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S&P posts 4th straight decline as recession talk weighs on Wall Street

Published 12/06/2022, 06:24 AM
Updated 12/06/2022, 07:55 PM
© Reuters. FILE PHOTO: The Wall Street entrance to the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) is seen in New York City, U.S., November 15, 2022. REUTERS/Brendan McDermid/File Photo
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By David French

(Reuters) - Wall Street ended lower on Tuesday, with the S&P 500 extending its losing streak to four sessions, as skittish investors fretted over Federal Reserve rate hikes and further talk of a looming recession.

Meta Platforms Inc (NASDAQ:META) dragged down markets, with its shares sliding 6.8% following reports that European Union regulators have ruled the company should not require users to agree to personalized ads based on their digital activity.

However, technology names generally suffered as investors applied caution toward high-growth companies whose performance would be sluggish in a challenging economy. Apple Inc (NASDAQ:AAPL), Amazon.com Inc (NASDAQ:AMZN) and Alphabet (NASDAQ:GOOGL) Inc fell between 2.5% and 3%, while the tech-heavy Nasdaq was pulled lower for a third straight session.

Most of the 11 major S&P sectors declined, with energy and communications services joining technology as leading laggards. Utilities, a defensive sector often preferred during times of economic uncertainty, was the only exception, gaining 0.7%.

Future economic growth prospects were in focus on Tuesday following comments from financial titans pointing toward uncertain times ahead.

Bank of America Corp (NYSE:BAC)'s chief executive predicted three quarters of mild negative growth next year, while JPMorgan Chase (NYSE:JPM) and Co's CEO Jamie Dimon said inflation will erode consumer spending power and that a mild to more pronounced recession was likely ahead.

Their comments came on the heels of recent views from BlackRock (NYSE:BLK) and others that believe the U.S. Federal Reserve's aggressive monetary tightening to combat stubbornly high price rises could induce an economic downturn in 2023.

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"The market is very reactive right now," said David Sadkin, president at Bel Air Investment Advisors.

He noted that, while markets traditionally reflect the future, right now they are moving up and down based on the latest headlines.

Fears about economic growth come amid a re-evaluation by traders of what path future interest rate hikes will take, following strong data on jobs and the services sector in recent days.

Money market bets are pointing to a 91% chance that the U.S. central bank might raise rates by 50 basis points at its Dec. 13-14 policy meeting, with rates expected to peak at 4.98% in May 2023, up from 4.92% estimated on Monday before service-sector data was released.

The S&P 500 rallied 13.8% in October and November on hopes of smaller rate hikes and better-than-expected earnings, although such Fed expectations could be undermined by further data releases, including producer prices due out on Friday.

"The market got ahead of itself at the end of November, but then we got some good economic data, so people are re-evaluating what the Fed is going to do next week," said Bel Air's Sadkin.

The Dow Jones Industrial Average fell 350.76 points, or 1.03%, to close at 33,596.34, the S&P 500 lost 57.58 points, or 1.44%, to finish at 3,941.26 and the Nasdaq Composite dropped 225.05 points, or 2%, to end on 11,014.89.

Jitters on the direction of global growth have also weighed on oil prices, with U.S. crude slipping to levels last seen in January, before Russia's invasion of Ukraine disrupted supply markets. The energy sector fell 2.7% on Tuesday.

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Banks are among the most sensitive stocks to an economic downturn, as they potentially face negative effects from bad loans or slowing loan growth. The S&P banks index slipped 1.4% to its lowest close since Oct. 21.

Volume on U.S. exchanges was 11.01 billion shares, in line with the average for the full session over the last 20 trading days.

The S&P 500 posted three new 52-week highs and nine new lows; the Nasdaq Composite recorded 52 new highs and 262 new lows.

Latest comments

Excuse da jour, chicken little, the sky is falling! Fraudulent bull*%#$.
recession talk is a good thing at this point, the talk would convince fed members to lean to dovish mode. plus, Georgia election result clears uncertainty toward political gridlock, ideal for stock mkt rally.
markets are forward looking ..means we have to test the new lows
stop panicking, soft landing ahead
recession fear comes from fed's mistake of rate hiking too much. So, the fear is manufactured, man-made, artificial, probably political. People should have basic human right to have freedom from fear of this kind.
All human fear is man-made.
maybe Fed members become afraid of constitional attack on their existence and back down interest rate hiking mistake.
fed should have only one of stock mkt's stable growth. inflation conrol should be goal of the executive branch.
Trump chimed in on the stock market a LOT while potus, and the market was in a multi-year trumpet/megaphone pattern during his term.
Him chiming in on the Fed didn't help, either.
Look at how well/badly Turkey's central bank is doing.
yes, do not forget yellen is current Treasuy Sec. yellen, the best economist ever. so there is real hope. powell does not matter.
gentleman biden should act for people and scold powell on behalf of people. for the people, by the people.
Its not Powells or Biden’s fault people are scared of a recession and selling stocks to prepare
No need to worry, the recession will be short and transitory like inflation.
BAC and JPM already said it'll be "mild"
biden's worst mistake was selecting Powell. this is why mkt is suffering.
You're a bot, just out here fishing! I told you weeks ago that Trump hired Powell.
Trump made Powell chairman because he is white and male and Yellen is a woman and was hired by Obama.
I heard Putin gave Trump the go ahead. or was it climate change? so hard to keep up with your excuses
The “worries” were created by Bloomberg, Reuters and all these media keep making fake news and stories !
Then say something true.
Do you work for the CCP?  You attack world democracies' medias and markets and defend Chinese policies a lot.
oil price is one year low. that is deflation. but fed wants to raise the rate? it is insane.
asset prices != inflation, if they did, the would need to raise rates every time the market goes up.
  Oil price =/= financial asset price
Recession worries? What recession? We’re already in recession. Huge manipulation
Blah...Blah...Blah. Sliding because the greedy slimeballs that control the algos are making it to go down. Fake Rigged Market!
Stop making excuses
why is a high interest wrong, because it is wrong. everyone knows. the real issue is whoever responsible should apologize and resign.
Yup.  But Putin is too deplorable to do the right thing.
Explain why its wrong instead of assuming everyone knows please. The cause of all financial losses is usually closely tied to assumption. Thats something everyone should know.
using inflation as an excuse to get high interest rates is unwise. Market should ignore it.
It was not the banks, it was the fake news keep dragging down the market!
EXCUSE DA JOUR. LOSERS
Even Trump said it about himself:  “If it’s bad, I say it’s fake. If it’s good, I say that’s the most accurate poll ever.”
And later on Jan 6th, 2021, he essentially said, "if it's not good for me, you guys go force it to be good for me."
I personally despise Trump, but even I can admit you ride his d i c way too much
Another biden day.
If only he knew what day it is...
after Two weeks you could be broke using a spammers recommendations.
crazy Americans. All have become directionless. Without recession they are proving they are in recession. Keep investing tax payers money in wars like Afghanistan and Ukraine which is now bouncing back. Come and invest in India.
Thru out the year market crash on good economy data, now its crashing on recession worries? Isn't it what market wants, recession so that fed can pivot.
No, not what market wants.  It's what retrumplicans wanted before the midterm to help them w/ elections.  Recall they were lying that  Biden "redefined" the word "recession", that the US was already in a recession that the US was doing worst than other countries, and that Trump's pal Putin was doing the right thing in Ukraine.
Only 50 basis points the fed is too chicken to stay at 75 already caved to 50 while market slready priced it in. They cannot finish the job already pivoting
"already caved to 50"  -- At  the most recent FOMc, the Fed raised by 0.75%.
It was not the banks, it was the fake news keep dragging down the market!
jimmy the "news" is not draging down the markets .......the news is just reporting information that is given to them by legitimate government and corporate sources. if you believe your words you should not be trading.
its not the news but the miserable and incompetent and panikmongering interpretation of facts plus chaotic overreaction of the market.
the markets are all about risk ... when higher risk is perceived, then the markets react.... nothing new,,,,it's always been that way.
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