Business World

S&P 500, Nasdaq begin 2024 with lower close as Apple, big techs weigh

- Reuters

THE S&P 500 and Nasdaq Composite closed the first trading session of 2024 lower, weighed by a fall in Apple shares after a broker downgrade and declines among other big-tech names triggered by a move higher by Treasury yields.

The lackluster session follows a year where Wall Street’s three major indexes notched double-digit gains on the back of optimism around artificial intelligen­ce and stabilizin­g inflation. The S&P 500 ended last week within 1% of a record closing high reached in early 2022.

However, equities were pressured on Tuesday as US Treasury yields climbed, with the yield on 10-year notes ticking above 4% to a two-week high before easing slightly to 3.937%.

Such movement in Treasury yields reflected investors’ tempered expectatio­ns around cuts this year in US interest rates. This, in turn, weighed on growth stocks — among them tech stocks — which would benefit from a more favorable rate environmen­t.

Apple fell 3.6% after Barclays downgraded the tech giant to “underweigh­t,” citing weakening iPhone demand. Other mega-cap stocks also declined, including Nvidia, Meta Platforms, and Microsoft, which slipped between 1.4% and 2.7%.

“Everyone was very excited by the tail-end rally, the Fed — on the surface at least — paring back a little, and the fact we didn’t have a recession,” said Jason Pride, chief of investment strategy & research at Glenmede.

“But does that mean we’re out the woods yet? I suspect, even if the Fed brings rates down gradually, monetary policy is still tight and still likely to be a hindrance to overall economic activity.”

The Fed’s December policy meeting minutes and a slew of labor market data are on the roster for this week as market participan­ts look to ascertain the timing of potential rate cuts.

While the Fed is widely seen holding rates at its January meeting, traders expect a near 70% chance of a 25-basis-point cut in March, according to the CME Group’s FedWatch tool.

The S&P 500 lost 27 points or 0.57% to end at 4,742.83 points while the Nasdaq Composite lost 245.41 points or 1.63% to 14,765.94. The Dow Jones Industrial Average rose 25.50 points or 0.068% to 37,715.04.

The S&P 500 sectors were mixed. Healthcare was the brightest performer, with its 1.8% gain taking it to its highest close since mid-December 2022. Moderna’s 13.1% advance led the sector higher after the vaccine maker was upgraded by brokerage Oppenheime­r, and it reiterated the company’s goal of achieving sales growth in 2025.

The energy index also rose 1.2% despite crude slipping on concerns about the economic outlook.

Informatio­n technology led decliners with a 2.6% fall, the index’s largest one-day drop since Aug. 2.

Tesla was flat despite saying it delivered a record number of electric vehicles in the fourth quarter, beating market estimates and meeting its 2023 target of 1.8 million vehicles.

Boeing dropped 3.4% after Goldman Sachs removed the aerospace company from its “conviction list.”

Meanwhile, Citigroup advanced 3.1% to $53.04, its highest finish since August 2022, after Wells Fargo raised its price target for the bank to $70 from $60. Wells analyst Mike Mayo also said Citi was his top pick among large banks in 2024, and he expects the stock to double to $100+ over the next three years.

Crypto-related stocks such as MicroStrat­egy gained as Bitcoin pierced above $45,000 for the first time since April 2022 on optimism around the possible approval of exchange-traded spot Bitcoin funds.

The volume on US exchanges was 11.86 billion shares, compared with the 12.4 billion average over the last 20 trading days. —

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