Stocks are broadly lower in afternoon trading Thursday as investors are discouraged by economic data that showed continuing pain for recession-impacted Americans as well as the steady rise of bond yields.
The S&P 500 index lost 0.9% as of 1:10 p.m. Eastern. The Dow Jones Industrial Average was down 0.9% and the technology-heavy Nasdaq Composite was down 1.4%. The Russell 2000 index of small companies was down 1.6%.
Energy prices declined for a second day, as the frigid temperatures that impacted Texas and much of the Midwest moved east. Natural gas prices were down 4%. Energy prices have been volatile the past week as record demand for natural gas and other fossil fuels to warm homes has caused electricity prices to skyrocket. Natural gas is typically used as an “on-demand” fuel source to cover increased electrical needs.
Bond yields continue to climb, as murmurs of inflation have started among investors and as the economy continues to climb out of the hole that was created by the pandemic. The yield on the 10-year U.S. Treasury note was at 1.30%, nearly double where it was last fall. It’s now trading at levels seen before the March 2020 pandemic shutdowns.
The climb in bond yields has multiple impacts on the market. When bonds pay higher yields, they are more attractive to a broader group of investors, who tend to move money out of low-performing stocks and into the steady income of bonds. It’s a push-pull phenomenon that’s existed in the market for decades. With bonds no longer paying out rock-bottom yields, the inverse relationship betweens stocks and bonds could be reasserting itself.
Secondly, the bond market tends to be a good predictor for the economy. The steady rise in yields means investors see the economy getting better but it also suggests they’re concerned about inflation. President Joe Biden’s plan to spend $1.9 trillion on stimulus could be somewhat inflationary, although in a recession, that is not necessarily a bad thing.
Optimism that rollouts of coronavirus vaccines will set the stage for stronger economic growth in the second half of this year has been pushing the stock market higher. But expectations of a post-pandemic recovery also have resurrected concerns over inflation that could prompt governments and central banks to pull back on stimulus down the road in several months or even a year.
“No argument in the market is more important (right now) and more balanced than whether or not we are due for a large spike in inflation,” said Chris Zaccarelli, chief investment officer for Independent Advisor Alliance, in a note to clients.
A sign of how painful the U.S. economy remains for many Americans, and the argument for why additional stimulus is needed, came in this week’s jobless claims report. The government reported that applications for jobless benefits rose last week to 861,000. That’s the latest indication that layoffs remain high as coronavirus shutdowns keep many businesses closed.
Minutes from the Federal Reserve’s January policy meeting released Wednesday showed central bank officials believed the pandemic still poses considerable risks to the economy and still support keeping interest rates low in order to boost the economy and help millions of Americans regain lost jobs.
Fed Chairman Jerome Powell has cautioned that inflation could accelerate for a time in coming months as the country opens up. But he and many private economists believe this will be only a temporary rise and not a sign that inflation is getting out of control.
Dow component Walmart slumped 6% after reporting weaker results than analysts were expecting.
Shares of GameStop and other beaten-down companies that have been the focus of online retail investors were mostly stable on Thursday. Congress is conducting a hearing on the recent volatility of these companies, which have been in a tug-of-war between Wall Street institutional investors betting against the companies and the online retail investors who pushed shares higher.
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