Los Angeles Times

On Wall St., a quiet end to a rough week

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The toughest week for Wall Street in nearly two months came to a quiet close on Friday, as stock indexes drifted to a mixed finish.

The Standard & Poor’s 500 rose 0.2%, but it still ended the week with a drop of 1.1%, which was its worst since December. The Dow Jones industrial average gained 169 points, or 0.5%, while the Nasdaq composite fell 0.6%.

Stocks have been struggling since rallying at the start of the year on hopes that the economy could avoid a severe recession and that cooling inflation could get the Federal Reserve to take it easier on interest rates.

“For most central banks the risk is that they have tightened too little, not too much,” economists led by Ethan Harris wrote in a BofA Global Research report.

“The ultimate gauge of success here is not avoiding a recession, but getting inflation on a path back to target,” Harris wrote.

Investors will get more updates on inflation next week when the government gives its latest monthly updates on prices at both the wholesale and consumer levels.

The worries about rates mean much of Wall Street’s action has been in the bond market, where yields have climbed on expectatio­ns for a firmer Fed. The yield on the 10-year Treasury, which helps set rates for mortgages and other important loans, rose to 3.73% from 3.66% late Thursday.

The two-year yield, which moves more on expectatio­ns for the Fed, ticked up to 4.50% from 4.48%. It was at 4.08% just over a week ago and is near its highest level since November.

Companies in recent weeks have also been delivering a mixed set of earnings reports for the end of 2022.

Lyft tumbled 36.4% after its latest report. The ridehailin­g company gave a forecast for revenue in the first three months of 2023 that fell short of analysts’ expectatio­ns.

Given worries about stillhigh inflation and a slowing economy eating into corporate profits, analysts have been cutting their earnings forecasts. So far this year, analysts have trimmed expectatio­ns for S&P 500 companies’ first-quarter earnings by 4.5%, according to strategist­s at Credit Suisse. That’s a deeper cut than average.

News Corp. fell 9.4% after the owner of the Wall Street Journal and other media reported weaker quarterly results than expected. It also said it will cut 5% of its workforce in 2023 as it contends with higher interest rates and inflation.

Expedia lost 8.6% after reporting weaker profit and revenue for the latest quarter than expected.

On the winning side were energy stocks, which rose with the price of crude oil. Valero Energy gained 6.1%, and Marathon Oil climbed 6.2%.

Oil prices rose after Russia said it will cut oil production by 500,000 barrels per day next month. Western countries had capped the price of Russia’s crude over its invasion of Ukraine. Brent crude, the internatio­nal standard, rose $1.89 to $86.39 per barrel.

Benchmark U.S. crude rose $1.66 to $79.72 per barrel.

Sharp rises in energy prices are one of the two big risks that Yung-Yu Ma, chief investment strategist at BMO Wealth Management, sees ahead for the market. That would send inflation higher and push the Fed to raise rates.

The other big risk he sees is if growth in workers’ wages stays too high, which the Fed could also see as pushing upward on inflation.

“The Fed is more concerned with inf lation staying down,” Ma said. “The market just wants it to come down. Once it comes down, the narrative is going to change: Will it stay down ... or will it reaccelera­te and cause the Fed to be on a longer-term inflation fighting mission?”

All told, the S&P 500 rose 8.96 points to 4,090.46 on Friday. The Dow gained 169.39 to end at 33,869.27, while the Nasdaq fell 71.46 to 11,718.12.

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