Major U.S. stock indexes fell on Tuesday, with the Dow and S&P 500 both snapping a 4-session win streak, as economic data showed more signs of a sputtering U.S. economy. The Dow Jones Industrial Average
DJIA,
fell about 198 points, or 0.6%, ending near 33,403, while the S&P 500 index
SPX,
shed 0.6% and the Nasdaq Composite Index
COMP,
fell 0.5%, according to preliminary FactSet data. Investors were eyeing less robust economic data out Tuesday. The number of U.S. job openings in February fell to a 21-month low, while orders for manufactured goods fell for the third time in the past four months. Gold prices
GC00,
were flirting with a return to record territory, trading above $2,000 an ounce. The 2-year Treasury rate
TMUBMUSD02Y,
stayed below 4% at 3.84%.
Tag: COMP
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Dow, S&P 500 clinch 4-day win streak, energy stocks jump on oil production cuts
The Dow and S&P 500 both closed higher on Monday to kick off April with a 4th straight session of gains, after a group of major global oil nations on Sunday announced surprise production cuts. The Dow Jones Industrial Average
DJIA,
+0.98%
climbed about 326 points, or 1% on Monday, to end near 33,600, according to preliminary FactSet data. The S&P 500 index
SPX,
+0.37%
gained 0.4%, while its energy component outperformed with a 4.9% climb. The Nasdaq Composite Index
COMP,
-0.27%
shed 0.3%. Investors piled into energy stocks after the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries and its allies said Sunday they would in May cut production by more than 1 million barrels a day in an effort to support oil-market stability, including with Saudi Arabia slashing its output by 500,000 barrels a day. May WTI oil future contract
CLK23,
+6.44%
climbed more than 6% to trade above $80 a barrel, the biggest daily gain in more than a year. The Energy Select Sector SPDR Fund
XLE,
+4.53%
rose 4.6%. The 2-year Treasury yield
TMUBMUSD02Y,
3.969%
slumped below 4%, while the 10-year Treasury
TMUBMUSD10Y,
3.417%
rate fell to 3.43%, as traders anticipated that higher oil prices could potentially act as a wretch in the Federal Reserve’s plans to bring inflation down to its 2% annual target. -
The surprise OPEC+ oil production cuts will increase gas prices — here’s how much
Surprise crude oil production cuts from Saudi Arabia and other oil-rich countries shouldn’t produce worries of skyrocketing gas costs for U.S. drivers still smarting from last year’s pump price shocks, according to fuel industry experts.
At a time when gas prices are already increasing because of rising seasonal demand, the slashed crude oil output that Saudi Arabia announced Sunday will translate into higher prices, they say. But compared to last year — when energy markets were absorbing the initial impact of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine — the altitude on those gas price increases may not feel so steep.
On Monday, the national average for a gallon of gas was $3.50, according to AAA. That’s around 10 cents more than a month ago, but almost 70 cents less than the $4.19 average cost one year ago.
The effects of decreased oil production could translate into initial price increases of up to 15 cents per gallon, according to two different energy sector watchers.
There’s Patrick De Haan, head of petroleum analysis at GasBuddy.
At OPIS, an outlet focused on energy sector news and analytics, Chief Oil Analyst Denton Cinquegrana said he was previously expecting summer gas prices to average around $3.60.
“This move probably boosts that by about 10 – 15 cents to about $3.70-3.75/gal.” Cinquegrana told MarketWatch.
OPIS is owned by Dow Jones, which also owns MarketWatch.
It’s possible for gas price averages to hit around $3.60 in the next week or so, he said. The other 10 to 15 cents might filter into retail pump prices later this month or in early May, according to Cinquegrana.
The surprise move came from Saudi Arabia and other members of OPEC+, the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries and allies, including Russia. In Saudi Arabia, officials were reportedly “irritated” by recent remarks from U.S. Energy Secretary Jennifer Granholm.
After the Biden administration tapped the country’s strategic petroleum reserve to combat last year’s high gas costs, Granholm said it will difficult to restock the reserve.
By May, more than 1 million barrels of oil a day will be slashed from output in the global energy markets. That’s in addition to OPEC+ production cuts announced last fall.
In cost breakdowns for a gallon of gas, the price of crude oil is responsible for more than half the price tag, according to the U.S. Energy Information Administration.
In Monday morning trading, the price of West Texas Intermediate crude for May delivery jumped 6% to just over $80 on the New York Mercantile Exchange.
For context, when gas prices were breaking records last year, the costs of West Texas Intermediate crude were in the triple digits. While retail prices surged in early March 2022, West Texas Intermediate crude briefly traded for more than $130 during the trading day on March 7, 2022.
The national average for a gallon of gas hit a record $5.01 in mid-June, according to AAA. In the current context, Cinquegrana doesn’t see a return to $5 gas averages, he said. Gas prices vary across the nation. California drivers are paying $4.80 on average while Mississippi drivers are paying $3.02 per gallon.
Even if price increases are not as sharp as last year, hot inflation is retreating slowly. So any extra costs are unwelcome to millions of American drivers who are living their lives and more frequently commuting to the office.
Like last year, oil prices are poised to increase, said AAA spokesman Devin Gladden.
But the economy’s background noise right now could dampen the impact as downturn worries keep sticking around, he added. Furthermore, there can be discrepancies in the announced production reductions and the amounts that are actually reduced, Gladden said.
“If recessionary concerns persist in the market, oil price increases may be limited due to the market believing lower oil demand will lead to lower prices this year,” he said.
On Monday, energy sector stocks and related exchange traded funds were climbing after the production cut news. In early afternoon trading, the Dow Jones Industrial Average
DJIA,
+0.81%
was up more than 200 points, or 0.7%, while the S&P 500
SPX,
-0.03%
is little changed and the Nasdaq Composite
COMP,
-0.98%
dropped 100 points, or 0.8%. -
This signal for U.S. stocks bodes well for a rally as some stability returns to the banking sector
The U.S. stock market has been flashing an important signal that suggests concerns about the banking sector have dissipated after the sudden collapse of Silicon Valley Bank earlier in March.
The Cboe Volatility Index
VIX,
-1.68% ,
a gauge of expected volatility in the S&P 500 index, dropped below the 20 level last week for the first time since March 8, suggesting a return to a lower risk environment that prevailed before Silicon Valley Bank first announced it had to sell securities to strengthen its deteriorating financial position.The index, often referred to as Wall Street’s “fear gauge,” was down 1.7% at 18.70 on Friday after rising above 30 on March 13, the first trading day after regulators announced emergency measures to stem fallout from Silicon Valley Bank’s failure.
“It’s not a normal volatility environment,” said Johan Grahn, head ETF market strategist at AllianzIM. “We’ve spent 95% of trading days in the past 12 months above 20, while we were above 20 only 15% of the time in the 8-year period before the pandemic-driven volatility started in February of 2020.”
He also noted the VIX topped 30 in one of five days over the past 12 months on average, but only one in 100 days over the same 8-year period before the pandemic.
“Now we’re living in those periods as if it’s normal, but it’s not normal based on that history,” Grahn said.
Other market analysts also said investors should beware of what comes next.
Interest rate cuts in 2023 could signal a tanking economy
The three major U.S. stock indexes ended the month on a positive note with the S&P 500
SPX,
+1.44%
gaining 3.5% and the Dow Jones Industrial Average
DJIA,
+1.26%
up 1.9%, according to Dow Jones Market Data. The Nasdaq Composite
COMP,
+1.74%
advanced 6.7% as volatility in banking-sector stocks ignited a rush into the technology sector.See: Are tech stocks becoming a haven again? ‘It’s a mistake,’ say market analysts.
For the quarter, the Nasdaq Composite rose 16.8%, its best quarterly gain since at least the fourth quarter of 2020, according to Dow Jones Market Data. The S&P 500, meanwhile, rose 7%, and the Dow advanced 0.4% in the first three months of 2023.
“Those worst fears have been taken off the table, at least for the time being. I think you’re just seeing a reflection in the markets of that fact,” Grahn told MarketWatch via phone.
“Fed Chairman Jerome Powell came out and started flexing his dovish wings a little bit by taking the banking issues into consideration and now leading the market to believe that maybe he will slow down what previously was communicated as more aggressive rate increases,” he said.
Stress in the banking sector and a possible credit squeeze has led markets to reprice expectations of future monetary tightening by the Federal Reserve. Traders’ bets are tilted toward a pause in interest rate increases in May, with odds of a 25-basis-point increase at 49%, according to CME FedWatch tool.
However, Grahn thinks if investors expect rate cuts will happen later this year, that could suggest the economy will tank “very soon” and in a “very painful way.”
Investors are effectively saying “there will be so much pain coming through the system so that the Fed cannot make an argument that holds water for why they want to keep the rates high,” said Grahn. “The risk sensitivity between what the market is pricing in terms of rate increases and where the Fed is telling the market that they’re going to be is way too wide. And the way that the market can be right is if we have a disastrous couple of months ahead of us.”
See: 2023 has been bad for the bears. Here are 5 reasons why it’s going to get even worse.
Liquidity spigot, back on
David Waddell, CEO and chief investment strategist at Waddell & Associates, said it has been past bailout reassurances that have stabilized financial markets, because they neutralize the threat of banking stress.
“Once the Fed turned on the ‘liquidity spigot’ and softened their rhetoric, the market took off, because while crises may destroy investor capital, bailouts create even more,” Waddell told MarketWatch in a phone interview.
It also bolsters the case for a shallow recession, he said, because the Fed has shown a tendency to over medicate. “The ‘patient’ will be fine,” Waddell said.
After Silicon Valley Bank failed earlier this month, U.S. Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen ruled out a return to broadscale federal bailouts for banks and emphasized the situation was very different from the 2008 financial crisis, which resulted in unprecedented measures to rescue the nation’s biggest banks.
See: Two-year Treasury yields sees biggest monthly drop since 2008 after bank turmoil
Big moves in Treasurys
U.S. Treasury yields tumbled in March with two-year rates
TMUBMUSD02Y,
4.101%
posting their biggest monthly yield drop since January 2008. The yield on the two-year Treasury note traded at 4.06% on Friday, down 73.5 basis points in March, according to Dow Jones Market Data.“So far, equities are holding up and economic data has not materially faltered, but I can say with confidence that moves of this magnitude in the Treasury market are not typically signals of smooth sailing ahead,” said Liz Young, head of investment strategy at SoFi.
The ICE BofA MOVE Index, which measures the implied volatility of the U.S. Treasury markets rallied to 198.71 in mid-March, its highest level since 2008, according to FactSet data.
“At the very least, they’re indicating that the uncertainty around Fed policy has risen. Not only due to the recent fears in the banking system — but to the unclear end to the Fed’s hiking cycle.”
Earnings reports, March jobs data ahead
Waddell said investors shouldn’t rely too heavily on a few week’s gains in U.S. stocks, but thinks market sentiment could improve in April due to surprise in the “resilience of earnings and the robustness of them in the recovery.”
However, John Butters, senior earnings analyst at FactSet, said there has been larger cuts than average to EPS estimates for S&P 500 companies for the first quarter of 2023, given the continuing concerns in the market about bank liquidity and a possible broader economic recession.
The estimated earnings decline for the index is 6.6% for the quarter. If that is the actual decline, it will mark the largest earnings decline reported by the index since the second quarter of 2020, Butters said in a Friday note.
Several Federal Reserve speakers are on deck for next week, but the other big thing to watch will be the monthly jobs report for March from the U.S. Labor Department on Friday.
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U.S. stocks have barely budged since last summer. Where will they go next?
U.S. stocks have shrugged off a number of threats since the start of the year, powering through the worst U.S. bank failures since the 2008 financial crisis, while resisting the pull of rising short-term Treasury yields.
This helped all three main U.S. equity benchmarks finish the first quarter in the green on Friday, but that doesn’t change the fact that the S&P 500 index, the main U.S. equity benchmark, has barely budged since last summer.
“The market has handled a lot of gut punches recently and it’s still standing in this range,” said JJ Kinahan, CEO of IG North America, owner of brokerage firm Tastytrade. “I think that’s a sign that the market is very healthy.”
The S&P 500 index
SPX,
+1.44%
traded at 4,110.41 on Sept. 12, 2022, according to FactSet data, just before aggressive Federal Reserve commentary on interest rates and worrisome inflation data triggered a sharp selloff. By comparison, the index finished Friday’s session at 4,109.31.Some equity analysts expect it to take months, or perhaps even longer, for U.S. stocks to break out of this range. Where they might go next also is anyone’s guess.
Investors likely won’t know until some of the uncertainty that has been plaguing the market over the past year clears up.
At the top of the market’s wish list is more information about how the Fed’s interest rate hikes are impacting the economy. This will be crucial in determining whether the central bank might need to keep raising interest rates in 2024, several analysts told MarketWatch.
Stocks are volatile, but stuck in a circle
The S&P 500 has vacillated in a roughly 600-point range since September, but at the same time, the number of outsize swings from day-to-day has become even more pronounced, making it more difficult to ascertain the health of the market, analysts said.
The S&P 500 rose or fell by 1% or more in 29 trading sessions in the first quarter, including Friday, when the S&P 500 closed 1.4% higher on the last session of the month and quarter, according to Dow Jones Market Data.
That’s nearly double the quarterly average of just 14.9 days going back to 1928, according to Dow Jones Market Data. The S&P 500 was created in 1957, and performance data taken from before then is based on a historical reconstruction of the index’s performance.
Stocks also look almost placid in comparison with other assets. For example, Treasurys saw an explosion of volatility in the wake of the collapse of Silicon Valley Bank in March. The 2-year Treasury yield
TMUBMUSD02Y,
4.114%
logged its largest monthly decline in 15 years in March as a result.“You can’t find any clues about where we’re going by watching the S&P 500,” said John Kosar, chief market strategist at Asbury Research, in a phone interview with MarketWatch. “Ten years ago, you could look at the movement of the S&P 500 and a simple indicator like volume and get a back-of-the-envelope idea of how healthy the market is. But you can’t do that anymore because of all this intraday volatility.”
The S&P 500’s 7% advance in the first quarter of this year has helped to mask weakness underneath the surface. Specifically, only 33% of S&P 500 companies’ shares have managed to outperform the index since the start of the quarter, well below the long-term average, according to figures provided to MarketWatch by analysts at UBS Group UBS.
Mega stocks, Fed to the rescue?
If it weren’t for a flight-to-safety rally in large capitalization technology names like Apple Inc.
AAPL,
+1.56% ,
Microsoft Corp.
MSFT,
+1.50%
and Nvidia Corp.
NVDA,
+1.44% ,
the S&P 500 and Nasdaq would likely be in much worse shape.Advancing megacap tech stocks have helped the Invesco QQQ
QQQ,
+1.66%
Trust exchange-traded fund, which tracks the Nasdaq 100, enter a fresh bull market in the past week, as the closely watched market gauge closed more than 20% above its 52-week closing low from late December, according to FactSet data. That’s helped to offset weakness in cyclical sectors like financials and real estate.Tech behemoths have also benefited from the hype around artificial intelligence platforms like OpenAI’s ChatGPT.
Confusion about the Fed’s quantitative tightening efforts to reduce the size of its balance sheet also helped muddle the outlook for markets.
For example, the size of the Fed’s balance sheet has increased again in recent weeks as banks have tapped the central bank’s emergency lending programs in the wake of the failure of two regional banks, undoing some of the central bank’s efforts to shrink its balance sheet by allowing some of its Treasury and mortgage-backed bond holdings to mature without reinvesting the proceeds.
Some analysts said this is akin to sending the market mixed signals.
“It seems to be both tightening and loosening right now,” said Andrew Adams, an analyst with Saut Strategy, in a recent note to clients.
What it takes for a break out
U.S. stocks have remained rangebound for long stretches in the past.
Beginning in late 2014, the S&P 500 traded in a tight range for roughly two years. Between Jan. 1, 2015 and Nov. 9, 2016, the day after former President Donald Trump defeated Hillary Clinton to become president of the U.S., the S&P 500 gained less than 100 points, according to FactSet data.
At the time, equity analysts blamed signs of softening economic activity in China and weakness in the U.S. energy industry for the market’s lackluster performance.
But after once it became clear that Trump would win the White House, stocks embarked on a steady ascent as investors bet that the Republican economic agenda, which included corporate tax cuts and deregulation, would likely bolster corporate profits.
It wasn’t until the fourth quarter of 2018 that stocks turned volatile once again as the S&P 500 wiped out its gains from earlier in the year, before ultimately finishing 2018 with a 6.2% drop for the year, according to FactSet.
As investors brace for a flood of first-quarter corporate earnings in the coming weeks, Kinahan said he expects stocks could remain range bound for at least a few more months.
“There’s going to be a very cautious outlook still, which should keep us in this range,” he said.
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U.S. stocks end Friday higher, Nasdaq posts best quarter since 2020
U.S. stocks rallied on Friday to end a rocky month higher, while the Nasdaq Composite also posted its best quarterly gain since 2020. The Dow Jones Industrial Average
DJIA,
+1.26%
jumped about 414 points, or 1.3%, ending near 33,273 on Friday and up 1.9% for the month, according to preliminary FactSet figures. The S&P 500 index
SPX,
+1.44%
and Nasdaq Composite Index
COMP,
+1.74%
posted higher daily gains of 1.4% and 1.7%, respectively, which elevated their monthly gains to 3.5% and 6.7%. Investors in stocks largely looked past turbulence earlier in March after the Federal Reserve acted to calm markets following the sudden collapse of Silicon Valley Bank and Signature Banks. The Fed opened a new facility for banks to tap for liquidity with the aim of preventing forced asset sales, if other banks experience sharp deposit outflows. Friday also marked the end of the quarter, with the Dow and S&P 500 both posting back-to-back quarterly gains. The Nasdaq booked a 16.8% quarterly gain, the best quarter since the 2020, according to Dow Jones Market Data. -
Dow rises more than 300 points after inflation report as Nasdaq heads for best quarter since 2020
U.S. stocks were climbing Friday afternoon following a softer-than-expected inflation report for February, while the Nasdaq Composite was on pace for its largest quarterly advance since 2020.
How stocks are trading
-
The Dow Jones Industrial Average
DJIA,
+1.26%
rose 340 points, or 1%, to 33,199. -
The S&P 500
SPX,
+1.44%
gained almost 47 points, or 1.2%, to nearly 4,098. -
The Nasdaq Composite
COMP,
+1.74%
advanced almost 173 points, or 1.4%, to 12,186.
For the week, the Dow is on track to gain 3% while the S&P was on pace to rise 3.2% and the Nasdaq Composite was heading for a 3.1% increase, according to FactSet data, at last check.
What’s driving markets
U.S. stocks were up sharply Friday afternoon as investors weighed data showing signs of moderating inflation.
“Core price pressures” eased in February, Barclays said in an economics research note Friday. “On balance, the easing in February PCE inflation was fairly broad-based across goods and services, barring housing.”
The personal-consumption-expenditures, or PCE, price index increased 0.3% in February, with inflation slowing to 5% year over year from 5.3% in January, according to a report Friday from the Bureau of Economic Analysis.
Core PCE, the Federal Reserve’s preferred inflation gauge that excludes energy and food prices, rose 0.3% last month for a year-over-year rate of 4.6%. That’s slightly lower than forecasts from economists polled by the Wall Street Journal and softened from the 4.7% increase seen over the 12 months through January.
Read: Inflation softens in February, PCE finds, and gives ammo for Fed rate-hike pause
While the Federal Reserve has been battling high inflation with interest rate hikes, futures traders are betting that rates have already peaked and that the Fed will likely reverse course and cut rates at least a couple of times before the end of the year, according to the CME’s FedWatch tool.
The market is pricing in a “coin flip” as to whether the Fed raises its benchmark rate by a quarter percentage point at its May policy meeting, said Matt Stucky, senior portfolio manager at Northwestern Mutual Wealth Management Co., in a phone interview Friday.
“We think we’re getting pretty close to the end” of the rate-hiking cycle, he said. Stucky expects the Fed may stop hiking once “cracks” start to form in the labor market, with job losses in “nonfarm payrolls.”
Meanwhile, consumer spending edged up 0.2% in February while personal incomes rose 0.3%, according to a Bureau of Economic Analysis report Friday.
“Incomes and spending are hanging in there and inflation’s cooling,” said Mike Skordeles, head of U.S. economics at Truist, in a phone interview Friday. “That has positive implications for markets” and the economy, he said.
Stocks traded higher following the release of the final reading on U.S. consumer sentiment for March from the University of Michigan. While confidence ticked lower compared with earlier estimates, inflation expectations moderated.
U.S. stocks have held up relatively well this quarter, shrugging off the Fed rate hikes and renewed recession fears. Since hitting its highest level of the year in early February, the S&P 500 has been trading in an increasingly narrow range, leaving analysts divided about where the market might be heading next.
“We need to see what the overall economy does,” said Kim Caughey Forrest, founder and chief investment officer of Bokeh Capital Partners. “I think GDP matters, and if GDP holds up while inflation comes down, that could be good for stocks.”
The Nasdaq Composite has risen around 16% since the start of the year, putting it on track for its best quarterly gain since the three months through June 2020, according to FactSet data, at last check. The technology -heavy Nasdaq jumped more than 30% in the second quarter of 2020 as stocks rebounded from the global market rout tied to COVID-19 that year.
The S&P 500 and Dow were also track for quarterly gains in late afternoon trading.
“The bond market is definitely more concerned about recession risks than stocks are,” said Skordeles, who is expecting a recession in the second half of the year. “They couldn’t be sending more different signals.”
Read: Two-year Treasury yields on pace for biggest monthly drop since 2008 after bank turmoil
New York Fed President John Williams said Friday in a speech at Housatonic Community College that stress in the U.S banking system will cause banks to tighten credit and probably lead to lower consumer spending.
Companies in focus
-
Right-wing media platforms Rumble
RUM,
+7.12%
and Digital World Acquisition
DWAC,
+7.58%
traded sharply higher on the Donald Trump indictment news. -
Metropolitan Bank Holding Corp.
MCB,
+33.64%
shares rallied after issuing a financial update assuring investors that it is well capitalized. The regional lender closed 27% down on Thursday. -
Palisade Bio’s
PALI,
+32.83%
stock soared, continuing a Thursday rally after Maxim Group upgraded the stock from hold to buy. -
Spero Therapeutics
SPRO,
+0.69%
shares slipped after the clinical-stage biopharmaceutical company posted fourth-quarter revenue of $47.4 million in 2022, higher than the $2.7 million in the same period of the previous year. The uplift was due to the company’s signings with GSK and Pfizer. -
Chicken Soup for the Soul Entertainment
CSSE,
-37.50%
sank after the streaming-service parent company announced it would sell some stock and reported a fourth-quarter loss. -
Virgin Orbit Holdings’s
VORB,
-41.19%
stock tumbled after the space-launch company said late Thursday that it would axe 675 – or 85% – of its staff and reportedly cease operations for the foreseeable future. -
Nikola Corp.
NKLA,
-13.57%
slumped after the electric-vehicle maker said that it intends to sell stock at a 20% discount, for $1.12 per share. -
U.S.-listed shares of Chinese e-commerce giant JD.com
JD,
-1.15%
were marginally lower after announcing late on Thursday that it intends to spin off two of its subsidiaries, following in the footsteps of Alibaba Group.
—Steve Goldstein contributed to this article.
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The Dow Jones Industrial Average
-
Wall Street bonuses fall by the most since 2008 as policy makers mull economic impact
Wall Street bonuses fell 26% in 2022, the largest drop since the collapse of Lehman Brothers in 2008, as New York state and city officials dial back their expectations for the economic impact of the securities industry.
While many people bemoan the salaries commanded by the Big Apple’s white-shoe bankers, the financial sector provides an economic boost to city and state budgets, helping to find public services that touch the lives of residents.
Now, with the banking sector absorbing the impact of the collapse of Silicon Valley Bank and Signature Bank in recent weeks and of a lack of investment bank deal-making, 2023 isn’t looking particularly strong. The current malaise may signal what’s in store for bonuses and employment in the coming year.
Rahul Jain, state deputy comptroller, said state and city official are baking in conservative projections for a decline in Wall Street profits and bonuses in 2023 partly because much remains unknown such as when the Fed will pause its interest rate hikes or possibly cut them.
“What we can’t tell is what the Fed will do with interest rates,” Jain told MarketWatch. “It doesn’t seem like we’ll return to the levels of 2020 and 2021, but there’s hope that 2023 will level off near 2022.”
While Wall Street and the banking sector is challenged, the overall economy remains relatively healthy, as other sectors such as travel make up for weakness in the securities industry in the New York area.
“The broad economy still matters and it’s still resilient,” he said. “People still want to do things.”
Like the FDIC and other regulators, the comptroller’s office is keeping an eye on the commercial real estate market, which will hinge on how much credit is available for loan refinancings.
“Any kind of credit crunch would make the situation worse,” Jain said.
The average Wall Street banker’s bonus dropped by $63,700 in 2022, to $176,700, the New York State Comptroller’s Office reported Thursday. That figure does not include regular salary.
Terrence Horan/MarketWatch
Even with the cut, the bonus alone eclipses average U.S. wages. Full-time employees in management, professional and related occupations have the highest median weekly earnings reported by the Bureau of Labor Statistics, and the median income for this group across the U.S. was $1,729 a week, or $89,908 a year, in the fourth quarter of 2022 for men, and $1,316 per week, or $68,432 per year, for women.
Wall Street banker bonuses jumped by 28% in 2020 and grew by another 12% in 2021, only to fall 26% in 2022. That is the largest drop since the 43% fall in 2008, the year Lehman Brothers collapsed and triggered a global financial crisis.
At the same time, employment in the securities industry climbed to 190,800 by the end of 2022, the highest level in at least 20 years and surpassing the previous 20-year high of 188,900 in 2007.
Collectively, Wall Street firms generated $25.8 billion in profits in 2022, less than half the $58.4 billion produced in 2021 as the impact of inflation, the war in Ukraine and supply constraints bit into deal-making.
The securities industry accounted for about $22.9 billion in state tax revenue, or 22% of the state’s tax collections in fiscal 2021-’22, and $5.4 billion in city tax revenue, or 8% of total tax collections over the same period.
New York State Comptroller Thomas P. DiNapoli estimated a drop of $457 million in 2022 tax income for the state and of $208 million for New York City, when measured against the lucrative year of 2021.
With recession in the headlines and markets selling off in 2022, however, policy makers have already adjusted their expectations for tax income.
New York Gov. Kathy Hochul’s proposed budget assumes that bonuses in the broader finance and insurance sector will drop by 25.2% in 2022-’23, while the city’s 2023 financial plan assumes a decrease of 35.6% for the securities industry.
“While lower bonuses affect income tax revenues for the state and city, our economic recovery does not depend solely on Wall Street,” DiNapoli said in a statement. “Employment in leisure and hospitality, retail, restaurants and construction must continue to improve for the city and state to fully recover.”
The fate of Wall Street’s bonuses in 2023 remains tied up in what markets and interest rates do for the balance of the year. Based on the storm clouds over the banking sector now, it’s possible bonuses could fall again.
In one positive sign, the equities market has managed to post gains so far in 2023 after bruising losses in 2022. At last check, the S&P 500
SPX,
+0.57%
is up 5.6% in 2023, while the Nasdaq
COMP,
+0.73%
has risen 14.9%. The Financial Select Sector SPDR exchange-traded fund
XLF,
-0.22%
is down 6.6% so far in 2023.After Wall Street bonuses fell 43% in 2008, they rebounded by 39% in 2009. Such a rapid recovery may not be in the cards for the coming year, however.
Member firms at the New York Stock Exchange generated profits of $13.5 billion in the first half of 2022, down by more than half from year-ago levels, according to an October report on the securities industry in New York by the comptroller’s office.
Revenue on trading, underwriting and securities offerings dropped about 48% over the same time period, while global debt offerings dropped by 17%.
At the same time, interest-rate expenses tripled as the U.S. Federal Reserve boosted interest rates.
“Despite this uncertainty, the city’s latest forecast predicts annual profits to average $21 billion over the next five years, comparable to the 10-year pre-pandemic average of $20.3 billion,” the study said.
The bonus pool of $33.7 billion in 2022 fell 21% from 2021’s record of $42.7 billion, the largest drop since the Great Recession.
Also read: Jobs added at Morgan Stanley, Bank of America, Citi and JPMorgan but cut at Wells Fargo and Goldman
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S&P 500 ends above 4,000 mark on Wednesday, posting highest close in 3 weeks
U.S. stocks finished higher on Wednesday as investors waited on an update on inflation due Friday that could help inform how many more rate hikes to expect from the Federal Reserve.
The S&P 500 index SPX rose about 56 points, or 1.4%, ending near 4,027, according to preliminary FactSet data, the highest close since March 6. That was only days before the collapse of Silicon Valley Bank put a spotlight on risks in the U.S. banking system after the Fed’s yearlong stretch of quick rate hikes.
The…
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U.S. stocks close lower Tuesday as Treasury yields climb
U.S. stocks ended modestly lower on Tuesday, as Treasury yields rose, keeping pressure on the rate-sensitive Nasdaq Composite Index. The Dow Jones Industrial Average DJIA shed about 37 points, or 0.1%, ending near 32,394, while the S&P 500 index SPX fell 0.2% and the Nasdaq COMP closed 0.5% lower, according to preliminary data from FactSet. Stocks fell, but ended off the session lows, as the 2-year Treasury rate BX:TMUBMUSD02Y climbed 10.5 basis points to 4.06%. Bond yields and prices move in the opposite direction. Tuesday also saw a raft of relatively upbeat economic data and increased expectations by traders in fed-funds…
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U.S. stocks end mostly higher as banks helped buoy S&P 500 after First Citizens deal
U.S. stocks closed mostly higher Monday, as bank shares climbed after First Citizens BancShares Inc.
FCNCA,
+53.74%
agreed to buy failed Silicon Valley Bank’s deposits and loans. The Dow Jones Industrial Average
DJIA,
+0.60%
finished 0.6% higher, while the S&P 500
SPX,
+0.16%
gained 0.2% and the technology-heavy Nasdaq Composite
COMP,
-0.47%
slipped 0.5%, according to preliminary data from FactSet. Regional and big banks helped buoy the S&P 500, with First Republic Bank
FRC,
+11.81%
among the index’s top-performing stocks, FactSet data show. Shares of major Wall Street banks such as Bank of America Corp.
BAC,
+4.97% ,
Citigroup Inc.
C,
+3.87% ,
Wells Fargo & Co.
WFC,
+3.42%
and JPMorgan Chase & Co.
JPM,
+2.87%
also saw sharp gains in Monday’s trading session. -
Why the worst banking mess since 2008 isn’t freaking out stock-market investors — yet
Judging by the major indexes, it will take more than the Federal Reserve raising interest rates in the midst of the worst banking mess since the 2008 financial crisis for stock-market investors to lose their cool.
“Investors are broadly assuming that regulators are going to step in and ringfence the sector if need be, and that’s what keeps it from spilling over to the broader market,” said Anastasia Amoroso, chief investment strategist at iCapital, in a phone interview.
There’s also a second reason. Investors see the banking woes forcing the Fed to pause the rate-hike cycle or even begin cutting as early as June, she noted. An end to the yearlong rise in rates will remove a source of pressure on stock-market valuations.
But gains last week, which came amid volatile trading, aren’t sending an all-clear signal, stock-market analysts and investors said.
Banking worries haven’t gone away after the failure of three U.S. institutions earlier this month and UBS Group AG’s
UBS,
-0.94% UBSG,
-3.55%
agreement to acquire troubled Swiss rival Credit Suisse
CS,
-1.23% CSGN,
-5.19%
in a merger forced by regulators. Jitters were on display Friday when shares of German financial giant Deutsche Bank
DB,
-3.11% It’s the fear of runs on U.S. regional banks that still keep investors up at night. Markets might face a test Monday if investors react to Federal Reserve data released after Friday’s closing bell showed deposits at small U.S. banks dropped by a record $119 billion in the weekly period ended Wednesday, March 15, following Silicon Valley Bank’s collapse the preceding Friday.
That sensitivity to deposits was on display last week. U.S. Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen was blamed for a late Wednesday selloff that saw the Dow end over 500 points lower after she told lawmakers that her department hadn’t considered or discussed a blanket guarantee for deposits. On Thursday, she told House lawmakers that, “we would be prepared to take additional actions if warranted.”
Deposits are “the epicenter of the crisis of confidence” in U.S. banks, said Kristina Hooper, chief global market strategist at Invesco, in a phone interview. Anything that suggests there won’t be full protection for deposits is bound to worry investors in a charged environment.
See: Is the deposit insurance system broken? 9 things you need to know.
Cascading runs on regional banks would stoke fears of further bank failures and the potential for a full-blown financial crisis, but short of that, pressure on deposits also underline fears the U.S. economy is headed for a credit crunch.
Speaking of a credit crunch. Deposits across banks have been under pressure after the Federal Reserve began aggressively raising interest rates roughly a year ago. Since then, deposits at all domestic banks have fallen by $663 billion, or 3.9%, as money flowed into money-market funds and bonds, noted Paul Ashworth, chief North American economist at Capital Economics, in a Friday note.
“Unless banks are willing to jack up their deposit rates to prevent that flight, they will eventually have to rein in the size of their loan portfolios, with the resulting squeeze on economic activity another reason to expect a recession is coming soon,” he wrote.
Meanwhile, activity in U.S. capital markets has largely dried up since Silicon Valley Bank’s collapse on March 10, noted Torsten Slok, chief global economist at Apollo Global Management, in a recent note.
Apollo Global Management
There was virtually no investment-grade or high-yield debt issuance and no initial public offerings on U.S. exchanges, while merger and acquisition activity since then represents completed deals that were initiated before SVB’s collapse, he said (see chart above).
“The longer capital markets are closed, and the longer funding spreads for banks remain elevated, the more negative the impact will be on the broader economy,” Slok wrote.
The Dow Jones Industrial Average
DJIA,
+0.41%
rose 1.2% last week, ending a back-to-back run of declines. The S&P 500
SPX,
+0.56%
rose 1.4%, recouping the large-cap benchmark’s March losses to turn flat on the month. The Nasdaq Composite
COMP,
+0.31%
saw a 1.7% weekly rise, leaving the tech-heavy index up 3.2% for the month to date.Regional bank stocks showed some signs of stability, but have yet to begin a meaningful recovery from steep March losses. The SPDR S&P Regional Banking ETF
KRE,
+3.03%
eked out a 0.2% weekly gain but remains down 29.3% in March. KRE’s plunge has taken it back to levels last seen in November 2020.Look beneath the surface, and the stock market appears “bifurcated,” said Austin Graff, chief investment officer and founder of Opal Capital.
Much of the resilience in the broader market is attributable to gains for megacap technology stocks, which have enjoyed a flight-to-safety role, he said in a phone interview.
The megacap tech-heavy Nasdaq-100
NDX,
+0.30%
was up 6% in March through Friday’s close, according to FactSet, while regional bank shares dragged on the small-cap Russell 2000
RUT,
+0.85% ,
down 8.5% over the same stretch.For investors, “the expectation should be for continued volatility because we do have less money flowing through the economy,” Graff said. There’s more pain to be felt in highly levered parts of the economy that weren’t prepared for the speed and scope of the Fed’s aggressive rate increases, including areas like commercial real estate that are also struggling with the work-from-home phenomenon.
Graff has been buying companies in traditionally defensive sectors, such as utilities, consumer staples and healthcare, that are expected to be resilient during economic downturns.
Invesco’s Hooper said it makes sense for tactical allocators to position defensively right now.
“But I think there has to be a recognition that if the banking issues that we’re seeing do appear to be resolved and the Fed has paused, we are likely to see a market regime shift…to a more risk-on environment,” she said. That would favor “overweight” positions in equities, including cyclical and small-cap stocks as well as moving further out on the risk spectrum on fixed income.
The problem, she said, is the well-known difficulty in timing the market.
Amoroso at iCapital said a “barbell” approach would allow investors to “get paid while they wait” by taking advantage of decent yields in cash, short- and long-term Treasurys, corporate bonds and private credit, while at the same time using dollar-cost averaging to take advantage of opportunities where valuations have been reset to the downside.
“It doesn’t feel great for investors, but the reality is that we’re likely trapped in a narrow range for the S&P for a while,” Amoroso said, “until either growth breaks to the downside or inflation breaks to the downside.”
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Dow ends 130 points higher Friday, stocks book weekly gains despite continued banking sector concerns
U.S. stocks ended a volatile week higher on Friday, a week that saw the Federal Reserve raise rates another 25 basis points and risks in the U.S. and European banking sectors remain in key focus. The Dow Jones Industrial Average
DJIA,
+0.41%
rose about 132 points, or 0.4%, ending near 32,238, Friday, boosting its weekly gain to 1.2%, according to preliminary FactSet data. The S&P 500 index
SPX,
+0.56%
climbed 0.6% Friday and 1.4% for the week, while the Nasdaq Composite Index
COMP,
+0.31%
closed up 0.3% for a 1.7% weekly gain. Investors have been concerned about a potential credit crunch and its likely toll on the economy, after the failure earlier in March of Silicon Valley Bank and Signature Bank. Fed Chairman Jerome Powell on Wednesday said he expected credit conditions to tightening further, doing some of the central bank’s work for it, in terms of bringing down inflation. One worry is that high rates and tighter credit could lead to a wave of defaults. Goldman Sachs this week raised its default forecast for the U.S. high-yield, or junk-bond, market to 4% from 2.8% for 2023. The junk-bond market is considered an earlier harbinger of potential stress in credit markets since it finances companies already considered at an elevated risk of buckling. European banks also were in focus, including on Friday as shares of Deutsche Bank
DB,
-3.11%
came under pressure after costs of insuring it against a credit default jumped. Still, the S&P 500 and Nasdaq posted back-to-back weekly gains, according to Dow Jones Market Data. Before Friday, the Dow had two weekly declines in a row. -
U.S. stocks end higher, S&P 500 books back-to-back weekly gains despite bank jitters spurred by Deutsche Bank
U.S. stocks finished Friday higher, despite a jump in the cost of Deutsche Bank’s credit-default swaps helping to reignite banking-sector worries. The Dow Jones Industrial Average, S&P 500 and Nasdaq Composite each booked weekly gains.
How stocks traded
-
The Dow Jones Industrial Average
DJIA,
+0.41%
rose 132.28 points, or 0.4%, to close at 32,237.53. -
The S&P 500
SPX,
+0.56%
gained 22.27 points, or 0.6%, to finish at 3,970.99. -
The Nasdaq Composite
COMP,
+0.31%
added 36.56 points, or 0.3%, to end at 11,823.96.
For the week, the Dow gained 1.2%, while the S&P 500 rose 1.4% and the Nasdaq advanced 1.7%, according to FactSet data. The Dow snapped two straight weeks of losses, while the S&P 500 and Nasdaq each booked back-to-back weekly gains.
What drove markets
U.S. stocks ended modestly higher Friday to notch weekly gains even as worries over the banking system lingered.
Bank concerns have cast a “heavy cloud over the market,” with investors worried about “weak links,” said Yung-Yu Ma, chief investment strategist at BMO Wealth Management, in a phone interview Friday. Ma said he expects investors will be looking to sell, potentially into any rallies, “until some of these clouds are lifted.”
Shares of Germany’s Deutsche Bank AG
DBK,
-8.53% DB,
-3.11%
dropped Friday, after the cost of insuring the bank against a credit default jumped. The bank’s credit-default swaps had risen to the highest level since late 2018, according to a Reuters report Friday.Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen announced Friday she called an unscheduled meeting of the Financial Stability Oversight Council or FSOC which was created in the wake of the 2008 financial crisis to help the government combat threats to financial stability. The FSOC issued a short statement after the market closed Friday saying that “while some institutions have come under stress, the U.S. banking system remains sound and resilient”.
“Clearly, somebody thinks there are some concerns there,” said Randy Frederick, managing director of trading and derivatives at Charles Schwab. The problems facing European banks stem back to the era of negative interest rates, which set banks up for large losses on their bond holdings, he said.
The selloff in Deutsche Bank shares weighed on banks in the U.S. and Europe, as banking-sector fears reemerged. Shares of UBS Group
UBS,
-0.94% ,
which recently agreed to buy rival Credit Suisse Group, fell Friday.Other major European lenders, including Italy’s UniCredit S.p.A
UCG,
-4.06%
and Spain’s Banco Santander SA
SAN,
-3.00% ,
also saw their shares sink.“The thing that’s important to know about financials is there probably are banks that have problems, but there are others that don’t,” Frederick told MarketWatch during a phone interview. “People need to do some research.”
The S&P 500’s financial sector fell 0.1% Friday, according to FactSet data.
While banking-sector woes have hammered the financial sector this month, the outperformance of megacap technology stocks and other sectors have helped prop up the broader U.S. equities market. So far this month, the S&P 500 index is up less than 0.1%, FactSet data show.
Concerns about the fragility of the banking sector have been percolating following a year of the Federal Reserve’s aggressive interest rate hikes. On Wednesday, the Fed announced that it hiked its policy rate by a quarter point to a range of 4.75% to 5% while projecting it could deliver one more 25 basis-point hike in 2023.
In his first comments since the rapid collapse of Silicon Valley Bank two weeks ago, St. Louis Federal Reserve President James Bullard said Friday the latest drop in Treasury yields could help cushion some of the stress facing the banking sector.
Yields on the 2-year Treasury note
TMUBMUSD02Y,
3.779%
and 10-year Treasury note
TMUBMUSD10Y,
3.376%
each fell Friday in their third straight week of declines, according to Dow Jones Market Data. Two-year yields slid to 3.777% on Friday, the lowest level since September based on 3 p.m. Eastern time levels, while 10-year Treasury yields dropped to 3.379%, their lowest rate since January.Read: ‘Red alert recession signals.’ Gundlach expects the Fed to cut rates substantially ‘soon.’
In U.S. economic data, a report Friday on sales of durable goods showed orders fell 1% in February, largely because of waning demand for passenger planes and new cars. Meanwhile, the S&P Global Flash U.S. services-sector index rose to an 11-month high of 53.8 in March.
The role of regional banks in the U.S. economy is “huge,” said Sandi Bragar, chief client officer at wealth management firm Aspiriant, in a phone interview Friday. Bragar said she worries that recent regional bank failures will result in a pullback in lending that leads to slower economic growth and potentially a recession.
“Our stance has been to be very diversified and we have been remaining on the defensive side of things,” she said.
Within equities, that has meant holding “high-quality companies” that should be resilient in “poor economic times,” including stocks in areas such as healthcare, information technology and consumer staples, said Bragar.
Companies in focus
-
Deutsche Bank
DBK,
-8.53% DB,
-3.11%
shares dropped 8.5% but finished off lows seen when the German bank’s credit default swaps jumped without an apparent catalyst. -
Wells Fargo
WFC,
-1.04%
shares slid 1% while JPMorgan
JPM,
-1.52%
fell 1.5%, with bank stocks remaining under pressure in the wake of regional U.S. bank failures. -
Activision Blizzard
ATVI,
+5.91%
climbed 5.9% and after the U.K. Competition and Markets Authority dropped some of its concerns with the potential purchase of the company by Microsoft. Shares of Microsoft
MSFT,
+1.05%
rose slightly more than 1%.
–Steve Goldstein contributed to this report.
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The Dow Jones Industrial Average
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Dow, S&P 500 post modest gains Thursday as investor focus returns to banking risks
U.S. stocks ended modestly higher Thursday in choppy trade as worries about potential weakness in the banking system resurfaced a day after the Federal Reserve increased hikes by 25 basis points. The Dow Jones Industrial Average
DJIA,
+0.23%
rose about 73 points, or 0.2%, ending near 32,103, down about 400 points from the session’s high. The S&P 500 index
SPX,
+0.30%
gained 0.3% and the Nasdaq Composite Index
COMP,
+1.01%
closed up 1%, according to preliminary figures from FactSet. Stocks closed off the session’s highs, but gained ground after Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen told a Senate committee that the federal government would take extra steps to stabilize the U.S. banking system, if necessary. Stocks closed sharply lower Wednesday after the Fed raised its policy rate to a range of 4.75% to 5%, up a year ago from close to zero. But some analysts said a catalyst of the selloff was comments from Yellen indicating she wasn’t yet considering ways to guarantee all bank deposits, despite regulators providing an exception to depositors in Silicon Valley Bank and Signature Bank, which failed earlier this month. Sheila Bair, who ran the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. from 2006 to 2011, told MarketWatch on Thursday that the focus should be on underwater securities at all banks, not only regional lenders. -
‘This is a risk confronting all banks,’ ex-FDIC chief Sheila Bair tells MarketWatch
Regional banks shouldn’t be the only source of worry for potential fallout from the Federal Reserve’s rapid pace of interest-rate hikes in the past year, said a former top banking regulator.
“I don’t see regional banks as having any particular problem,” said Sheila Bair, who ran the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. from 2006 to 2011, in an interview with MarketWatch on Thursday. “We need to be mindful of all unmarked securities at banks — small, medium and large.”
Bair called the hyperfocus on regional banks and interest-rate risks “counter productive” in the wake of the collapse earlier in March of Silicon Valley Bank and Signature Bank
SBNY,
-22.87%
of New York.“This is a risk confronting all banks,” she said. “All examiners need to be on alert for how interest-rate risk is being managed. If there is a run, they will need to sell these securities. Those are the kinds of things all-size banks, and all examiners should be worried about.”
A run on deposits at Silicon Valley Bank snowballed after it disclosed a $1.8 billion loss on a sudden sale of $21 billion worth of high-quality, rate-sensitive mortgage and Treasury securities. It was the biggest U.S. bank failure since Washington Mutual’s collapse in 2008.
The FDIC estimated that U.S. banks had some $620 billion of unrealized losses from securities on their books as of the end of 2022, including longer-duration Treasurys and mortgage securities that have become worth less than their face value.
“Unrealized losses on securities have meaningfully reduced the reported equity capital of the banking industry,” FDIC Chairman Martin Gruenberg said on March 6, in a speech at the Institute of International Bankers.
Days after that gathering, Silicon Valley Bank and Signature Bank both collapsed, prompting regulators to roll out a new emergency bank funding program to help head off any liquidity strains at other U.S. lenders. Regulators also backstopped all deposits at the two failed lenders.
Bair earlier this month argued that if U.S. banking authorities see systemic risks they should go to Congress and ask for a backstop against uninsured deposits, beyond the standard $250,000 cap per depositor, at a single bank. Specifically, she wants zero-interest accounts, or those used for payroll and other operational expenses, to be fully covered, as was the case for a few years in the wake of the global financial crisis to stop runs on community banks.
Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen said Wednesday that blanket deposit insurance protection isn’t something her department is considering, but added that the appropriate level of protection could be debated in the future.
Fed Chairman Jerome Powell on Wednesday said the U.S. banking system “is sound and resilient, with strong capital and liquidity,” after hiking rates by another 25 basis points to a range of 4.75% to 5%, up from almost zero a year ago.
See: Fed hikes interest rates again, pencils in just one more rate rise this year
Bair has been calling for a pause on Fed rate hikes since December. She said that instead of raising rates by another 25 basis points on Wednesday, Fed Chair Powell should have hit pause and said the central bank needs time to assess.
“If we have a financial crisis, we won’t have a soft landing,” Bair said. “We have to avoid that at all costs.”
Read: Bank failures like SVB are a reminder that ‘risk-free’ assets can still wreck portfolios
Stocks closed modestly higher Thursday in choppy trade, with the Dow Jones Industrial Average
DJIA,
+0.23%
up 0.2% and S&P 500 index
SPX,
+0.30%
advancing 0.3%, while the Nasdaq Composite Index
COMP,
+1.01%
gained 1%. -
Moody’s sees risk that U.S. banking ‘turmoil’ can’t be contained
Despite quick action by regulators and policy makers, there’s a rising risk that banking-system stress will spill over into other sectors and the U.S. economy, “unleashing greater financial and economic damage than we anticipated,” said Moody’s Investors Service, one of the Big Three credit-ratings firms.
Simply put, the risk is that officials “will be unable to curtail the current turmoil without longer-lasting and potentially severe repercussions within and beyond the banking sector,” Atsi Sheth, Moody’s managing director of credit strategy, and others wrote in a note distributed on Thursday. Still, the agency’s baseline view is that U.S. officials will “broadly succeed.”
Moody’s warning came as Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen indicated that the U.S. could take additional actions if needed to stabilize the banking system, and after Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell assured Americans on Wednesday that the central bank would use its tools to protect depositors.
Read: Regional banks get the attention, but worries are more widespread, says ex-FDIC chief Bair and Debate over expanding deposit insurance weighs on bank stocks. Here’s what to know.
Beneath the surface, though, is lingering worry. Hedge-fund manager Bill Ackman, for example, is warning of an acceleration of deposit outflows from banks and the latest global fund manager survey from Bank of America
BAC,
-2.42%
found that 31% of 212 managers polled regard a systemic credit crunch as the biggest threat to markets.Of the three ways in which banking-system troubles could spill over more broadly, one of them is potentially the “most potent,” according to Moody’s: That is a general aversion to risk by financial-market players and a decision by banks to retrench from providing credit. Such a scenario could lead to the “crystallization of risk in multiple pockets simultaneously,” the ratings agency said.
Source: Moody’s Investors Service
“Over the course of 2023, as financial conditions remain tight and growth slows, a range of sectors and entities with existing credit challenges will face risks to their credit profiles,” the Moody’s team wrote. Banks are not the only type of players with exposure to interest-rate shocks, and “market scrutiny will focus on those entities that are exposed to similar risks as the troubled banks.”
A second potential channel for spillover is through the direct and indirect exposure to troubled banks that private and public entities have — via deposits, loans, transactional facilities, essential services, or holdings in those banks’ bonds and stocks. And a third way in which banking problems could spread more broadly is through a misstep by policy makers, who have been focused on inflation and may not be able to respond effectively enough to evolving developments, Moody’s said.
On Thursday, U.S. stocks
DJIA,
+0.23% COMP,
+1.01%
finished higher as investors continued to weigh the risks to the banking sector. The policy-sensitive 2-year Treasury yield
TMUBMUSD02Y,
3.833%
fell to its lowest level this year, while gold futures settled at a more than one-year high.Last week, Fitch Ratings said that nonbank financial institutions, insurers, and funds were experiencing a variety of “knock-on effects” as the result of the sudden deterioration of a few U.S. banks.
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Dow skids 530 points, stocks close sharply lower after Fed raises rates, says cuts unlikely this year
U.S. stocks closed sharply lower on Wednesday, giving up earlier gains, after the Federal Reserve raises interest rates by 25 basis points as expected, but talked down the possibility of cuts to rates this year. The Dow Jones Industrial Average
DJIA,
-1.63%
tumbled 531 points, or 1.6%, ending near 32,028, while the S&P 500 index
SPX,
-1.65%
shed 1.7% and the Nasdaq Composite Index
COMP,
-1.60%
closed down 1.6%, according to preliminary FactSet figures. Fed Chairman Jerome Powell said the U.S. banking system remained resilient after it and regulators rolled out liquidity measures to help shore up confidence in the banking system after the collapse of Silicon Valley Bank and Signature Bank earlier in March. Powell also said that tighter credit conditions for consumers, following the bank failures, would likely work like rate hikes in terms of lowering inflation. It will be a key area of focus for the Fed in the coming weeks and months, he said. The 10-year Treasury rate
TMUBMUSD10Y,
3.444%
fell Wednesday to 3.46%, a sign that investors in the bond market think growth will be slower. -

S&P 500 pushes above 4,010 level, stocks turn higher after Fed raises rates by 25 basis points
U.S. stocks turned higher, shaking off earlier weakness, after the Federal Reserve on Wednesday raised its policy rate as expected by 25 basis points to help fight inflation. The increase in interest rates comes despite recent weakness in the banking system after the collapse earlier in March of Silicon Valley Bank. The S&P 500 index
SPX,
-0.55%
was up 14 points, or 0.4%, to about 4,016, at last check, while the Dow Jones Industrial Average
DJIA,
-0.68%
was up 0.2% near 32,609 and the Nasdaq Composite Index was 0.7% higher. The Fed also said the U.S. banking system remains resilient, in its policy statement. The 10-year Treasury rate
TMUBMUSD10Y,
3.507%
was lower at 3.52%.