Business World

Wall Street rally stalls on Fed signals

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Wall Street ended lower on Wednesday after a late-afternoon reversal following signals from the Federal Reserve that it could change its bond investment policy this year, quenching a rally sparked by a strong private-sector jobs report. Also investor concerns about the Trump administra­tion’s ability to deliver promised tax cuts were intensifie­d by comments from lawmakers.

WALL STREET ended lower on Wednesday after a late-afternoon reversal following signals from the Federal Reserve that it could change its bond investment policy this year, quenching a rally sparked by a strong private-sector jobs report.

Also investor concerns about the Trump administra­tion’s ability to deliver promised tax cuts were intensifie­d by comments from lawmakers on deep divisions in Washington.

Most Federal Reserve policy makers think the US central bank should take steps to begin trimming its $ 4.5- trillion balance sheet this year as long as the economic data holds up, Fed meeting minutes showed.

The minutes also showed “some participan­ts viewed equity prices as quite high relative to standard valuation measures.”

“Either it scared participan­ts because of talk that sounds like maybe (the stock market) is bubbling, or there is some thought that the normalizat­ion of the balance sheet is going to harm growth… or we are going to get more (rate) hikes” than already expected, said Janna Sampson, co- chief investment officer at OakBrook Investment­s LLC in Lisle, Illinois.

In a heavy volume trading day, The Dow Jones Industrial Average ended down 41.09 points, or 0.20%, at 20,648.15, the S&P 500 lost 7.21 points, or 0.31%, to 2,352.95 and the Nasdaq Composite dropped 34.13 points, or 0.58%, to 5,864.48.

The Dow posted its largest intra-day downside reversal in 14 months in Wednesday’s session after shedding a gain of more than 198 points to end near the session low, which was a drop of nearly 50 points.

After the recent failure of the Republican­s’ health care legislatio­n reform bill some investors had hoped this would bring President Donald J. Trump’s taxcutting promise closer to reality.

But US House of Representa­tives Speaker Paul Ryan said on Wednesday that tax reform will take longer to accomplish than health care.

“It seems like it was a combinatio­n of hawkish Fed minutes, disappoint­ment about the pace of tax reform and a pullback in crude prices” that reversed the rally, according to Randy Frederick, vice-president of trading and derivative­s for Charles Schwab in Austin, Texas. “From my perspectiv­e, this is probably an unjustifie­d emotional dip driven by several mixed signals.”

Nine of the S& P’s 11 major sectors finished lower, with financials leading the sell-off. Utilities and Real Estate, the so-called defensive sectors, were the only two that ended higher. Earlier in the day the S&P had risen as much as 0.80% and the Nasdaq hit a record high after private-sector jobs data blew past expectatio­ns.

Data showed that US companies added 263,000 workers in March, the most since December 2014 and well above economists’ expectatio­ns of 187,000.

The Nasdaq biotechnol­ogy index turned negative in the late afternoon to end down 1.40%.

This was likely because investors turned away from riskier investment­s this afternoon, said Chris Zaccarelli, chief investment officer at Cornerston­e Financial Partners in North Carolina.

Declining issues outnumbere­d advancing ones on the NYSE by a 1.93- to- 1 ratio; on Nasdaq, a 2.61-to-1 ratio favored decliners. The S& P 500 posted 38 new 52-week highs and six new lows; the Nasdaq Composite recorded 71 new highs and 69 new lows. More than 7.58 billion shares changed hands on US exchanges compared with the 6.8 billion average for the last 20 sessions. —

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