Continuing to fret over inflation, concerns exacerbated today by Goldman Sachs predicting that there would be four rate hikes this year instead of the expected three, all the indexes took a dive, the Dow by nearly 400 points, before investors decided to start buying the dip. Especially in tech, names that have seen drawdowns of 10% or more, as today’s expert put it, “people are looking at that and going that looks pretty good – time to snap them up.” And snap them up they did taking the Nasdaq and S&P from rather serious deficit positions to near break-even for the day, and the Dow to close down 162. Volume was above average at 12.1 billion.
Mon January 10,
2022 5:34 PM
Nasdaq
ekes out gain in late session comeback
By Sinéad
Carew and Caroline Valetkevitch
DJ: 36,231.66 -4.81 NAS: 14,935.90 -144.96 S&P: 4,677.03 -19.02 1/7
DJ: 36,068.87 -162.79 NAS: 14,942.83 +6.93 S&P: 4,670.29
-6.74 1/10
Jan 10 (Reuters) - Wall Street's three
major indexes staged a late-session comeback on Monday as the Nasdaq managed to
eke out a tiny gain and investors swooped in to hunt for bargains, while the
S&P 500 and the Dow Jones Industrial Average finished well above their
session lows. After falling almost 3%
earlier in the day and as much as 10.37% below its intraday record level
reached on Nov. 22, the technology-heavy Nasdaq pointed sharply higher to
regain all its losses for the day in afternoon trading. While investors spent the morning fretting
about rising bond yields and what this week's inflation data might mean for
U.S. Federal Reserve monetary policy tightening, others took advantage of
earlier nerves to buy the dip.
"We've
gotten to the point where you wonder if the roller coaster has peaked and is
heading straight down. But fundamentally
there's a lot of buyers in this market buying on the dip," said
Rick Meckler, a partner of Cherry Lane Investments, a family investment office
in New Vernon, New Jersey who attributed much of the afternoon strength to
retail investors buying favorite stocks such as Tesla (TSLA.O).
Paul Nolte, portfolio manager at Kingsview Investment Management in
Chicago also attributed the late session comeback to dip-buyers looking at U.S.
Treasury yields fall from their peaks of the day. "Some of the tech names are off 5 to 10 percent or more, and
people are looking at that and going that looks pretty good - time to snap them
up," said Nolte. "The
other thing though to keep an eye on is what happens to interest rates because that has really
been what's been dragging technology. We saw little bit of a reversal
late in the day in (Treasury yields). They came down just a touch and that was
a little bit of a green light for tech investors," he said.
The Dow Jones Industrial Average (.DJI) fell
162.79 points, or 0.45%, to 36,068.87, the S&P 500 (.SPX) lost
6.74 points, or 0.14%, to 4,670.29 and the Nasdaq Composite (.IXIC) added
6.93 points, or 0.05%, to 14,942.83.
After
starting the day among the biggest laggards, the S&P technology index (.SPLRCT) managed to eke out a tiny gain of
0.1%, behind the healthcare sector (.SPXHC) which closed up 1% and ahead of
communications services (.SPLRCR) which, rising 0.02%, was the
session's only other gainer among the 11 major industry sectors. The biggest decliners on the day were
industrials (.SPLRCI) which closed down 1.2% and
materials (.SPLRCM) which dropped 0.99%. Traders have ramped up their rate hike expectations since the Fed's
minutes from the December meeting appeared to signal an
earlier-than-expected rate rise.
Goldman Sachs said it expects the Fed
to raise rates four times in 2022, compared to its previous forecast of three. read more Earlier
the benchmark 10-year
Treasury yield rose to its highest level in nearly two years on Monday. read more After
falling as much as 4.6% earlier in the session, Nasdaq heavyweight Tesla (TSLA.O) made a dramatic turnaround to
close up 3%. Meckler said retail
investors appeared to flood back into the stock which had suffered after Chief
Executive Elon Musk tweeted on Friday that the electric carmaker will raise the
U.S. price of its advanced driver assistant software. read more Nike
shares closed down 4.2% after HSBC downgraded the stock to "hold."
Declining
issues outnumbered advancing ones on the NYSE by a 2.04-to-1 ratio; on Nasdaq,
a 1.97-to-1 ratio favored decliners. The
S&P 500 posted 38 new 52-week highs and 5 new lows; the Nasdaq Composite
recorded 69 new highs and 609 new lows.
On U.S. exchanges 12.15 billion shares changed hands compared with the 10.55 billion average for the last 20 sessions.
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