The news from the Fed minutes contained no surprises and more reassurances that most officials agreed to slow rate increases to ¼ point until inflation was under control. This was enough good news to lift all the indexes for most of the day, the Dow being up some 120 points until 2 pm when everything went on the decline again with both the Dow and S&P ending modestly down, the Nasdaq modestly up. But though the news was mostly positive, it was yet another nail in the coffin that the rate hiking campaign would continue despite recession risks. Volume remained below average at 10.58 billion.
Wed February 22, 2023 5:21 PM
S&P ends down as Fed minutes fail to
halt losing run
By David French
DJ: 33,129.59 -697.10 NAS: 11,492.30 -294.97 S&P: 3,997.34 -81.75 2/21
DJ: 33,045.09 -84.50 NAS: 11,507.07 +14.77 S&P: 3,991.05
-6.29 2/22
Feb 22 (Reuters) - The S&P 500 (.SPX) extended its losing streak to four
sessions as Wall Street ended broadly lower on Wednesday, with investors
cautious despite the latest guidance on rate policy from the U.S. central bank
showing few surprises. Minutes from the
Federal Reserve's Jan. 31-Feb. 1 meeting said that "almost all" Fed
officials agreed to slow the pace of increases in interest rates to a quarter
of a percentage point. There was also
solid backing though for the belief that the risks of high inflation remained a
"key factor" that would shape monetary policy and further rate hikes
would be necessary until it was controlled.
Such messaging carried few surprises versus what the Fed and its governors have been communicating
in recent weeks, and stocks
were broadly steady in the wake of the minutes' release, after choppy
trading prior to their publication. However,
a general weakening in the
final hour of trading pushed both the S&P 500 (.SPX) and the Dow Jones Industrial (.DJI) back into the red. The Nasdaq
Composite (.IXIC) managed to scrape back into positive
territory though in the final moments, ensuring its own losing streak was
snapped at three. "It's clear that
the Fed is determined to
keep on with its rate-hiking campaign, and they are going to do it even
as recession risks grow," said Ed Moya, senior market analyst at OANDA. "And that's why, after digesting the minutes, you saw markets softening
a little bit."
For the S&P, it is now on its
longest negative run since mid-December, and finished below 4,000 points
for the second straight day: a level not recorded since Jan. 20.
The Dow fell 84.5 points, or 0.26%, to 33,045.09, the
S&P lost 6.29 points, or 0.16%, to 3,991.05 and the Nasdaq added 14.77
points, or 0.13%, to 11,507.07. Despite the declines experienced by the
S&P and the Dow, the
falls were not as sharp as Tuesday's, which was the worst daily performance posted
by markets in 2023.
Following a market
rout in 2022, the three major indexes logged monthly gains in January as investors hoped the
Fed would pause its rate hikes and perhaps pivot around year-end. However, stocks have had a volatile run in February,
as traders priced in higher interest rates for longer, assuming that inflation
remains higher in a sturdy economy. Money
market participants expect
rates to peak at 5.35% by July and stay around those levels till the end
of 2023.
"We'll see what
happens with equities, but I think downward momentum should lead over the next couple
of weeks," said OANDA's Moya. Most
of the 11 major S&P 500 sectors fell, with energy (.SPNY) and real estate (.SPLRCR) the poorest performers. The duo
declined 0.8% and 1%, respectively. The
energy index has finished lower for seven straight sessions, as commodity
prices have come under pressure from investor concerns over future economic
growth and fuel demand.
Meanwhile, CoStar
Group Inc (CSGP.O) fell 5.1%
after the online real estate marketplaces provider said it was no longer in
talks to buy Realtor.com owner Move Inc from News Corp (NWSA.O) - which, itself, closed 3.2%
lower.
Volume on U.S. exchanges was 10.58 billion shares, compared with the 11.61 billion average for the full
session over the last 20 trading days.
The S&P 500 posted
four new 52-week highs and one new low; the Nasdaq Composite recorded 36 new
highs and 110 new lows.
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