Yuma Sun

Investment pros staying calm after rate fears hit stocks

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NEW YORK — The stock market has finally found something to fear.

For more than a year, investors have brushed off bombastic talk about nuclear war, dysfunctio­n on Capitol Hill and other worrisome situations. The Dow Jones industrial average and the Standard & Poor’s 500 glided to record after record, with few hiccups.

Last week, the calm cracked. The stock market finally got spooked by an ongoing sell-off in bonds. As bond prices fall, their yields go up, a signal of rising interest rates. Low interest rates have been an underpinni­ng of the current bull market in stocks, now in its ninth year.

On Friday, the rate on the 10-year Treasury note jumped to a four-year high. The Dow and S&P 500 each lost around 4 percent, their worst week since January 2016. On Friday, the Dow dropped 665 points, or 2.5 percent. Some earningsre­lated selling in big names such as Apple and Exxon Mobil added to the swoon.

Some investors believe the market can recover, noting that both global economic growth and corporate earnings remain strong. One hallmark of this bull market has been investors’ willingnes­s to buy the dips. This week’s drop could test their resolve.

Since the recession, ultra-low interest rates have made it easier for businesses and companies to borrow. They also have pushed investors into buying stocks by minimizing the interest payments from bonds.

Rates were due to rise, and investors cast a wary eye on the 10-year Treasury as it rose earlier this year. Those concerns hit a high point on Friday after a U.S. government report said wages last month rose at the fastest pace in eight years.

Bigger paychecks are a welcome sight for workers, but can also signal that inflation is about to pick up across the economy. Inflation has been relatively dormant since the recession. This week, the Federal Reserve said it expects inflation to finally pick up this year.

The Fed could raise interest rates more quickly than investors are prepared for if inflation accelerate­s at too fast a pace. That could further upset markets, which have seen an unusual lack of volatility for more than a year. After Friday’s jobs report, some economists raised their forecast for Fed rate increases this year to four from three.

The yield on the 10-year Treasury climbed to 2.84 percent Friday from 2.79 percent late Thursday and from 2.41 percent at the start of the year. It’s at its highest level since 2014.

“We are rapidly approachin­g the point at which low rates will no longer provide support to the equity market,” said Eric Winograd, senior U.S. economist at AllianceBe­rnstein.

Those concerns echoed worldwide. Other markets around the world were similarly weak as interest rates climbed. The German DAX index lost 4.2 percent over the week, and South Korea’s Kospi index lost 1.9 percent.

Investors have cited low interest rates are one reason they’ve continued to buy stocks, even as prices rose faster than corporate earnings. By that measure, the price-earnings ratio, the S&P 500 is close to the most expensive it’s been in many years, adjusted for inflation.

Higher interest rates tend to make investors less willing to pay high price-earnings ratios. Hence all the focus on exactly how many times the Fed will raise rates this year.

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