Stock Market Traders Discover That Bad News Is Bad After All – Yahoo Finance

Date:

- Advertisement -

(Bloomberg) — Order is being restored in financial markets, a frightening development for equity bulls.
Most Read from Bloomberg
Trump Hawks Superhero NFT Trading Cards as Crypto Universe Implodes
Is Putin Finally Getting Smart About His Ukraine Disaster?
Elon Musk’s Tesla Share Sales Approach the $40 Billion Mark
US Stocks Drop for a Second Day; Oil Snaps Rally: Markets Wrap
For the first time in a long time, news that was bad for the economy was bad for the stock market as well, more proof that recession fear has replaced inflation angst as that market’s biggest bugaboo. That bonds took the news in stride is nice for investors with a toe in each market, but adds to evidence that concern about the economy has become the bigger input to both.
Rather than rise on speculation that weak data would curb Federal Reserve tightening, the S&P 500 dropped 2.5% on Thursday, while the Nasdaq 100 lost 3.4%. Small-cap stocks lost more than 2.5% and the VIX volatility gauge shot back above 22. The yield on 10-year Treasuries hovered around 3.45%, down from a peak of 3.63% earlier this week.
“The concern is growth and what’s going to happen to the economy, and is the Fed pushing us into recession,” Mona Mahajan, senior investment strategist at Edward Jones, said on Bloomberg’s “What Goes Up” podcast on Thursday. “Markets won’t ignore the fact that we’re entering a downturn — and so could we head back toward those lows, give up some of the gains that we’ve seen recently? We think that is certainly a scenario that is a credible one.”
In months prior, bad economic news was often taken as good by investors because it suggested the Federal Reserve’s interest-rate increases were working as intended to cool the economy and tamp down inflation. But now a shift may be at hand: Many investors are worrying more about a recession in 2023, with the risk increasing that the Fed could overtighten.
Data Thursday suggested US economic growth is slowing, with retail sales and manufacturing dropping last month, though the labor market has remained strong. Retail sales fell in November by the most in nearly a year, calling into question the health of the consumer, while several factory measures also showed contraction, burdened by weaker demand, among other things. Meanwhile, regional Federal Reserve banks data showed that manufacturing weakened in both the New York and Philadelphia regions by more than expected — the latter’s new orders gauge fell to the lowest since the onset of the pandemic.
“Investors took their eye off the ball and were hoping for a glide path into the holidays,” said Mike Bailey, director of research at FBB Capital Partners. “Markets are realizing that we are in for a staring contest between Jay Powell and investors that could go on for three, six, or nine months.” He added that yields on short-term Treasuries rose Thursday, while those on longer-term ones declined, “which would support a theme of a hawkish Fed move near-term, pushing rates up, but also leading to perhaps a worse recession, which might suggest slower long-term growth and lower long rates.”
The iShares 20+ Year Treasury Bond ETF, known by its ticker TLT, is on pace to beat the SPDR S&P 500 ETF Trust (SPY) for five straight weeks, the longest winning streak since March of 2020. The Treasury fund is outperforming the latter by nearly 10 percentage points in December, poised for its best month since that period as well.
On Wednesday, the Fed raised its benchmark rate by 50 basis points to a 4.25%-to-4.5% target range and policymakers predicted rates would end next year at 5.1%, a higher level than previously indicated. Chair Jerome Powell reiterated that the central bank would keep rates higher for longer, and played down hopes for a rate cut next year.
The Fed also, among other projections, updated its forecast for the unemployment rate, saying it could rise to 4.6% next year — and such a hike from July’s trough of 3.5% “has never not caused a recession,” wrote Julian Emanuel, chief equity, derivatives and quantitative strategist at Evercore ISI, who added that no bear market has ever bottomed before a recession has started. Emanuel recommends a defensive position as the first half of 2023 could remain volatile still.
“The pullback in the market today — we aren’t surprised by it,” Nadia Lovell, UBS Global Wealth Management senior US equity strategist, told Bloomberg Television on Thursday. “This is a market that has traded on the hope that the Fed will not do what they say they will do. Yesterday they sent a clearly different message.”
“The risk is to the upside. That is what the market is grappling with today,” Lovell added. “We don’t yet think the bottom is into this market. You’ll probably see it in the first half of the year.”
–With assistance from Michael P. Regan and John McCorry.
Most Read from Bloomberg Businessweek
Long Covid’s Effects Go Beyond Respiratory Issues
A Racist Tweet Wasn’t the Only Problem at Elite London Firm
AmEx Hooked Big Spenders and Regained the Throne With a Pricier Platinum Card
China’s iPhone Factory Stumbles Give India a Chance to Swoop In
How a Cocaine-Smuggling Cartel Infiltrated the World’s Biggest Shipping Company
©2022 Bloomberg L.P.
Hyatt is showing relative strength as travelers make holiday plans. Third quarter occupancy rose to nearly 68%.
The house’s sales include $5.4 billion in auctioned art sales in 2022, down 10% from the year before. On Thursday, RM Sotheby’s, a collectible-car auctioneer for which Sotheby’s now owns a majority share, separately reported sales of $929 million, lifting Sotheby’s overall sales to $7.7 billion. Phillips’ tally includes $250 million in privately brokered art sales.
Shares of Novavax tumble as the vaccine maker plans to sell up to $125 million in stock, and offer $125 million of convertible senior notes.
Shares have fallen more than 70% in 2022 as Wall Street has grown more cautious about the videogame platform,
U.S. stocks finished sharply lower on Thursday, adding to the previous day's losses, a day after the Federal Reserve raised rates and revived recession worries.
Apart from ExxonMobil (XOM) and Chevron ((VX), Cenovus Energy (CVE), Transocean (RIG) and Petrobras (PBR) hogged attention during the week.
Former President Donald Trump teased on Truth Social that he would be making “a major announcement” on Thursday, December 15, exactly one month after launching his re-election bid. And the announcement turned out to be…….him selling digital cartoons of himself as a ripped superhero wearing the American flag as a cape for $99 each.
Fifteen years ago, in the first quarter of 2007, U.S. housing prices were at an all-time high. The Fed was raising interest rates. After a series of rate hikes, the Fed funds rate reached 5.25%, its highest point in six years.
The company said that about 90 people were laid off, but that it wasn't part of a companywide job cut.
When I was in my 20s, I was lucky to work for a company that offered a pension plan—and that put me on the road to retirement. How can you ensure a comfortable retirement? As I mentioned in an earlier article, a Fidelity Investments study found that if you save 15% of your gross income every year from age 25 through 67, and you also receive Social Security, that should ensure you have enough to maintain your current standard of living once you retire.
Retirees need to start planning at age 60 to avoid getting blindsided by the income-related monthly adjustment amount, or IRMAA, which can get tacked on to standard Medicare premiums
They all have market caps that have fallen by between 42% and 81% this year but have what's considered to be reliable revenue streams.
The legendary investor has just posted a message that might discourage investors from buying stocks.
Despite periods of relief, hampered by supply-chain issues and China’s zero-Covid policies, NIO (NIO) shares have been on an almost constant downtrend all year. That said, with the year’s end clearly in view, Deutsche Bank analyst Edison Yu sees a number of potential “positive developments” ahead for NIO, and these form the basis for a “short-term investment idea.” So, what are these positive developments to look forward to? Well, for one, while so far December’s weekly registration data has com
Whether increased regulation would have prevented the spectacular collapse of cryptocurrency exchange FTX was fiercely debated at a hearing of the Senate’s banking committee Wednesday. Sen. Elizabeth Warren announced at the hearing bipartisan legislation aimed at cracking down on cryptocurrencies being used in money laundering. The legislation, co-sponsored by Republican Sen. Roger Marshall of Kansas, would require cryptocurrency exchanges to verify customer identities like banks and other financial institutions do.
US Senators Elizabeth Warren and Roger Marshall have introduced a bipartisan bill designed to crack down on illegal uses of cryptocurrency.
Investor concerns have yet to abate, with worries given some added impetus this week when Fed Chair Jerome Powell said that the central bank is expecting interest rates to rise to 5.1% by the end of 2023. At that rate, many economists fear that a recession is inevitable. In fact, as a sign that recession might be on the horizon, November retail-sales data showed the biggest drop in over a year. The immediate result was a sudden drop in stocks across the board, but the unintended consequence may
In early trading, shares of Western Digital (NASDAQ: WDC), a manufacturer of computer hard disk drives and solid state drives, plunged more than 10%. Worse, the damage seems to be spreading throughout the computer hardware industry, with shares of semiconductors specialist Intel (NASDAQ: INTC) tumbling 3.3%, and Qualcomm (NASDAQ: QCOM) following everyone else lower — down 3.8%. This morning, Goldman Sachs (NYSE: GS) downgraded Western Digital stock from neutral to sell and cut its price target 28% to just $31 a share.
Most investors at least have a few stocks they can brag about. Not so this year with Cathie Wood's ARK Innovation.
Shares of Apple (NASDAQ: AAPL), Amazon (NASDAQ: AMZN), and Microsoft (NASDAQ: MSFT) were all sliding this morning as investors processed the latest Federal Reserve interest rate hike and as investors worry that the Fed could potentially tip the economy into a recession. Making matters worse today, the latest data shows that retail sales are slowing down. As a result, Apple had fallen by 3.4%, Amazon had plunged 4%, and Microsoft had tumbled by 3.1% at 11:31 a.m. ET.

source

- Advertisement -

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here

Share post:

Subscribe

ADVERTISEMENT

Popular

More like this
Related

IMF predicts global public debt will be at 93% of GDP by end of 2024

Global public debt will exceed US$100 trillion by the...

World Bank’s Banga says more bilateral debt forgiveness needed

World Bank President Ajay Banga said on Thursday (17...

Ghana, creditor panel agree on debt restructuring, paving way for IMF cash

Ghana has finalised a pact with its official creditor...

Nigeria strikes deal with Shell to supply $3.8 billion methanol project

Nigeria has struck a deal for Shell (SHEL.L), opens new...