All the indexes were deeply in the red all day, the Dow starting some 500 points down and didn’t really improve a lot all day, rising a bit late in session to close 336 down. It again boils down to fear over continued rate hikes, today’s dive attributed to both a CPI report, considered the Fed’s main barometer, showing a 0.6% gain in prices in January vs 0.2% in December. This combined with more hawkish comments from the Fed that rates should go higher than necessary to meet the inflation target, which the futures traders have now raised to a possible 5.5% vs the prior 5.35%. Volume remains below average at 10.3 billion.
Fri February 24,
2023 5:07 PM
Wall St ends sharply down, posts biggest
weekly drop of 2023
By David French
DJ: 33,153.91 +108.82 NAS: 11,590.40 +83.33 S&P: 4,012.32 +21.27 2/23
DJ: 32,816.92 -336.99 NAS: 11,394.94 -195.46 S&P: 3,970.04
-42.28 2/24
Feb 24 (Reuters) - Wall Street's main indexes posted
their biggest weekly drop of 2023 after sharp losses on Friday, as investors
braced for the possibility of more aggressive rate hikes from the U.S. Federal
Reserve as U.S. economic data pointed to resilient consumers. For the blue-chip Dow Jones Industrial
Average (.DJI), the 3% fall was its
biggest weekly decline since September. It was also the Dow's fourth straight
weekly decline, its longest losing streak for nearly 10 months. The S&P
500 (.SPX) and Nasdaq
Composite (.IXIC) were also down 2.7%
and 3.3%, respectively. After a strong
January, stocks have retreated this month as a slew of economic data amplified
worries that the U.S. central bank might have to keep rates higher for longer.
Data on Friday showed
the personal consumption expenditures (PCE) price index, the Fed's preferred inflation gauge, shot up 0.6% last month after gaining just
0.2% in December. Consumer spending, which
accounts for more than two-thirds of U.S. economic activity, jumped 1.8% last month,
exceeding forecasts for a
1.3% rise. Jason Pride, chief
investment officer of private wealth at Glenmede, said previous market cycles
had witnessed similar delayed reactions by the market to rising interest rates
and data releases, which helps explain volatile trading patterns as investors
slowly adjust.
"This market has not yet realized the likelihood
of a recession that we think is reality," he said, noting past rate hikes normally
had taken between six and
18 months before their effects had fully filtered through into the
economy. "We don't think (a
recession is) a given, but there's a higher likelihood than the market has
embedded in its thought process." Traders
of futures tied to the Fed's policy rate added to bets of at
least three more rate hikes this year, with the peak rate seen in the range of 5.25%-5.5% by June. Cleveland Fed President Loretta Mester said the Fed should raise interest rates
higher than necessary if need be to get inflation fully under control.
The Dow Jones Industrial Average (.DJI) fell 336.99 points,
or 1.02%, to 32,816.92, the S&P 500 (.SPX) lost 42.28 points,
or 1.05%, to 3,970.04 and the Nasdaq Composite (.IXIC) dropped 195.46
points, or 1.69%, to 11,394.94. Nine of the 11 major S&P sectors fell,
with real estate (.SPLRCR),
technology (.SPLRCT) and
consumer discretionary (.SPLRCD) the biggest decliners.
Communication services (.SPLRCL) fell 1.4% to a
sixth straight loss, its worst run since a similar six-session skid in August.
Megacap stocks including Tesla
Inc (TSLA.O),
Amazon.com Inc (AMZN.O) and
Nvidia Corp (NVDA.O)
slid between 1.6% and 2.6%
as Treasury yields rose. The yield on
two-year Treasury notes , which are highly sensitive to Fed policy, climbed to
4.826% - its highest in nearly four months.
Boeing Co (BA.N) slid 4.8% after the
Federal Aviation Administration said the planemaker temporarily halted
deliveries of its 787 Dreamliner jets. Adobe Inc (ADBE.O) sank 7.6% on reports the
U.S. Justice Department would block the Photoshop maker's $20 billion bid for
cloud-based designer platform Figma. The
decline in Adobe's stock was the largest since Sept. 15, the day the Figma
agreement was announced. Meanwhile,
Range Resources Corp (RRC.N) jumped 11.9% in
late trading, its biggest gain in nine months, after Bloomberg News reported
that Pioneer Natural Resources (PXD.N) was in talks to
buy it. Pioneer's stock fell 4.1% on the report.
Volume on U.S. exchanges was 10.31 billion shares, compared with the 11.53 billion average for the full
session over the last 20 trading days.
The S&P 500 posted
2 new 52-week highs and 11 new lows; the Nasdaq Composite recorded 44 new highs
and 162 new lows.
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