It was a volatile session for the S&P and Nasdaq with the S&P back and forth between black and red a few times and the Nasdaq sinking big time after 10 a.m. and staying down until 2 pm before recovering to a modest 32 point loss. The Dow fared much better, always in the black but sinking a little mid-morning before going into an all-afternoon rally. Energy stocks provided the rallies as OPEC+ cut output unexpectedly, but of course this also triggered more inflation worries. These worries were however placated by a drop in manufacturing. Odds for ¼ point vs no rate hike are today at 56/44, up from 50/50 on Friday. Despite the day’s results, the S&P is up 7% for Q1, the Nasdaq 17%. Volume was light at 10.9 billion.
Mon April 3, 2023 4:14 PM
S&P 500 ends higher as oil stocks
rally; Tesla tumbles
By Noel
Randewich and Ankika
Biswas
DJ: 33,274.15 +415.12 NAS: 12,221.91 +208.44 S&P: 4,109.31 +58.48 3/31
DJ: 33,601.15 +327.00 NAS: 12,189.45 -32.45 S&P: 4,124.51
+15.20 4/3
April 3 (Reuters) - The S&P 500 ended higher on
Monday, lifted by energy stocks following surprise cuts to the OPEC+ group's
oil output targets, while Tesla tumbled after its electric vehicle deliveries
for the first quarter disappointed investors.
Tesla Inc (TSLA.O) dropped
6.1% after disclosing March-quarter deliveries rose
just 4% from the previous quarter, even after CEO Elon Musk slashed car prices
in January to boost demand. The S&P
500 energy sector index (.SPNY) surged 4.9%
after Saudi Arabia and other OPEC+ oil producers announced unexpected output cuts that could push oil prices
toward $100 a barrel. Chevron Corp (CVX.N), Exxon Mobil Corp (XOM.N) and Occidental Petroleum
Corp (OXY.N) all rallied more than 4%. However, the prospect of higher oil costs
added to inflation worries on Wall Street just days after evidence of cooling
prices raised expectations that the U.S. Federal Reserve might soon end its
aggressive monetary tightening campaign.
"The decision to cut production
is a headwind for inflation ... and that's why, on balance we're seeing
a generally 'risk off'
bias," said Terry Sandven, chief equity strategist at U.S. Bank
Wealth Management in Minneapolis. The
Dow was lifted in part by a 4.6% rally in UnitedHealth Group Inc (UNH.N) on better-than-proposed Medicare Advantage rates for 2024. Investors worried about inflation drew comfort from surveys
by the Institute for Supply Management and
S&P Global that reflected weakness in manufacturing activity in March. Interest rate futures imply 56% odds the Fed will raise
rates by 25 basis points at its meeting in May, and 44% odds it will keep interest
rates unchanged, according to CME Group's Fedwatch tool.
The S&P 500 climbed 0.37% to end the session at
4,124.49 points. The Nasdaq declined
0.27% to 12,189.45 points, while the Dow Jones Industrial Average rose 0.98% to
33,601.15 points. Despite turbulence in the global banking sector,
the S&P 500 jumped 7%
in the first quarter and the tech-heavy Nasdaq rallied 17%.
First-quarter earnings
season is around the corner, with big banks among the first to report in coming
weeks and offer details about the sector's overall
health after the March collapse of Silicon Valley Bank sparked a fears of a
broader industry crisis.
Across the U.S. stock
market (.AD.US), advancing stocks outnumbered falling
ones by a 1.1-to-one ratio. The S&P
500 posted 20 new highs and no new lows; the Nasdaq recorded 85 new highs and
121 new lows.
Volume on U.S. exchanges was relatively light, with 10.9
billion shares traded, compared with an average of
12.7 billion shares over the previous 20 sessions.
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