The day got started on a very good foot. In fact, the Dow was up nearly 200 points in the morning session, and the other two were up as well. Then at 1 pm everthing came crashing down and without any good explanation as to what inciting incident happened at 1 pm except for just continuing anxiety over inflation and the rapid rise in Treasury yields. Yesterday the panic was blamed on a poor report from Goldman Sachs but no such luck this time with both Morgan Stanley and BofA turning in stellar reports, but still panic ensued. At the end of the day, the Nasdaq was officially in correction territory having lost 10.7% from the November high. The last correction was last February so today marked the beginning of the fourth correction since the pandemic began. Volume was above average at 11.4 billion.
Wed January 19,
2022 4:57 PM
Wall
Street sell-off deepens, Nasdaq confirms correction
By Lewis
Krauskopf and Shreyashi Sanyal, Bansari Mayur Kamdar
DJ: 35,368.47 -543.34 NAS: 14,506.90 -386.86 S&P: 4,577.11 -85,74 1/18
DJ: 35,028.65 -339.82 NAS: 14,340.25 -166.64 S&P: 4,532.76
-44.35 1/19
Jan 19 (Reuters) - Wall Street's main
indexes ended sharply lower on Wednesday, with the tech-heavy Nasdaq confirming
it was in a correction, after a diverse set of corporate earnings and as
investors continued to worry about higher U.S. Treasury yields and the Federal
Reserve tightening monetary policy. The
Nasdaq ended down 10.7% from its Nov. 19 closing record high, as stocks sold
off into the market close. A correction is confirmed when an index closes 10%
or more below its record closing level. The
Nasdaq's last correction was in early 2021, when the tech-heavy index fell more
than 10% from Feb. 12 to March 8. It was the fourth time in the two years since
the coronavirus pandemic shook global markets that the index has found itself
in a correction. read
more
On
Wednesday, Apple (AAPL.O) shares fell 2.1%, weighing most on
the Nasdaq, while declines in Tesla (TSLA.O) and Amazon also dragged on the
index. Stocks have gotten off to a rocky start in 2022, as a
fast rise in Treasury
yields amid concerns the Fed will become aggressive in controlling
inflation has particularly hit tech and growth shares. The benchmark S&P
500 is down about 5% so far this year. “Any
beginning of tightening often results in significant volatility and I think
there is always that risk that there is a policy error and it ends the economic
cycle," said Kristina Hooper, chief global market strategist at Invesco.
"So we just have a
lot of apprehension.”
The Dow Jones Industrial Average (.DJI) fell
339.82 points, or 0.96%, to 35,028.65, the S&P 500 (.SPX) lost
44.35 points, or 0.97%, to 4,532.76 and the Nasdaq Composite (.IXIC) dropped
166.64 points, or 1.15%, to 14,340.26. Consumer discretionary (.SPLRCD) fell most among S&P 500
sectors, dropping 1.8%, while financials (.SPSY) dropped about 1.7% and
technology (.SPLRCT) slid 1.4%. The small-cap Russell 2000 (.RUT) fell 1.6%.
Stocks
had tumbled on Tuesday, with the Nasdaq falling 2.6%, after weak results from
Goldman Sachs and a spike in Treasury yields. U.S. Treasury yields eased on
Wednesday from two-year highs. Investors
are looking to next week's
Fed policy meeting for more clarity on central bankers' plans 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. "There's a fair amount of anxiety in terms of how the next three to
six months are going to play out with a rate-hike cycle set to start
likely in March," said Michael James, managing director of equity trading
at Wedbush Securities in Los Angeles.
In
company news, shares of Procter & Gamble (PG.N) rose 3.4% after the consumer goods company bumped
up its annual sales forecast. read more Bank of America
Corp (BAC.N) reported a better-than-expected 30% jump in quarterly profit,
while Morgan Stanley (MS.N) also reported fourth-quarter profit which beat market expectations,
following uneven results from other banks. Bank of America shares rose 0.4%,
while Morgan Stanley shares gained 1.8%. read more
Declining
issues outnumbered advancing ones on the NYSE by a 2.06-to-1 ratio; on Nasdaq,
a 2.09-to-1 ratio favored decliners. The
S&P 500 posted 13 new 52-week highs and seven new lows; the Nasdaq
Composite recorded 23 new highs and 630 new lows.
About 11.4 billion shares changed hands in U.S. exchanges, compared with the 10 billion daily average over the last 20 sessions.
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