Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Bumpy trading day sends stocks mostly lower; bond yields ease

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A choppy day on Wall Street ended with stocks mostly lower on Friday, helping push the S&P 500 to its second straight weekly loss.

Investors continued to watch the bond market, where Treasury yields eased lower, as well as Washington, where Congress was expected to vote on President Joe Biden’s stimulus package.

Losses in banks and health care stocks helped drag the S&P 500 down 0.5%, erasing an early gain. Falling oil prices weighed on energy stocks. Technology and communicat­ion services companies, which bore the brunt of the selling a day before, recovered slightly, which helped the tech-heavy Nasdaq composite manage a 0.6% gain.

Bond yields eased off of their multiweek climb. The yield on the 10-year U.S. Treasury fell to 1.42% from 1.51% late Thursday.

“We still think the uptrend in [stocks] is very much intact and that they’ll outperform bonds in the coming year,” said Sameer Samana, senior global market strategist at Wells Fargo Investment Institute.

The S&P 500 index fell 18.19 points to 3,811.15. Despite a two-week slide, the index managed a 2.6% gain for February after a 1.1% loss in January.

The Dow Jones Industrial Average dropped 469.64 points, or 1.5%, to 30,932.37. The Nasdaq gained 72.91 points to 13,192.34. The index still posted its biggest weekly loss since October. The Russell 2000 index of smaller companies eked out a small gain, adding 0.88 points, or less than 0.1%, to 2,201.05.

The indexes remain close to the all-time highs they set earlier this month.

A sell-off on Wall Street on Thursday picked up speed when the yield on the 10-year U.S. Treasury note rose above 1.5%, a level not seen in more than a year and far above the 0.92% it was trading at only two months ago. That move raised the alarm that yields, and the interest rates they influence, will move higher from here.

The recent rise in bond yields reflects growing confidence that the economy is on the path to recovery, but also expectatio­ns that inflation is headed higher, which might prompt central banks eventually to raise interest rates to cool price increases. Rising yields can make stocks look less attractive relative to bonds, which is why every tick up in yields has correspond­ed with a tick down in stock prices.

“Investors should look at this as an affirmatio­n that the recovery is taking hold,” said Brian Levitt, Global Market Strategist at Invesco.

 ?? Courtney Crow/New York Stock Exchange via AP ?? Traders Aman Patel, left, and Peter Tuchman work Friday on the New York Stock Exchange floor. Stocks wobbled Friday between small gains and losses as rising technology stocks offset a slide in banks and energy companies.
Courtney Crow/New York Stock Exchange via AP Traders Aman Patel, left, and Peter Tuchman work Friday on the New York Stock Exchange floor. Stocks wobbled Friday between small gains and losses as rising technology stocks offset a slide in banks and energy companies.

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