Los Angeles Times

Economic data, Meta weigh down indexes

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NEW YORK — Worries about a potentiall­y toxic cocktail combining stubbornly high inflation with a flagging economy dragged U.S. stocks lower on Thursday. A sharp drop for Facebook’s parent company, one of Wall Street’s most inf luential stocks, also hurt the market.

The Standard & Poor’s 500 fell 0.5% and sliced some of the gain off what had been a big winning week. It looked to be heading for a much worse loss in the morning, when it tumbled as much as 1.6%.

The Dow Jones industrial average dropped 375 points, or 1%, after earlier falling 700 points. The Nasdaq composite sank 0.6%.

Meta Platforms, the company behind Facebook and Instagram, dropped 10.6% even though it reported better profit for the latest quarter than analysts expected. Investors focused instead on the big investment­s in artificial intelligen­ce Meta pledged to make. AI has created a frenzy on Wall Street, but Meta is increasing its spending when it also gave a forecast range for upcoming revenue whose midpoint fell below analysts’ expectatio­ns.

The entire U.S. stock market felt the pressure of another rise in Treasury yields after disappoint­ing data on the U.S. economy. The report undercut a central hope that’s sent the S&P 500 to record after record this year: The economy can avoid a deep recession and support strong profits for companies, even if high inflation takes a while to get fully under control.

But Thursday’s report said the U.S. economy’s growth slowed to a 1.6% annual rate during the first three months of this year from 3.4% at the end of 2023.

That was weaker than expected and would have been disappoint­ing by itself. Making it worse for financial markets, the report also said inflation was hotter during the three months than economists forecast. That could tie the hands of the Federal Reserve, which typically juices sluggish economies by cutting interest rates.

Treasury yields still climbed as traders pared bets for cuts to rates this year by the Federal Reserve.

The yield on the 10-year Treasury rose to 4.70% from 4.66% just before the report and from 4.65% late Wednesday.

Traders are largely betting on the possibilit­y of just one or maybe two cuts to interest rates this year, if any, according to data from CME Group. They came into the year forecastin­g six or more. A string of reports this year showing inflation remaining hotter than forecast has crushed those expectatio­ns.

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