The News Herald (Willoughby, OH)

Late gains reverse most of an early slide on stock market

- By Damian J. Troise and Alex Veiga

A late-afternoon burst of buying on Wall Street helped reverse most of a stock market sell-off Tuesday, nudging the S&P 500 to its first gain after a five-day losing streak.

The benchmark index eked out a 0.1% gain after having been down more than 1.8% earlier. The Nasdaq lost 0.5% as technology stocks fell for a sixth straight day. The tech-heavy index had been down nearly 4%. The Dow Jones Industrial Average, which is less exposed to tech stocks than the two other indexes, managed to rise 0.1%.

Facebook, Disney, Netflix and other communicat­ions stocks helped drive the market’s comeback. Financial and energy companies also helped lift the market, outweighin­g losses in technology and other sectors. Bond yields held near their highest level in a year.

Still, the main reason the market didn’t rack up bigger losses is the wave of selling in Big Tech stocks nearly reversed entirely as traders seized the opportunit­y to pick up shares in Apple, Microsoft, Amazon and other big gainers over the past year at a more attractive price. Tesla, which joined the S&P 500 at the end of last year, ended 2.2% lower after being down as much as 13.4%.

The S&P 500 index rose 4.87 points to 3,881.37. The Dow gained 15.66 points to 31,537.35. The Nasdaq lost 67.85 points to 13,465.20. The indexes were at alltime highs less than two weeks ago.

Smaller company stocks fell more than the broader market. The Russell 2000 small-cap index slid 19.76 points, or 0.9%, to 2,231.21. The index, the biggest gainer so far this year, clawed back from a 3.6% slide.

Since the pandemic began, investors consistent­ly pushed the prices of Big Tech stocks to stratosphe­ric heights, betting that quarantine­d consumers would do most of their shopping online and spend more on devices and services for entertainm­ent.

The bet mostly paid off, as big tech companies reported big profits last year. But the pandemic may be reaching its end stages, with millions of vaccines being administer­ed each week in the U.S. and across the globe now. It may cause consumers to return to their pre-pandemic habits.

By late afternoon, the tech sell-off nearly reversed itself. Apple slipped 0.1%, Microsoft fell 0.5%, and Amazon gained 0.4%. As traders turned to buying Tesla, rather than selling the stock, that also helped limit the S&P 500’s losses. The electric car maker is the second-most heavily weighted stock in the index’s consumer discretion­ary sector after Amazon.

Investors remain increasing­ly focused on a big tick up in bond yields and how it affects stock valuations. The yield on the 10-year Treasury note rose to 1.36%, continuing its quick climb up over the last few weeks.

When bond yields rise, stock prices tend to be negatively impacted because investors turn an increasing­ly larger portion of their money toward the steadier stream of income that bonds provide.

“If you have a 10-year (Treasury yield) which returns something, then all of a sudden you get this situation where investors may want more of a risk-free asset and rotate out of equities,” said Sylvia

Jablonski, chief investment officer at Defiance ETFs.

While eventually higher bond yields impact big dividend-paying stocks like consumer staples, utilities and real estate, they tend to impact stocks that have big valuations like technology stocks much earlier. Tech stocks tend to have higher-than-average priceto-earnings ratios, which values a stock on how much the company earns in profits each year versus its stock price. The S&P 500 is currently trading at a price-toearnings ratio of 32, historical­ly high, while the price-to-earnings ratio of a company like Amazon is north of 75.

Federal Reserve Chair Jay Powell told Congress Tuesday the Fed didn’t see a need to alter its policy of keeping interest rates ultralow, noting that the economic recovery “remains uneven and far from complete.”

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