Los Angeles Times

Tech stocks lead a broad pullback

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Technology companies led a broad slide for stocks on Wall Street and bond yields rose again Monday as investors look ahead to the upcoming company earnings reporting season and what it will reveal about the effects of inflation on corporate profits.

The Standard & Poor’s 500 index fell 1.7%, adding to its recent losses. The Dow Jones industrial average fell 1.2% and the tech-heavy Nasdaq composite slid 2.2%. Both the benchmark S&P 500 and the Nasdaq are coming off their first weekly losses in four weeks.

Bond yields rose. The yield on the 10-year Treasury climbed to 2.78% from 2.71% late Friday. Bonds have been rising amid expectatio­ns of higher interest rates as the Federal Reserve moves to squelch inflation.

The market “is still reacting to what’s happening in the bond market,” said Willie Delwiche, investment strategist at All Star Charts. “You have yields, not just in the U.S. but around the world, moving sharply higher and that’s putting pressure on [stocks] generally. That was the story last week, and it’s the story this week.”

Higher rates hurt all kinds of investment­s, particular­ly stocks that are seen as the most expensive, such as those of Big Tech companies. As bonds offer better returns for less risk, that makes pricey stocks less attractive, which is why the heaviest selling has been concentrat­ed in technology and other growth stocks as inflation fears have rattled the market.

Technology stocks were again the biggest weights on the market Monday. Microsoft fell 3.9% and Apple shed 2.6%.

All 11 sectors in the S&P 500 fell. The index ended down 75.75 points to 4,412.53. The Dow lost 413.04 points to 34,308.08, and the Nasdaq slid 299.04 points to 13,411.96.

Small-company stocks held up better than the rest of the market. The Russell 2000 fell 14.24 points, or 0.7%, to 1,980.32.

Energy stocks were among some of the biggest losers as they followed oil prices lower. U.S. crude oil prices fell 4% and Occidental Petroleum slumped 6.3%, the biggest decliner in the S&P 500.

Oil prices remain volatile amid Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, which has put more pressure on global energy supplies. Global oil prices are up slightly more than 25% for the year, though they have been easing somewhat throughout April.

Twitter was in focus after Tesla Chief Executive Elon Musk said he wouldn’t be joining the company’s board after all. The stock rose 1.7%. Musk recently became the company’s biggest individual shareholde­r and is now free to increase his stake.

Shares of the new Warner Bros. Discovery media giant rose 1.3% on their first day of trading. The company is the $43-billion combinatio­n of Discovery and the AT&T spinoff Warner Media that includes storied film studio Warner Bros., CNN, HBO, HGTV and Discovery. AT&T jumped 7.7%.

Investors continue to remain uneasy about higher interest rates, Russia’s war on Ukraine and China’s effort to contain coronaviru­s outbreaks. In China, automakers and other manufactur­ers are reducing production after authoritie­s tightened restrictio­ns to help stem coronaviru­s outbreaks in Shanghai and other cities.

Wall Street will get several updates this week that could provide more clues about how the broader economy has been handling rising inflation.

The Labor Department on Tuesday will release its report on consumer prices for March, and the Commerce Department on Thursday will release its March retail sales report. Those reports have been closely watched as investors try to figure out how rising prices have been affecting consumer spending. Any significan­t slowdown in consumer spending probably would mean a sharper-thanexpect­ed slowdown in economic growth this year.

The latest economic updates come as investors expect a more aggressive shift from the Federal Reserve as it tries to temper the effect of rising inflation. The central bank has already announced a quarter-percentage point increase of its key interest rate.

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