All three indexes were in the black most of the day, the Dow up almost 200 points in the morning, but then slipped into the red around 2 pm to all close down by as much as their gains, the Nasdaq considerably more so. It was likely around 2 pm when the Fed tried throwing cold water on the market’s enthusiasm that the Fed was overstating inflation woes and emphasizing again that there would likely be two more hikes this year. The consumer appears to agree with the Fed as inflation expectations dropped to more than a two-year low. The Nasdaq has now had 8 consecutive weekly gains, the longest streak in four years, and the S&P its fifth. Volume was huge at 17 billion but this was distorted by the expiration of stock options so we’ll wait until Tuesday for the real picture.
S&P 500 ends lower as Microsoft
recedes from record high
By Noel
Randewich and Sruthi
Shankar
June 16, 2023 4:30 PM
DJ: 34,408.06 +428.73 NAS: 13,782.82 +156.34 S&P: 4,425.84 +53.25 6/15
DJ: 34,299.12 -108.94 NAS: 13,689.57 -93.25 S&P: 4,409.59
-16.25 6/16
June 16 (Reuters) - The S&P 500 ended lower on
Friday, weighed down by Microsoft and other market heavyweights as comments
from two Federal Reserve officials curtailed optimism that the central bank is
nearing the end of its aggressive interest rate hikes. The Nasdaq (.IXIC) also ended the week lower,
although the index and the S&P 500 remained near 14-month highs after economic data this week pointed to
cooling inflation, eclipsing concerns about further rate hikes. After holding rates steady on Wednesday, the
U.S. central bank signaled borrowing costs could rise as
much as half a percentage point by year-end. However, traders see the Fed
pausing hikes or even cutting rates in December following an expected
25-basis-point rate hike in July, according CMEGroup's Fedwatch tool.
Fed policymakers on Friday attempted to cool that
optimism. Fed Governor Christopher Waller warned
"core inflation is
not coming down like I thought it would." Richmond Fed President
Thomas Barkin said he was "comfortable" with further rate increases
given that inflation was
still not on the path back to 2%.
"I think the Fed
will continue to jawbone the market's enthusiasm down and say 'No, we
plan on raising two more times, but of course we are data dependent,'"
said CFRA Research Chief Investment Strategist Sam Stovall. U.S. consumers' near-term inflation expectations dropped to a
more than two-year low in June and the outlook over the next five years
improved slightly, according to the University of Michigan's survey that also showed sentiment perking
up.
A 1.7% decline in
Microsoft Corp (MSFT.O) and a 1.3%
dip in Amazon.com Inc (AMZN.O) weighed on
the S&P 500 and the Nasdaq. Microsoft's stock on Thursday closed at its
highest level ever. Nvidia Corp (NVDA.O) edged up 0.1% after Morgan
Stanley hiked its price target and named the chipmaker its top pick among U.S.
semiconductor firms.
U.S. stock markets will be closed on Monday for the
Juneteenth holiday.
S&P 500 fell 0.36% to end the session at 4,409.77
points. The Nasdaq declined 0.68% to
13,689.57 points, while the Dow Jones Industrial Average declined 0.31% to
34,301.03 points.
Volume on U.S. exchanges was heavy amid the simultaneous
expiration of stock options, stock index futures
and index options contracts. Nearly 17 billion shares were traded, compared to an average of 11
billion shares over the previous 20 sessions.
Of the 11 S&P
500 sector indexes, eight declined, led by communication services (.SPLRCL), down 1%, followed by a 0.83% loss
in information technology (.SPLRCT).
For the week, the S&P 500 rose 2.6%, the Dow added
1.2% and the Nasdaq gained 3.2%.
Fueled by recent
strong gains in Nvidia and other megacaps, the Nasdaq logged its eighth consecutive week of gains,
its longest streak
of weekly advance since
March 2019. The benchmark S&P 500's weekly gain was
its fifth in a row.
Adobe Inc rose 0.9% after the Photoshop maker's
earnings forecast surpassed analysts' estimates. iRobot Corp (IRBT.O) surged 21% after Britain's
competition regulator cleared Amazon's (AMZN.O) planned $1.7 billion acquisition
of the vacuum cleaner maker. Micron Technology (MU.O) fell 1.7% after warning of a
bigger hit to global revenue from a Chinese ban on the sale of its memory chips
to key domestic industries.
Declining stocks
outnumbered rising ones within the S&P 500 (.AD.SPX) by a 1.4-to-one ratio. The S&P 500 posted 24 new highs and no
new lows; the Nasdaq recorded 112 new highs and 67 new lows.
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