98 -112.24 NAS: 15,886.54 -95.81 S&P: 4,685.25 -16.45 11/9
DJ: 36,079.94 -240.04 NAS: 15,622.71 -263.84 S&P: 4,646.71
-38.54 11/10
NEW
YORK (Reuters) - Wall Street closed sharply lower on Wednesday as surging
consumer prices curbed investor risk appetite, and stoked worries of a
protracted wave of red hot inflation. All three major U.S. stock indexes fell,
extending their losses throughout the trading day and adding to Tuesday’s
sell-off which snapped the S&P 500’s and Nasdaq’s eight-session runs of
all-time closing highs. “It’s not
surprising that after what was truly a historic run for the market to take a
pause,” said Ross Mayfield, investment strategy analyst at Baird in Louisville,
Kentucky. “But we do think there are enough tailwinds heading into year-end to
move the market higher.” The Labor
Department’s consumer price index (CPI), delivered a hotter-than-expected jump
of 0.9% and the fastest year-on-year gain in 31 years.
The
report hinted that the persistently tangled global supply chain could result in
the current inflation wave
taking longer to abate than many - including the U.S. Federal Reserve - had
hoped. “The inflation story is really the driver that drives all
things,” Mayfield added. “It will affect Fed policy and fiscal policy,
it’s the driver of interest rates. It’s hard to talk about anything but
inflation.” And Gregory Daco, chief
economist of Oxford Economics, believes this report means current price spikes
have some staying power. “I think things will continue to get
worse before they get better in terms of the inflation outlook because
we don’t see core inflation peaking
until sometime in early 2022,” Daco said.
The
Dow Jones Industrial Average fell 240.04 points, or 0.66%, to 36,079.94, the
S&P 500 lost 38.54 points, or 0.82%, to 4,646.71 and the Nasdaq Composite
dropped 263.84 points, or 1.66%, to 15,622.71. Of the 11 major
sectors in the S&P 500 eight closed red, with energy suffering the biggest
percentage losses. Utilities led the gainers.
Tech weighed heaviest on the S&P 500, with megacaps Apple Inc and
Microsoft Corp among the biggest drags. Third-quarter earnings
season has reached the final stretch, and of the companies having reported, 81% have beaten street
expectations.
Walt Disney Co shares dropped more than
4% in after-hours trading after the media company reported disappointing
streaming subscriber numbers. Tesla Inc
rose 4.3%, reversing several sessions of declines in the wake of CEO Elon
Musk’s polling Twitter users on whether he should sell 10% of his stake in the
company he founded. This comes as rival
electric vehicle maker Rivian Automotive Inc made its splash as a publicly
traded company, raising $12 billion. Its shares surged 29.1%. Retail trading platform Robinhood Markets Inc plunged
6.0%, adding to its losses two days after reporting a security breach affecting
5 million customers.
Declining issues outnumbered advancing
ones on the NYSE by a 2.26-to-1 ratio; on Nasdaq, a 2.50-to-1 ratio favored
decliners. The S&P 500 posted 26 new
52-week highs and 4 new lows; the Nasdaq Composite recorded 95 new highs and
121 new lows.
Volume on U.S. exchanges was 11.72 billion shares, compared with the 10.89 billion average over the last 20 trading days.
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