Business World

US stocks slide as hot producer price data crimp rate cut bets

- Reuters

US STOCKS fell on Friday with the Nasdaq showing the largest decline after a hotter-than-expected producer prices report eroded hopes for imminent interest rate cuts by the US Federal Reserve.

A Labor department report showed producer prices increased more than expected in January, feeding fears inflation was picking up after months of cooling. After five consecutiv­e weeks of gains, all three indexes posted a weekly decline.

The data could encourage the Fed to wait before cutting rates. Earlier this week, a hot consumer prices report sparked a sell-off in equity markets although a slump in January retail sales on Thursday stoked hopes of rate cuts.

Treasury yields spiked after the report as traders added to bets the Fed may defer the first rate cut until after June.

“The theme of higher for longer is really the continuing market narrative” for interest rates, said Greg Bassuk, chief executive officer at AXS Investment­s.

Two Fed officials expressed caution. Atlanta Fed President Raphael Bostic said he needed more evidence inflation pressures are easing, but is open to lowering rates at some point in the next few months. San Francisco Fed President Mary Daly said “there is more work to do” to ensure stable prices, despite remarkable progress.

The S&P 500 lost 24.16 points or 0.48% to end at 5,005.57 points; while the Nasdaq Composite lost 130.52 points or 0.82% to 15,775.65. The Dow Jones Industrial Average fell 145.13 points or 0.37% to 38,627.99.

Most mega-cap stocks dropped, with Meta Platforms falling 2.2% and dragging the S&P 500 communicat­ion services index down 1.56%.

The S&P 500 closed above 5,000 for the fourth time this year thanks to robust corporate earnings and surging enthusiasm around artificial intelligen­ce (AI).

Applied Materials jumped 6.4% after the semiconduc­tor equipment supplier forecast better-than-expected second-quarter revenue on strong demand for advanced chips used in AI.

Vulcan Materials gained 5.2% after forecastin­g a higher fullyear profit, aiding a rise in the S&P 500 materials sector index.

Roku slumped 23.8% after forecastin­g a bigger first-quarter loss, while crypto exchange Coinbase Global jumped 8.8% on posting its first quarterly profit since 2021.

DoorDash dropped 8.1% as the delivery firm forecast a quarterly profitabil­ity metric below expectatio­ns, hurt by higher labor costs.

Declining issues outnumbere­d advancers by a 1.7-to-1 ratio on the NYSE, while on Nasdaq declining issues outnumbere­d advancers by a 1.6-to-1 ratio. The S&P 500 posted 63 new 52-week highs and three new lows while the Nasdaq recorded 225 new highs and 66 new lows.

On US exchanges 11.18 billion shares changed hands compared with the 11.65 billion moving average for the last 20 sessions. —

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