U.S. Stocks Fall, Bond Yields Stabilize
U.S. stocks fell and a selloff in government bonds stabilized Friday, after the latest sign that the Federal Reserve will tighten monetary policy aggressively to fight inflation.
The S&P 500 fell 1.3% in morning trading, while the technology-heavy Nasdaq Composite declined 0.8%. The Dow Jones Industrial Average dropped 500 points, or 1.4%. On Thursday, major U.S. stock indexes finished with losses. All three indexes were on course to finish the week in the red.
This week’s steep rise in government bond yields showed signs of steadying, with the yield on the 10-year Treasury note recently at 2.895% after ending at 2.917% Thursday. Earlier Friday, yields staged a climb before reversing course. Yields rise when bond prices decline.
Concerns about inflation and the pace of monetary tightening by the Fed have remained at the forefront of investors’ minds this week and have helped lead to swings in major stock indexes. On Thursday, Fed Chairman
Jerome Powell
gave investors a clear signal that the central bank is ready to tighten monetary policy more quickly and indicated it was likely to raise interest rates by a half-percentage point at its meeting in May.
A rate increase next month, following the Fed’s quarter percentage point increase in March, would mark the first time since 2006 that the central bank increased its policy rate at back-to-back meetings.
Mr. Powell’s comments injected fresh volatility into a stock market that has been whipsawed this year by the war in Ukraine, soaring inflation and rising Covid-19 cases in China. Many traders are now worried that the Fed’s tightening cycle could tip the economy into a recession as consumers are already feeling uneasy about the economy. Next week, investors will parse fresh figures from The University of Michigan on April consumer sentiment.
“I think what you’re seeing is consumers are becoming much more hesitant,” said
Susannah Streeter,
senior investment and markets analyst at Hargreaves Lansdown. “It’s a tricky tightrope that central-bank policy makers are having to tread right now. They need to put a lid on that boiling pot of inflation but they don’t want steam to be driven out of the economy completely.”
Still, for now, investors have been encouraged by strong first-quarter earnings. Of the companies that have reported so far, nearly 80% have beat analyst expectations. That has helped provide some stability to the U.S. stock market.
Shares of
fell about 17%, on pace for its largest percent decrease since March 2020, after the hospital chain lowered its guidance for the year. The company said volume and revenue for the first quarter was offset by higher-than-expected inflationary pressures on labor costs.
The healthcare-company’s decline is worrying investors, who consider it be a defensive stock. Money managers often bet that consumers would spend money on hospital bills before any discretionary purchases.
“Usually when the economy’s slowing down, or there is a perception it’ll slow down, there are obvious sectors to hide in. Those traditional sectors aren’t as safe from earnings basis as they are historically because they still are going to have negative impact from inflation,” said
Tavis McCourt,
institutional equity strategist at Raymond James.
Shares of airlines rose.
added 2.3% and
gained 0.5%. On Thursday, American said its sales hit a record in March, the first month since the pandemic began in which the airline’s total revenue surpassed 2019 levels. United said it has been able to pass the rise in fuel prices on to consumers.
Shares of
fell 1.8% after the credit-card company logged first-quarter net income of $2.10 billion, down from $2.24 billion a year earlier, even as spending on travel and entertainment surged.
Gap shares fell 19% in early trading Friday, after the retailer cut its fiscal first-quarter guidance and announced the departure of the president and chief executive of its Old Navy business.
jumped 9 after the maker of…
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