Houston Chronicle

S&P 500 extends drop from its July peak

- By Rita Nazareth

A rebound in stocks sputtered, with the S&P 500 extending a slide from its July peak to 10% — and entering a “correction.” Oil topped $85 and gold hit $2,000 amid the latest geopolitic­al developmen­ts.

Volatility resurfaced on news that Israeli forces are expanding their activity in Gaza.

The benchmark stock gauge headed toward its worst week in a month. JPMorgan Chase & Co. dropped as Chief Executive Officer Jamie Dimon plans to sell shares currently worth about $141 million. Amazon.com Inc. and Intel Corp. rallied on earnings.

Treasury two-year yields edged lower as traders took a hotter inflation measure in stride. The dollar fell.

U.S. stocks are in their third month of declines after bond yields soared on worries about a persistent­ly hawkish Federal Reserve.

Concern about the war in the Middle East as well as an underwhelm­ing corporate earnings season have dented risk appetite more recently.

“The aggressive market selloff has been driven largely by technical factors, as fundamenta­ls remain solid,” said Mark Hackett, chief of investment research at Nationwide.

“This is fitting, given the strong bounce since last October was also largely technical. Signs of oversold conditions and supportive seasonalit­y should lead to a bounce, though sentiment will need to shift, which could take a catalyst or a period of capitulati­on.”

More than two-thirds of stocks for companies in the S&P 500 index are trading below their 200-day moving averages, according to an analysis by Bloomberg Intelligen­ce.

That’s a sign of widespread pain for stock prices, after many companies have posted lackluster earnings amid interest rates that are high and bond yields that keep creeping up.

In economic news, near-term inflation expectatio­ns rose in October to a five-month high as they feared higher prices at the gas pump, reinforcin­g downbeat views on the economy.

The Fed’s preferred measure of underlying inflation accelerate­d to a four-month high in September and consumer spending picked up, keeping the door open to another interest-rate hike in the months ahead.

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