With the employment report coming out pretty exactly the way the market wanted, all the indexes opened well into the black, the Dow up some 170 points. Then about 11 a.m. everything started going south as investors decided, contrary to prevailing wisdom, that the solid jobs report which was supposed to keep this rally going, instead had the effect of triggering profit-taking.
There was a sell-off that landed everyone modestly in the red by closing, the Nasdaq a little more so, even though the Nasdaq, S&P and the overall tech index, all hit record highs again in the morning. The good news is that “the general bias right now is for the market to continue moving higher, inflation is going to continue to be benign, the Fed is going to start to ease.” And “these types of pullbacks are healthy to see.” Next week’s CPI and retail sales reports will offer more clues. At 12.3 billion, volume was a tad higher than average.
Wall Street slips from records with
Nasdaq leading declines
By Sinéad Carew and Bansari Mayur Kamdar
Fri March 8, 2024 6:13 PM
DJ: 38,791.35 +130.30 NAS: 16,273.38 +241.83 S&P: 5,157.36 +52.60 3/7
DJ: 38,722.69 -68.66 NAS: 16,085.11 -188.26 S&P: 5,123.69
-33.67 3/8
March 8 (Reuters) - The S&P 500 and Nasdaq closed lower on Friday after touching record
highs during the session, with high-flying chip stocks going into reverse and a
mixed labor market report that showed more new jobs than expected with a rising
unemployment rate. The S&P and
Nasdaq briefly hit intraday record highs but started to lose steam late
morning. The Philadelphia Semiconductor Index (.SOX), opens new tab sharply
underperformed and ended the day down 4% after touching an intraday record
high. Artificial intelligence chip
darling Nvidia (NVDA.O), opens new tab closed
down 5.6% to snap a six-session winning streak. Early in the session it had
been up more than 5%.
In the chip index, Broadcom (AVGO.O), opens new tab sank
7% after its full-year forecast failed to impress investors and Marvell Technology, opens new tab(MRVL.O), opens new tab tumbled
11.4% after it forecast first-quarter results below market expectations on soft
demand. Stocks had opened higher after data showed U.S. job growth accelerated in February,
with nonfarm payrolls increasing by 275,000 jobs against an expected 200,000 rise. January jobs
numbers were revised lower. Also, the unemployment rate rose to 3.9%
in February after holding at 3.7% for three straight months, while wage growth slowed to
0.1% on a monthly basis.
"Today is just profit taking," said Brian Price, head of investment
management for Commonwealth Financial Network who described the week as "a
microcosm of the year so far" with modest pull backs and buyers stepping
in.
Price pointed to some signs of consumers spending more cautiously, with Costco
Wholesale (COST.O), opens new tab shares
closing down 7.6% as quarterly sales fell short of estimates due to tepid demand
for higher-margin goods. But Price said
"the general bias
right now is for the market to continue to move higher, absent negative
catalysts." "That's really
what the market is hanging its hat on right now, that inflation is going to continue to be benign, that
the Fed is going to start to ease."
Next week's February data including consumer prices (CPI) and retail sales will offer more cues
on the prospects for potential rate cuts.
On Thursday, Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell said the central bank was "not far" from
gaining the confidence inflation is falling sufficiently to begin cutting
interest rates.
The Dow Jones Industrial
Average (.DJI), opens new tab fell
68.66 points, or 0.18%, to 38,722.69, the S&P 500 (.SPX), opens new tab lost
33.67 points, or 0.65%, to 5,123.69 and the Nasdaq Composite (.IXIC), opens new tab lost
188.26 points, or 1.16%, to 16,085.11. The biggest loser among the S&P 500's 11
major sectors was technology (.SPLRCT), opens new tab,
which ended down 1.8%, followed by consumer staples (.SPLRCS), opens new tab,
which fell 0.8%, with a big drag from Costco.
For the week the S&P
500 lost 0.26% while Nasdaq fell 1.17% and the Dow dropped 0.93%. "People may be taking some chips off the table.
We've had a decent run. Some of the technology names had moved up quite a
bit," said Charlie Ripley, Senior Investment Strategist for Allianz
Investment Management. "When you've
markets which have run up as much as this has since the start of the year, with
returns coming in a strong as they have, these types of pull backs are healthy to see."
The biggest
gainer was real estate (.SPLRCR), opens new tab,
which closed up 1.1% followed by energy (.SPNY), opens new tab,
which added 0.4%. Also on the bright
side, Gap (GPS.N), opens new tab shares
finished up 8.2% after the retailer beat Wall Street expectations for
fourth-quarter results, buoyed by strong demand on improved product offerings
at its Old Navy and namesake brands during the holiday season, and lower
markdowns.
Advancing issues outnumbered decliners by a 1.25-to-1 ratio on
the NYSE where there were 708 new highs and 48 new lows. On the Nasdaq 2,086 stocks rose and 2,192
fell as declining issues outnumbered advancers by about a 1.05-to-1 ratio. The S&P 500 posted 65 new 52-week highs
and no new lows while the Nasdaq recorded 351 new highs and 83 new lows.
On U.S. exchanges 12.29 billion shares changed hands compared with the 12.08
billion average for the last 20 sessions.
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