When Goldman Sachs turned in a less than glowing Q4 report on Tuesday, it triggered an avalanche of panic selling related to the perfect storm of coming Fed rate hikes deflating tech, inflation spikes ballooning Treasury yields to a 2 year high, and a fall in the big megastocks including Microsoft, Apple and Facebook. Now more than ever investors will be focused on next week’s Fed meeting for more clarity on inflation. Meanwhile today’s volume shot up to nearly 12 billion.
Tue January 18,
2022 7:43 PM
Wall
St sinks as yields spike, financials fall after Goldman miss
By Lewis
Krauskopf and Bansari Mayur Kamdar, Shreyashi Sanyal
DJ: 35,911.81 -201.81 NAS: 14,893.75 +86.94 S&P: 4,662.85 +3.82 1/14
DJ: 35,368.47 -543.34 NAS: 14,506.90 -386.86 S&P: 4,577.11
-85,74 1/18
Jan 18 (Reuters) - Wall Street's main
indexes fell sharply on Tuesday as weak results from Goldman Sachs weighed on
financial stocks and tech shares continued their sell-off to start the year as
U.S. Treasury yields rose to milestones.
The Nasdaq dropped most among major indexes on Tuesday and now has
fallen about 9.7% from its Nov. 19 record closing high, close to confirming a
10% correction for the first time since early 2021. The tech-heavy index also
closed below its 200-day moving average, a key technical support level, for the
first time since April 2020.
Goldman Sachs(GS.N) shares
tumbled 7% after the investment bank missed quarterly profit expectations amid weak trading activity. The financials sector (.SPSY), which has been one of the
better-performing groups in 2022, dropped 2.3%. “The financials crumbling a little
bit under the weight of less-than-impressive earnings quarters is
probably the biggest factor today,” said Chuck Carlson, chief executive officer
at Horizon Investment Services in Hammond, Indiana. “When you have taken out
potentially one of the areas that actually was working here, that kind of casts
a pall on the market.”
Benchmark
U.S. Treasury yields
jumped to two-year highs and two-year yields breached 1% as traders prepared for the
Federal Reserve to be more aggressive in tackling unabated inflation. The steep ascent in yields to start 2022 has
weighed in particular on tech and growth stocks, whose future expected cash
flows are discounted more sharply as yields rise. “The hot inflation prints have spooked the
market that the Fed is
going to move and so we are seeing this rise in yields,” said Mona
Mahajan, senior investment strategist at Edward Jones. "It’s not only the rise in yields but
the rapid rise in yields
... that really does cause
some indigestion in the market, but particularly in growth, higher
valuation, more speculative asset classes,” Mahajan said.
The Dow Jones Industrial Average (.DJI) fell
543.34 points, or 1.51%, to 35,368.47, the S&P 500 (.SPX) lost
85.74 points, or 1.84%, to 4,577.11 and the Nasdaq Composite (.IXIC) dropped
386.86 points, or 2.6%, to 14,506.90. Of 11 S&P 500
sectors, 10 ended lower, with technology (.SPLRCT) falling the most. Energy (.SPNY), the top-percentage gainer so far in
2022, was the lone sector in positive territory, rising 0.4%.
Declines in megacap stocks, including Microsoft (MSFT.O), Apple (AAPL.O) and Meta Platforms (FB.O), weighed
heavily on the S&P 500 among individual shares. A BofA survey showed that fund managers had cut their
overweight positions in tech to their lowest levels since 2008, while
another survey by Deutsche Bank found that a majority of respondents believed
U.S. technology stocks are in bubble territory. read more Investors
are zeroing in on next
week's Fed policy meeting for more clarity on central bankers' next
moves to rein in inflation.
Data last week showed U.S. consumer prices increased solidly in December,
culminating in the largest annual rise in inflation in nearly four
decades. read more
In
company news, Activision (ATVI.O) shares soared nearly 26% after
Microsoft (MSFT.O) announced a deal to buy the
video-game maker for $68.7 billion. Shares of other video game companies rose,
with Electronic Arts (EA.O) up 2.7% and Take-Two Interactive Software (TTWO.O) up 1%. Microsoft shares fell
2.4%. read more
Declining
issues outnumbered advancing ones on the NYSE by a 5.52-to-1 ratio; on Nasdaq,
a 4.93-to-1 ratio favored decliners. The
S&P 500 posted 34 new 52-week highs and nine new lows; the Nasdaq Composite
recorded 69 new highs and 611 new lows.
About 11.9 billion shares changed
hands in U.S. exchanges, compared with the 10 billion daily average over
the last 20 sessions.
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