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Wall Street pulls back on stocks, Treasury yields dip

Published Mar 22, 2022 10:29PM ET Updated Mar 23, 2022 04:32PM ET
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2/2 © Reuters. FILE PHOTO: A man wearing a protective mask, amid the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) outbreak, walks past an electronic board displaying Shanghai Composite index, Nikkei index and Dow Jones Industrial Average outside a brokerage in Tokyo, Japan, March 7, 2/2
 
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By Lawrence Delevingne

(Reuters) -Wall Street pushed stocks and Treasury yields down on Wednesday after both had powered higher earlier in the week as investors took in the strength of the economy and hawkish comments from U.S. policymakers.

Two-year U.S. Treasury yields have risen sharply so far in March and were set for their biggest monthly jump since 2004. Investors have been relatively sanguine about the implications of higher yields on stock market valuations, with many choosing to buy back in after a bruising few months for equity prices.

That narrative took a pause on Wednesday as major U.S. equities indexes declined more than 1%. The Dow Jones Industrial Average fell 448.96 points, or 1.29%, to 34,358.5; the S&P 500 lost 55.41 points, or 1.23%, to 4,456.2; and the Nasdaq Composite dropped 186.21 points, or 1.32%, to 13,922.60.

European stocks also fell about 1%, with a pan-European equity benchmark hitting a new one-month high in early London trading before falling back as traders took profits. MSCI's broadest gauge of world stocks declined 0.9%.

Investors were still trying to make up their minds about interest rates and stocks.

"Although there is widespread criticism, it's too early to take the view that the Fed won't be able to negotiate the fine line of reducing inflation without derailing growth," said Mark Haefele, Chief Investment Officer, UBS Global Wealth Management.

"Given a higher degree of uncertainty, rather than make a directional play on stocks moving higher, we prefer selected overweight and underweight positions, yielding an overall neutral allocation to equities."

BOND SELL-OFF

The most eye-catching moves recently have been in the bond market, although there was some reversal on Wednesday. The two-year U.S. Treasury yield, which typically moves in step with interest rate expectations, was down 4.8 basis points at 2.107%. The yield on 10-year Treasury notes was down 7.6 basis points to 2.301%.

The sharp rise in short-dated yields has flattened the gap between two- and 10-year U.S. yields to its lowest levels since the coronavirus pandemic hit global markets in March 2020. An inverted yield curve is widely seen as a predictor of future U.S. recessions.

JPMorgan (NYSE:JPM) market strategists wrote in a recent note that markets have rebounded recently because investors are "looking through the hawkish Fed and ominous signal" from the rates curve flattening.

"We believe this is warranted given strong economic fundamentals, our expectation the (two-year and 10-year Treasury) curve will stay positive this year, and moderating risks of large energy supply disruptions," they wrote.

The economics conversation came as Western leaders began gathering in Brussels to plan more measures to pressure Russian President Vladimir Putin to halt his month-old Ukraine campaign; Putin, in response, said Moscow planned to switch its gas sales to "unfriendly" countries to roubles.

Oil prices rose in volatile trading on Wednesday, supported by disruption of Russian and Kazakh crude exports. U.S. crude recently rose 4.71% to $114.42 per barrel and Brent was at $121.37, up 5.1% on the day.

Gold prices also gained on Wednesday as investors looked to shield against soaring inflation and uncertainty caused by events in Ukraine, with elevated U.S. bond yields capping gains in non-interest-bearing metal. Spot gold added 1.3% to $1,946.44 an ounce.

Currency market activity continued to be relatively subdued, confirming the lack of clear directional trends.

Against the U.S. dollar, the yen was up about 0.25% by 2000 GMT/4 pm ET, but held around 121 yen after Bank of Japan Governor Haruhiko Kuroda said it was premature to debate the exit from ultra-loose monetary policy.

The euro and sterling fell about 0.25% and 0.4% respectively against a broadly stronger dollar.

Wall Street pulls back on stocks, Treasury yields dip
 

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Comments (8)
Chad Richer Than You
Chad Richer Than You Mar 23, 2022 8:14PM ET
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Stop stocking food cans and just buy SP500. No recession in sight. No end of days. The market has factored in and forgotten about Russia-Ukraine.
Shep De
Shep De Mar 23, 2022 6:47PM ET
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June, analyst, @ Tribeca Invrstments said telling stuff, "We are seeing a lot of interest rate increases" and, paraphrased (read the article yourself), she also stated, the past 4-day rally markets not "new money piling in" but hedge funds covering. The latter should tell you we're still in a bear overtone marker plus, to her many interest rates I'll add, the hike amounts, not just the number of hiked, is most alarming. FED, w/ Powell chair leading charge, open now to "back to back half-percentage point hikes." The 30% likelihood, 2 weeks ago by economists/analysts of 0.50% next FOMC, climbed to 50% a week ago and now stands at 72% chance per CMG website of 0.50% the next rate raise.
Marco cuevas
Marco cuevas Mar 23, 2022 10:47AM ET
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HERE WE GO the great robbery of American wealth by the greedy institutions!!!!
Shep De
Shep De Mar 23, 2022 9:43AM ET
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Why? Yencent just showed gaming and social media in a growth cycle slowing , prob thru 2023 or when metaverse and VR become game-worthy, which is a long ways off
charles Robinson
charles Robinson Mar 23, 2022 6:34AM ET
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"this is fine."
Marco cuevas
Marco cuevas Mar 23, 2022 4:40AM ET
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Surprise surprise red premarket who didn't see that coming.
Dave Jones
Dave Jones Mar 23, 2022 2:17AM ET
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So...stocks are a safer haven than bonds....umm......yeah
Stan Smith
Stan Smith Mar 22, 2022 11:32PM ET
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Cause stocks are the safe haven where you want to be in these wonderful markets.. lol.  Sounds like they are luring investors onto the titanic
Iheb Jlassi
Iheb Jlassi Mar 22, 2022 11:32PM ET
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Chivito Presipicio The propaganda is unreal
 
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