Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Major indexes fall in tandem with global markets

- STAN CHOE Informatio­n for this article was contribute­d by Joe McDonald, Matt Ott and Tom Krisher of The Associated Press.

NEW YORK — Wall Street slipped as stocks slumped worldwide Wednesday on worries about the strength of the global economy and inflation.

The S&P 500 fell 25.69, or 0.6%, to 4,179.83. The Dow Jones Industrial Average dropped 134.51, or 0.4%, to 32,908.27, and the Nasdaq composite lost 82.14, or 0.6%, to 12,935.29.

Stock markets in Asia fell even more after discouragi­ng data on manufactur­ing from China.

The world’s second-largest economy has not been rebounding as strongly as many investors had hoped. That raises worries when economies around the world are contending with still-high inflation and much higher interest rates than a year earlier.

Wall Street has been able to weather such concerns pretty well recently, largely because of gains for a handful of tech companies and others getting swept up in the buzz around AI.

The S&P 500 managed to close out May with a modest gain.

But some of the air seeped out of those big winners on Wednesday. Nvidia, whose chips are helping to power the surge into AI, dropped 5.7% for its first fall since it gave a monster forecast last week for future sales.

Worries are also rising for the larger U.S. economy, which has slowed under the weight of much higher interest rates.

The Federal Reserve has raised rates at a furious pace since early last year in hopes of getting inflation under control. But high rates work by hurting the economy and hitting prices for investment­s.

“We see this as a race for weakness between inflation and economic activity,” said Tony Roth, chief investment officer at Wilmington Trust.

Either inflation needs to break lower to return to the Fed’s target, which would allow it to go easier on interest rates, or the economy will fall into recession.

Roth said both the economy and inflation have remained strong for longer than he expected: “It’s a very slow race to the bottom.”

A report released Wednesday morning bolstered expectatio­ns for the Federal Reserve to raise rates at least one more time.

It showed employers advertised more job openings than expected, the latest signal of a job market that’s remained remarkably resilient.

While that’s good news for workers and for the economy, it also gives the Fed more leeway to keep rates high.

A strong job market could keep upward pressure on workers’ wages, which Wall Street fears could keep inflation high.

“The increase in job openings is the worst news the Fed could have because that just puts more pressure on wages,” Roth said.

But stocks pared their losses in the afternoon after a Fed official hinted the central bank may hold rates steady at its next meeting in two weeks.

“Indeed, skipping a rate hike at a coming meeting would allow the Committee to see more data before making decisions about the extent of additional policy firming,” Fed Gov. Philip Jefferson said in a speech.

Other, smaller portions of the economy have shown much more pain in the face of higher rates. A report on Wednesday morning suggested manufactur­ing in the Chicago region is contractin­g by much more than economists feared.

The U.S. banking system has also come under pressure. The Fed-driven surge in rates means customers are pulling their deposits in hopes of making more in interest at money-market funds.

Higher rates have also knocked down the values for bonds and other investment­s banks made when rates were low.

In the bond market, the yield on the 10-year Treasury fell to 3.62% from 3.70% late Tuesday.

It helps set rates for mortgages and other important loans that influence the housing and other markets.

The two-year yield, which moves more on expectatio­ns for Fed action, fell to 4.39% from 4.46%.

Either inflation needs to break lower to return to the Fed’s target, which would allow it to go easier on interest rates, or the economy will fall into recession.

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