Worries that Friday’s non-farm payrolls report will show even more inflation has fueled concerns that there will be a ½ point rate hike this month. The higher hikes will be seen to hurt the banks abilities to lend and thus the entire banking sector sank today bringing the whole market down with it, the Dow a big 543 points. The one bit of good news is that today’s Labor Department report showed 21,000 more unemployed than forecast and being taken as the first sign that the labor market may finally be loosening which is good news on the inflation front. But Friday’s payrolls report will tell a better story and is expected to show less than half the increase in new jobs than January but still not enough, still ticking in the wrong direction. For once volume was above average at about 11.7 billion.
Thu March 9, 2023 4:46 PM
Wall St falls on bank stocks tumble,
jobs report jitters
By Sinéad Carew and Amruta Khandekar
DJ: 32,798.40 -58.06 NAS: 11,576.00 +45.67 S&P: 3,992.01 +5.64 3/8
DJ: 32,254.86 -543.54 NAS: 11,338.35 -237.65 S&P: 3,918.32
-73.69 3/9
March 9 (Reuters) - Wall Street's three major stock
indexes closed lower on Thursday, with bank stocks creating the biggest drag
while investors also worried that Friday's jobs report could spur more
aggressive interest rate hikes from the Federal Reserve. The S&P 500's bank index (.SPXBK) finished down 6.6% after hitting
its lowest level since mid-October. Investors fled the sector after
tech-industry lender SVB Financial Group (SIVB.O) launched a share sale to shore
up its balance sheet due to declining deposits from startups struggling for
funding. The Nasadaq ended down more
than 2% while the benchmark S&P 500 and the Dow lost close to 2%.
Investors were also stressing out before
Friday's U.S. non-farm payrolls report for February with expectations for large wage
increases fueling inflation worries. Fed Chair Jerome Powell this week
exacerbated concerns about upcoming interest rate hikes aimed at fighting
stubbornly high inflation. Traders were
betting that chances of a
50-basis-point rate hike at the Fed's March meeting were around 60%, according to CME Group's
FedWatch tool, up sharply from a probability of 31% before Powell's Tuesday and
Wednesday appearances in Congress.
"There's a lot of
anticipation around tomorrow's jobs report. We're going to get a slew of data
in the next week and a half," said Mona Mahajan, Senior Investment
Strategist, Edward Jones, New York, also citing inflation and retail sales
reports all due out before the next Fed meeting which ends March 22. Earlier on Thursday, Labor Department data
showed initial claims
for state unemployment benefits rose 21,000
to a seasonally adjusted 211,000
for the week ended March 4, compared with economist forecasts for 195,000 claims. While last week's increased jobless claims
may be "the first
sign the labor market may be showing signs of loosening," Mahajan
wants to see "more data points to establish a trend." The February non-farm payrolls report is expected to show a payrolls
increase of 205,000 after January's blowout 517,000 figure, which had
already led markets to brace for a bigger U.S. rate hike.
Any proof last month's
"gigantic payrolls number wasn't an anomaly" would serve to
"reinforce the market's anxieties around the Fed's response to it,"
said Mark Luschini, chief investment strategist at Janney Montgomery Scott in
Philadelphia. And with February wage increases expected
to rise 4.7% compared with January's 4.4%, "it feels like its ticking in the wrong direction
even if we just meet expectations," said Mahajan who will be closely
watching the wage data.
The Dow Jones Industrial Average (.DJI) fell 543.54 points, or 1.66%, to
32,254.86, the S&P 500 (.SPX) lost 73.69
points, or 1.85%, to 3,918.32 and the Nasdaq Composite (.IXIC) dropped 237.65 points, or 2.05%,
to 11,338.36. The biggest drag on the S&P 500 came from
the financial sector (.SPSY) followed by
information technology (.SPLRCT). The financials index ended the day down 4%,
its deepest one-day percentage loss since June 2020. The S&P bank sub-sector (.SPXBK) turned negative for the year-to-date
on Thursday, last down 4.7% so far for 2023. Thursday was its first full
day trading below its 200-day moving average since Jan. 5.
All the S&P's 11 major industry sectors ended the
session lower. Utilities (.SPLRCU), down 0.8% was the smallest decliner. Consumer
staples (.SPLRCS) was the next smallest,
down 0.95%, with healthcare (.SPXHC) down 1%. With investors already concerned that the Fed could over-tighten and cause
a recession and hurt bank lending demand, "there's an element of
'sell-first ask questions later' with regard to contagion risk," from SVB
Financial for banks said Luschini at Janney Montgomery Scott.
SVB closed down 60% at
$106.04 after falling at one point by around 63% and hitting its lowest level
since August 2016 after the lender slashed its 2023 outlook and launched a
share sale to shore up its balance sheet.
Also weighing on the sub-index was Signature Bank (SBNY.O), which tumbled 12% to $90.76 after
its crypto-bank peer Silvergate Capital Corp (SI.N) disclosed plans to voluntarily
liquidate. Silvergate closed down 42% to $2.84.
On the bright side, General Electric Co (GE.N) closed up more than 5% after the
industrial conglomerate reiterated its 2023 earnings forecast.
Declining issues
outnumbered advancing ones on the NYSE by a 5.12-to-1 ratio; on Nasdaq, a
3.83-to-1 ratio favored decliners. The
S&P 500 posted 5 new 52-week highs and 22 new lows; the Nasdaq Composite
recorded 58 new highs and 289 new lows.
On U.S exchanges 11.69 billion shares changed
hands compared with the 10.95 billion average for the last 20 sessions.
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