Houston Chronicle

Stocks tumble as war overshadow­s jobs data

- By Stan Choe and Alex Veiga

NEW YORK — Stocks around the world racked up more losses Friday, as even a gangbuster­s report on the U.S. jobs market can’t pull Wall Street’s focus off its worries about the war in Ukraine.

The S&P 500 was 1.2 percent lower in afternoon trading, following up on sharper losses in Europe after a fire at the continent’s largest nuclear plant caused by shelling raised worries about what’s next. Markets worldwide have swung wildly over the last week on worries about how high prices for oil, wheat and other commoditie­s produced in the region will go because of Russia’s invasion, inflaming the world’s already high inflation.

Treasury yields sank again as investors moved money into U.S. government bonds in search of safety, and a measure of nervousnes­s on Wall Street climbed.

All the movements came despite a much stronger report on U.S. jobs than economists expected, one described as encouragin­g and even “fantastic.” Hiring by employers last month topped expectatio­ns by hundreds of thousands of workers, more people came back into the workforce after sitting on the sidelines and jobs numbers for prior months were revised higher.

On the inflation front, growth in wages for workers was slower last month than economists expected. While that’s discouragi­ng for workers hoping to keep up with rising prices at the grocery store, for economists and investors, it means less risk the economy may be headed for what’s called a “wage-price spiral.” In such a reinforcin­g cycle, higher wages for workers would cause companies to raise their own prices even higher.

“The COVID recovery was in full bloom in the jobs report,” said Brian Jacobsen, senior investment strategist at Allspring Global Investment­s.

“The tricky part is the future, not the past,” he said, as U.S. crude oil prices climbed above $115 per barrel amid worries about pressure on supplies because of the Ukrainian war. “Higher fuel and food costs can eat into consumers’ budgets. Those high costs can be a boon for oil producers and farmers, but not for everyone else.”

Such concerns helped drag the Dow Jones Industrial Average down more than 500 points in the early going. The blue chip index clawed back some of those losses by afternoon. It was down 321 points, or 1 percent, to 33,470, as of 3:35 p.m. Eastern time. The Nasdaq composite was 2 percent lower.

In the benchmark S&P 500, more than 65 percent of stocks were down, with technology and financial companies weighing down the index the most.

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