U.S. stocks logged their biggest daily advance in more than 5 weeks on Friday as investors reacted to data showing the labor market and wage growth finally starting to cool. The S&P 500
SPX,
gained roughly 87 points, or 2.3%, to finish at 3,895 as the index snapped a four-week losing streak. The Dow Jones Industrial Average
DJIA,
climbed 700 points, or 2.1%, to finish at roughly 33,630. The Nasdaq Composite
COMP,
advanced 264 points, or 1.6%, 10,569. Labor Department data showed the U.S. economy added 233,000 jobs last month, which was fewer than the prior month, while beating economists’ expectations for 200,000 new jobs. Wages grew by a modest 0.3% last month.
Tag: SPX
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Dow gains 700 points as stocks log biggest advance in 5 weeks
+2.28% +2.13% +2.56% -

House adjourns until 10 p.m. Eastern as speaker election remains unresolved
The U.S. House of Representatives voted Friday to adjourn until 10 p.m. Eastern, as the chamber’s Republican leaders sought a break during their push to get California Rep. Kevin McCarthy elected as speaker. McCarthy picked up some support Friday in the latest rounds of voting for speaker of the House, though it wasn’t sufficient to give him the job so another ballot was expected.
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Dow up 500 points as pace of jobs growth, wage gains cools in December
U.S. stocks advanced Friday, with the Dow rising 500 points, as monthly Labor Department data showed the pace of job creation cooled in December while wage gains slowed, fueling hopes that the Federal Reserve’s interest rate hikes are starting to have the desired effect.
How are stocks trading
-
The S&P 500
SPX,
+1.85%
gained 61 points, or 1.6%, to 3,869. -
Dow Jones Industrial Average
DJIA,
+1.85%
climbed 528 points, or 1.6%, to 33,458. -
Nasdaq Composite
COMP,
+2.93%
advanced 155 points, or 1.5%, to 10,460.
After several sessions of choppy trade stocks finished lower on Thursday. However, thanks to Friday’s strong rebound, the S&P 500 is on track to finish the week in the green after four consecutive weekly declines.
What’s driving markets
Stock-market bulls cheered Friday’s jobs report, which showed that the pace of job creation and wage growth cooled last month, contradicting labor-market data released earlier in the week.
The December nonfarm payrolls report showed 223,000 jobs were created in December, above expectations for 200,000 new jobs, though the pace of job creation slowed from 256,000 during November. Wages grew by just 0.3% in December, down from 0.4% a month earlier.
See: U.S. adds 223,000 jobs in December and jobless rate matches 55-year low of 3.5%
While stocks advanced in the wake of the data, it seems the labor market has continued to confound expectations for an imminent recession, market analysts said. While the pace of wage growth has slowed slightly, workers continued to command higher pay, even if wages have lagged headline inflation.
“This is not going to push the Fed off its agenda one iota,” said Brad Conger, deputy chief investment officer at Hirtle, Callaghan & Co., in commentary about Friday’s data.
Numerous Fed officials have made clear that they want to see unemployment climb in order to help suppress inflation and engineer a return to the Fed’s 2% target. Senior Fed officials expect unemployment to rise by nearly a percentage point in 2023, according to projections released in December.
“The release was a win-win from the Fed’s perspective, as it signaled that wage inflation is moderating while job growth remains steady,” said Peter Essele, Head of Portfolio Management, Commonwealth Financial Network. “Coupled with the fact that headline inflation continues to move in the right direction, there’s a growing chance the Fed may be able to navigate a soft landing in the economy. If it meets its target, 2023 could be one of the best years for markets given the amount of negative investor sentiment currently weighing on prices.”
The S&P 500 index is down more than 19% from its 52-week high after the Fed raised interest rates by 4.25 percentage points in 2022 in an attempt to crush inflation that hit a four-decade high of 9.1% in June, according to the consumer-price index.
Jobs data released earlier in the week painted a picture of a labor market that had remained robust despite the Fed’s best efforts, and it’s not clear whether Friday’s data have meaningfully changed this perception, market strategists said.
JOLTS data released Tuesday showed more than 10 million jobs remained open. Analysts noted that the ADP private sector employment report released on Thursday was stronger than expected, which triggered a selloff in stocks.
Later Friday morning in New York, the ISM services sector index for December turned negative for the first time since May 2020, indicating a slowdown in the all-important services sector. The ISM services index slowed to 49.6% in December from 56.5%, below forecast.
The drumbeat of cautious Fedspeak continued on Friday, with Federal Reserve Governor Lisa Cook saying that inflation “remains far too high, despite some encouraging signs lately.” The pace of inflation has cooled in recent months, according to the consumer-price index.
Atlanta Fed President Raphael Bostic said on CNBC Friday that the December jobs data “doesn’t really change my outlook at all.”
A number of other Fed speakers are expected Friday, including Richmond Fed President Tom Barkin at 12:15 p.m. and Kansas City Fed President Esther George at 1 p.m.
Single-stock movers
- Technology stocks may be under pressure on Friday after Samsung Electronics KR:005930 said quarterly profits fell to an eight-year low as it saw weaker demand for chips and smartphones.
-
Southwest Airlines Co.
LUV,
+2.51%
shares are worth watching after the airline warned Friday that it expects to report a surprise net loss for the fourth quarter after canceling thousands of flights over the holidays. - Tesla Inc. shares are sinking lower after the electric vehicle maker cut prices in China again.
-
World Wrestling Entertainment
WWE,
+22.56%
shares soared as founder Vince McMahon returned to the company. -
Shares of Bed Bath & Beyond Inc.
BBBY,
-21.60%
slumped as the company said it was likely to file for bankruptcy. -
Costco Wholesale Corp.
COST,
+6.77%
shares climbed on strong holiday sales.
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The S&P 500
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U.S. adds robust 223,000 jobs in December, but wage growth slows in sign of ebbing inflation pressures
The numbers: The U.S. generated 223,000 new jobs in December to mark the smallest increase in two years, but the labor market still showed surprising vigor even as the economy faced rising headwinds.
The unemployment rate, meanwhile, slipped to 3.5% from 3.6%, the government said Friday.
The jobless rate has touched 3.5% several times since 2019. That matches the lowest rate since 1969.
One good sign for Wall Street and the Federal Reserve. Hourly pay rose a modest 0.3% last month, suggesting wages are coming off a boil.
The increase in wages over the past year also slowed to 4.6% from 4.8%, marking the smallest gain since the summer of 2021.
U.S. stocks
DJIA,
-1.02%
SPX,
-1.16%
rose in premarket trades and bond yields edged higher after the report.Economists polled by The Wall Street Journal had forecast a smaller increase in new jobs of 200,000.
The resilient labor market is a double-edged sword for the Federal Reserve.
For one thing, a scarcity of workers has driven up wages and threatens to prolong a bout of high inflation. The Fed wants the labor market to cool off further to ease the upward pressure on prices.
Yet the strong labor market also offers the best hope for the Fed to avert a recession as it jacks up interest rates to the highest level in years. Higher rates reduce inflation by slowing the economy.
James Bullard, president of the St. Louis Federal Reserve, said on Thursday the odds of so-called soft landing have gone up in part because of the sturdy labor market. He was referring to a Goldilocks scenario in which the central bank vanquishes inflation without causing a recession.
Senior Fed officials still want to see the jobs market slacken some more, however. They are likely to keep raising rates — and keep them high — until demand for labor, goods and services ease up.
Big picture: The U.S. economy has shown more fragility, especially in segments like housing and manufacturing that are sensitive to high interest rates. Many economists predict a recession is likely this year due to the higher cost of borrowing.
The Fed, for its part, is trying to thread the needle: Bring down high inflation and keep the economy out of recession.
Whatever the outcome, one thing is virtually certain: The unemployment rate is expected to rise as U.S. growth wanes. Whether it’s enough to help the Fed achieve is far from clear.
Key details: Health care providers, hotels and restaurants accounted for most of the increase in employment last month. They added a combined 150,000-plus jobs.
Hiring was weaker in most other sectors, suggesting that the labor market is likely to soften further.
High-tech has been hit particularly hard and is experiencing a wave of layoffs.
Employment in so-called professional businesses, which includes some tech, fell by 6,000, largely reflecting fewer temps being hired. It was the only major category to post a decline.
The share of working-age people in the labor force — known as the participation rate — rose a tick to 62.3%.. A lack of people looking for work is a chief source of the labor shortage.
Hiring in November and October was little changed after government revisions. The economy added 256,000 jobs in November and 263,000 in October.
Market reaction: The Dow Jones Industrial Average DJIA and S&P 500 SPX were set to open higher in Friday trades.
Investors worry a strong labor market will push the Fed to take sterner measures to slow the economy. The slowdown in hiring and wage growth is likely to be seen in a positive light.
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McCarthy falls short again in ninth speaker vote, setting up 10th ballot
A ninth round of voting in the U.S. House of Representatives yet again failed to deliver a speaker on Thursday, as top House Republican Kevin McCarthy keeps facing opposition from too many fellow GOP lawmakers. Seventeen Republicans again voted for GOP Rep. Byron Donalds of Florida rather than McCarthy, while Reps. Lauren Boebert of Colorado, Josh Brecheen of Oklahoma and Matt Gaetz of Florida backed Rep. Kevin Hern of Oklahoma, who has been supporting McCarthy. Gaetz had backed former President Donald Trump for speaker in Thursday’s prior rounds of voting. GOP Rep. Victoria Spartz of Indiana again voted “present.” The House last had nine rounds of voting for a speaker election in 1923, and the chamber now must vote a 10th time.
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Dow drops 300 points as strong jobs data suggests more aggressive Fed rate hikes
U.S. stocks finished lower on Thursday, with the Dow dropping more than 300 points, as strong jobs data and hawkish Fed commentary signaled more aggressive Federal Reserve interest-rate hikes to come. The S&P 500
SPX,
-1.16%
shed 44.87 points, or 1.2%, to finish at 3,808.10. The Nasdaq Composite
COMP,
-1.47%
dropped 153.52 points, or 1.5%, to 10,305.24. The Dow Jones Industrial Average
DJIA,
-1.02%
retreated 339.69, or 1%, to 32,930.08. Private payrolls data from ADP showed jobs growth last month was far more robust than economists had expected, stoking concerns that Friday’s monthly payrolls report might also surprise to the upside. One stock-market analyst told MarketWatch earlier that “good news” about the labor market is “bad news” for stocks and bonds, as it means the Fed has failed to undercut the labor market, a key step toward suppressing inflation. -
House adjourns until Thursday as new rounds of voting keep failing to elect speaker
The U.S. House of Representatives voted on Wednesday night to adjourn until 12:30 p.m. Eastern on Thursday, with the move coming as lawmakers have been unable to elect a new speaker for a second day in a row.
That vote came after House Republicans briefly reconvened at 8 p.m. Eastern following a flurry of meetings that attempted to find room for compromise.
Top House Republican Kevin McCarthy keeps hitting resistance in his push to become speaker, falling short of a majority in three rounds of voting on Wednesday afternoon and three earlier rounds of voting on Tuesday.
CNN and Axios reported Wednesday night that McCarthy offered significant concessions to the defecting Republicans but it was unclear if that would be enough to sway enough of their votes. “No deal yet,” McCarthy said after a closed-door meeting Wednesday night, according to the Associated Press, “But a lot of progress.”
The House must kick off the new congressional session with the election of a speaker, and it’s required to keep voting until one is chosen. There hasn’t been a need for multiple votes for a speaker’s election since 1923, when nine rounds of voting were required.
McCarthy can handle no more than four GOP defections given his party’s 222-212 majority, but more than that number have repeatedly opposed the California congressman.
In all three rounds of voting on Wednesday, 20 Republicans opposed him and voted instead for Rep. Byron Donalds of Florida, while Rep. Victoria Spartz of Indiana voted “present” after backing McCarthy on Tuesday.
In Tuesday’s third vote, the number of Republican lawmakers voting against McCarthy rose to 20, up from 19 in the first two rounds. Those 20 backed GOP Rep. Jim Jordan of Ohio on Tuesday, even as Jordan gave a speech in support of McCarthy and didn’t vote for himself.
Analysts have been warning that the tensions over what’s typically a ceremonial election could signal that the GOP-run House will be dysfunctional throughout 2023 —and that might affect markets eventually.
“If the House deadlock continues for weeks — or longer — the markets may have to worry about fiscal policy uncertainty,” said Greg Valliere, chief U.S. policy strategist at AGF Investments, in a note.
“If House Republicans can’t even elect a leader, how will they respond when a debt default crisis looms later this year?”
Former President Donald Trump offered support for McCarthy in a post on Wednesday morning on Truth Social, his social network.
“It’s now time for all of our GREAT Republican House Members to VOTE FOR KEVIN, CLOSE THE DEAL, TAKE THE VICTORY,” Trump wrote.
“DO NOT TURN A GREAT TRIUMPH INTO A GIANT & EMBARRASSING DEFEAT. IT’S TIME TO CELEBRATE, YOU DESERVE IT. Kevin McCarthy will do a good job, and maybe even a GREAT JOB — JUST WATCH!”
Betting market PredictIt on Wednesday evening was giving McCarthy around a 42% chance of becoming speaker, while No. 2 House Republican Steve Scalise’s chances were around 38%.
Related: How betting markets got the midterms wrong, and why Biden’s a ‘great bet’ for 2024
Republicans have taken control of the House thanks to wins in November’s midterm elections, returning to power in that chamber after four years in the minority.
But the GOP’s hopes for a strong red wave two years into President Joe Biden’s term were dashed, as the party has claimed just a small House majority and Democrats have maintained their grip on the Senate.
McCarthy has been drawing opposition from about 10% of his fellow House Republicans in large part because he’s viewed as not having done enough to oppose Democrats — as well as being part of the Washington establishment.
From MarketWatch’s archives (November 2022): McCarthy’s House speaker bid may be in trouble due to Republican objections: ‘He’s not a true conservative’
GOP Rep. Scott Perry of Pennsylvania, who heads the House Freedom Caucus, described voting against McCarthy as a vote against business as usual in Washington.
“Everybody came here because they said to their constituents, “This town is broken, and I want to fix it,’” Perry said, as he gave a speech Wednesday on the House floor.
“Well, how are you going to fix it, if you come to this town and just step right in line and keep doing the same things that everybody has done before?”
The Freedom Caucus, known for helping to bring about former Speaker John Boehner’s departure from his post in 2015, is made up of several dozen of the chamber’s most conservative Republicans.
U.S. stocks
SPX,
+0.75%
DJIA,
+0.40%
closed with gains on Wednesday. The main equity gauges finished lower on Tuesday in 2023’s first session, after the S&P 500 benchmark fell 19% in 2022, hit by the Federal Reserve’s interest-rate hikes as the central bank tries to rein in inflation.Now read: Isolated and humiliated, Russia is biggest geopolitical threat of 2023, analysts say
Plus: Brace yourself: Your tax refund could shrink in 2023. Here’s why.
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‘Recession is what everyone is betting on’: 2023’s first trading day begins
In the first trading day of the new year, U.S. financial markets were bogged down by the almost universal view that a recession is approaching.
A stocks rally fizzled out within the first 30 minutes of opening gains. Gold, a traditional safe haven, touched its highest level in six months, rising alongside silver and platinum. And 10- to 30-year Treasury yields, nestled in what’s known as the long end of the bond market, fell as investors jumped into government bonds — driving those yields down respectively to around 3.8% and 3.9%.
At the heart of the market moves was the strong sense that an economic downturn is all but inevitable at this point, following months of central bank interest rate hikes around the world — with the International Monetary Fund‘s chief Kristalina Georgieva warning that the economies of the U.S., European Union and China are all slowing simultaneously. Scion Asset Management founder Michael Burry said he expects another “inflation spike” after recession rocks the U.S., and former New York Fed President William Dudley said a U.S. economic downturn “is pretty likely.”
Read: Stock-market investors face 3 recession scenarios in 2023
“Recession is what everyone is betting on,” said Ben Emons, senior portfolio manager and head of fixed income/macro strategy at NewEdge Wealth in New York. “And, the thinking is, therefore inflation will decelerate faster than what people anticipate and the Federal Reserve could move quicker to a rate cut. But the whole narrative of a recession is something that’s bothering the stock market and other asset classes because it will mean shrinking margins and earnings.”
Indeed, a much-hoped for rally in stocks around this time of the year, known as the “Santa Claus rally,” is failing to materialize, with just one more trading session left on Wednesday before the end of that seasonal period. The in-house research arm of BlackRock Inc., the world’s largest asset manager, described recession as “foretold” on Tuesday and said it is “tactically underweight” developed-market stocks, which are still “not pricing the recession we see ahead.” That’s the case even though global stocks ended 2022 down by 18% and bonds fell 16%, said Jean Boivin, head of the BlackRock Investment Institute, and others.
Sources: BlackRock Investment Institute, Refinitiv, Bloomberg.
“We see stock rallies built on hopes for rapid rate cuts fizzling. Why? Central banks are unlikely to come to the rescue in recessions they themselves caused to bring inflation down to policy targets. Earnings expectations are also still not fully reflecting recession, in our view. But markets are now pricing in more of the damage we see – and as this continues, it would pave the way for us to turn more positive on risk assets,” Boivin and others at BlackRock Investment Institute wrote in a note Tuesday.
“Even with a recession coming, we think we are going to be living with inflation,” they said.
Interestingly, the financial market’s focus on a 2023 recession is being accompanied by the view that such a downturn will help cure inflation, allowing central banks to end, slow, or even reverse their monetary policy-tightening campaigns. That view was buttressed by Tuesday’s release of inflation data out of Germany, which showed that the annual rate from the consumer price index fell by more than expected in December to a four-month low. Back in the U.S., fed funds futures traders priced in a greater likelihood of a smaller-than-usual, 25-basis point rate hike by the Federal Reserve in February.
As of Tuesday afternoon, all three major U.S. stock indexes DJIA SPX were down, led by a 1.3% drop in the Nasdaq Composite.
Meanwhile, a rally in Treasurys moderated relative to earlier in the day. The 10-year Treasury yield
TMUBMUSD10Y,
3.785% ,
a benchmark for borrowing costs, dropped back to levels last seen around Dec. 23-26, a period when conditions were “totally illiquid and no one was trading,” said Emons of NewEdge Wealth. -

Stocks cement worst year since 2008 as S&P 500 logs 4th biggest drop since inception
U.S. stocks polished off their worst year since 2008 with a loss on Friday, bringing the year-to-date decline for the S&P 500 to 19.4%, its largest calendar-year drop since 2008, Dow Jones Market Data show. The same holds true for the Dow Jones Industrial Average, which shed 8.8% this year, and the Nasdaq Composite, which lost 33.1%. On Friday, as stocks pared their losses heading into the close on the last session of the year, the S&P 500
SPX,
-0.25%
fell 9.78 points, or 0.2%, to finish at 3,839.50, while the Nasdaq Composite
COMP,
-0.11%
fell 11.61 points, or 0.1%, to 10,466.48, and the Dow
DJIA,
-0.22%
fell 73.55 points, or 0.2%, to 33,147.25. 2022 also marked the fourth-worst year for the S&P 500 since its inception in 1957. The only years where stocks fared worse were 2002, 1974 and 2008, according to DJMD. As previously high-flying megacap technology stocks and other interest-rate sensitive assets crumbled, value stocks outperformed this year, sending the Dow to its biggest calendar-year outperformance vs. the Nasdaq since 2000. The blue-chip gauge also recorded its biggest outperformance vs. the S&P 500 since the index’s creation. Energy stocks were a lone bright spot, as the S&P 500 energy sector recorded its best year on record with a 59% gain. -
U.S. stocks fall on last trading day of 2022, booking monthly losses and worst year since 2008
U.S. stocks ended lower Friday, booking their worst annual losses since 2008, as tax-loss harvesting along with anxieties about the outlook for corporate profits and the U.S. consumer took their toll.
How stock indexes traded
-
The Dow Jones Industrial Average
DJIA,
-0.22%
slipped 73.55 points, or 0.2%, to 33,147.25. -
The S&P 500
SPX,
-0.25%
shed 9.78 points, or 0.3%, to 3,839.50. - The Nasdaq Composite dipped 11.61 points, or 0.1%, to 10,466.48.
For the week, the Dow fell 0.2%, the S&P 500 slipped 0.1% and the Nasdaq slid 0.3%. The S&P 500 dropped for a fourth straight week, its longest losing streak since May, according to Dow Jones Market Data.
All three major benchmarks suffered their worst year since 2008 based on percentage declines. The Dow dropped 8.8% in 2022, while the S&P 500 tumbled 19.4% and the technology-heavy Nasdaq plunged 33.1%.
What drove markets
U.S. stocks fell Friday, closing out the last trading session of 2022 with weekly and monthly losses.
Stocks and bonds have been crushed this year as the Federal Reserve raised its benchmark interest rate more aggressively than many had expected as it sought to crush the worst inflation in four decades. The S&P 500 ended 2022 with a loss of 19.4%, its worst annual performance since 2008 as the index snapped a three-year win streak, according to Dow Jones Market Data.
“Investors have been on edge,” said Mark Heppenstall, chief investment officer at Penn Mutual Asset Management, in a phone interview Friday. “It seems as though the ability to drive down prices is probably a bit easier given just how crummy the year’s been.”
Stock indexes have slumped in recent weeks as hopes for a Fed policy pivot faded after the central bank in December signaled that it would likely wait until 2024 to cut interest rates.
On the final day of the trading year, markets were also being hit by selling to lock in losses that can be written off of tax bills, a practice known as tax-loss harvesting, according to Kim Forrest, chief investment officer at Bokeh Capital Partners.
An uncertain outlook for 2023 was also taking its toll, as investors fretted about the strength of corporate profits, the economy and the U.S. consumer with fourth-quarter earnings season looming early next year, Forrest said.
“I think the Fed, and then earnings in the middle of January — those are going to set the tone for the next six months. Until then, it’s anybody’s guess,” she added.
The U.S. central bank has raised its benchmark rate by more than four percentage points since the beginning of the year, driving borrowing costs to their highest levels since 2007.
The timing of the Fed’s first interest rate cut will likely have a major impact on markets, according to Forrest, but the outlook remains uncertain, even as the Fed has tried to signal that it plans to keep rates higher for longer.
On the economic data front, the Chicago PMI for December, the last major data release of the year, came in stronger than expected, climbing to 44.9 from 37.2 a month prior. Readings below 50 indicate contraction territory.
Next year, “we’re more likely to shift towards fears around economic growth as opposed to inflation,” said Heppenstall. “I think the decline in growth will eventually lead to a more meaningful decline in inflation.”
Read: Stock-market investors face 3 recession scenarios in 2023
Eric Sterner, CIO of Apollon Wealth Management, said in a phone interview Friday that he’s expecting the U.S. could fall into a recession next year and that the stock market could see a new bottom as companies potentially revise their earnings lower. “I think earnings expectations for 2023 are still too high,” he said.
The Dow Jones Industrial Average, S&P 500 and Nasdaq Composite booked modest weekly declines, adding to their December losses. For the month, the Dow fell 4.2%, while the S&P 500 dropped 5.9% and the Nasdaq sank 8.7%, FactSet data show.
Read: Value stocks trounce growth equities in 2022 by historically wide margin
As for bonds, the U.S. Treasury market was set to record its worst year since at least the 1970s.
The yield on the 10-year Treasury note
TMUBMUSD10Y,
3.879%
has jumped 2.330 percentage points this year to 3.826%, its largest annual gain on record based on data going back to 1977, according to Dow Jones Market Data.Two-year Treasury yields
TMUBMUSD02Y,
4.423%
soared 3.669 percentage points in 2022 to 4.399%, while the 30-year yield
TMUBMUSD30Y,
3.971%
jumped 2.046 percentage points to end the year at 3.934%. That marked the largest calendar-year increases ever for each based on data going back to 1973, according to Dow Jones Market Data.Outside the U.S., European stocks capped off their biggest percentage drop for a calendar year since 2018, with the Stoxx Europe 600
SXXP,
-1.27% ,
an index of euro-denominated shares, falling 12.9%, according to Dow Jones Market Data.Read: Slumping U.S. stock market lags these international ETFs as 2022 comes to an end
Companies in focus
-
Tesla Inc.
TSLA,
+1.12%
shares rose 1.1% after their worst run of losses in more than four years. -
Southwest Airlines
LUV,
+0.87%
shares gained 0.9% as the company said it expected its holiday travel fiasco to impact fourth-quarter profits. -
Las Vegas Sands Corp.
LVS,
+2.10%
was among the best performers in the S&P 500 index on Friday, with its shares ending 2.1% higher, as it confirmed renewed gaming concessions in Macau.
—Steve Goldstein contributed to this article.
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The Dow Jones Industrial Average
-
U.S. stocks close sharply higher in year-end rally after jobless claims data deemed ‘welcome news for the Fed’
U.S. stock indexes finished sharply higher on Thursday, the second-to-last trading session of the year, with the Nasdaq Composite jumping 2.6%, erasing losses from earlier in the week.
The three main indexes built on premarket gains after U.S. weekly jobless claims data showed the number of workers receiving benefits has climbed to the highest level since February, a tentative sign that the Federal Reserve’s interest-rate hikes might be slowing economic growth and inflation.
How stocks traded
-
The S&P 500
SPX,
+1.75%
rose 66.06 points, or 1.8%, to end at 3,849.28. -
Dow Jones Industrial Average
DJIA,
+1.05%
added 345.09 points, or 1.1%, finishing at 33,220.80. -
Nasdaq Composite
COMP,
+2.59%
climbed 264.80 points, or 2.6%, to finish at 10,478.09.
On Wednesday, the Nasdaq Composite dropped 1.4% to 10,213, its lowest closing level of the year. The S&P 500 is up more than 6% from its 2022 low from mid-October, but the large-cap index remains down 19.2% year-to-date, FactSet data show.
What drove markets
The penultimate session of 2022 showed tentative signs of delivering some much needed festive cheer for the stock market as a hope for “Santa Claus rally” had earlier failed to materialize.
MarketWatch Live: Is that you, Santa Claus?
Stocks advanced on Thursday as data showed the number of Americans receiving more than a single week of unemployment benefits had climbed by 41,000 last week to 1.71 million, the highest level in 10 months.
The jobless-claims data “points to a loosening in the labor market, which is welcome news for the Fed,” said Larry Adam, chief investment officer at Raymond James, in a tweet.
However, analysts at Citi still think the claims data indicates a still-very-tight labor markets compared to historical levels.
“While both initial and continuing claims increased this week, they remain within the levels of late 2019,” wrote Gisela Hoxha, U.S. economics research analyst at Citi. “Anecdotes of company layoffs have increased in recent months, particularly in the tech sector. While it could be hard to disentangle the seasonal effects from the announced layoffs, in our view there is no significant evidence of them showing up in the claims data yet.”
Some of those layoffs could be taking effect a couple months later as employees might be kept on payroll for some time after the announcement, which will become significant signs of weakness in the labor market in 2023, Hoxha added.
Stocks were on track to finish what’s set to be the worst year since 2008 not far from 2022 lows. The S&P 500’s 52-week closing low at 3,577.03 was hit on Oct. 12.
Still, the three indexes managed to erase losses from earlier in the week on Thursday. Nasdaq Composite was down 0.2% this week, while the S&P 500 gained 0.1% and the Dow was nearly flat as of Thursday’s close. If the S&P 500 can hold on to weekly gains through Friday, it would mark the end of a three-week losing streak that has been the index’s longest since September, FactSet data show.
Companies in focus
-
Tesla Inc.
TSLA,
+8.08%
shares finished 8.1% higher on Thursday after posting its first rise in eight sessions Wednesday. The electric-vehicle maker’s shares had declined in seven consecutive sessions, their worst losing streak since a seven-session run that ended on Sept. 15, 2018. -
Southwest Airlines
LUV,
+3.70%
remains in focus as the airline tries to recover from logistical issues that caused thousands of flight cancellations over the past week. The stock fell 11% over the past two days, but rose 3.7% in Thursday session. -
General Electric’s
GE,
+2.17%
spinoff of GE HealthCare Technologies will join the S&P 500 index when it begins trading as a separate public company on Jan. 4. GE HealthCare will replace Vornado Realty Trust
VNO,
+1.63% ,
which will move to the S&P MidCap 400. Vornado will replace logistics company RXO
RXO,
+8.39% ,
which will move to the S&P SmallCap 600. GE HealthCare — trading on a when-issued basis — rose 0.9%, while Vornado gained 1.6% and RXO jumped 8.4%. -
Cal-Maine
CALM,
-14.50%
shares ended 14.5% lower after its quarterly earnings came in below Wall Street forecasts. Cal-Maine reported record sales for the quarter as an avian flu outbreak continued to limit the supply of eggs, driving prices sharply higher. The company also said there were no positive tests for avian flu at any of its production facilities, as of Wednesday.
— Jamie Chisholm contributed to this article
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The S&P 500
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Did 2022 break Wall Street’s ‘fear gauge’? Why the VIX no longer reflects the sorry state of the stock market
U.S. stocks are about to cap off their worst year since 2008. But investors wouldn’t know it by glancing at what’s often referred to as Wall Street’s favorite fear gauge, which has recently failed to reach new heights as stocks tumbled to fresh lows.
The Cboe Volatility Index
VIX,
-3.16% ,
better known as the VIX, is on track to finish 2022 not far off its long-term average despite widespread pain across markets. The VIX, based on trading in S&P 500 index options, serves as an indicator of expected volatility in the index over the coming 30-day period.After topping out at 36.45 on March 7, it repeatedly failed to make new highs for the year, according to data from FactSet, even as stocks tumbled to their lowest levels in years in June and again in September and October.
Nicholas Colas, co-founder of DataTrek Research, highlighted the phenomenon in several research notes to his clients this year.
Not only is the S&P 500 on track to finish the year down roughly 20%, 2022 has also been the most consistently choppy year for stocks in more than a decade by at least one measure.
The index has recorded 46 moves of 2% in either direction since the start of the year, the most since 2009, according to Dow Jones Market Data — narrowly surpassing the number from 2020. That’s roughly four times the 10-year average of 11.3 per year.
The VIX fell 3% on Thursday to 21.46 in afternoon trading as the S&P 500
SPX,
+1.75% ,
Dow Jones Industrial Average DJIA and Nasdaq Composite COMP all headed for daily gains after the Nasdaq booked its lowest closing level of the year on Wednesday.A ‘really terrible year’
Perhaps counterintuitively, Colas and others see the subdued VIX as a potential cause for concern. This is because a spike in the fear gauge has typically preceded stock-market bottoms in recent decades.
Colas and others refer to the phenomenon as “capitulation,” meaning that a surge in the VIX means that sentiment in the market has grown so dire that the beginning of a market turnaround is likely at hand.
The VIX surged above 80 before stocks bottomed out in March 2009, and again in March 2020. Colas has said in the past that levels above 40 are needed to signal that capitulation is at hand. Volatility typically rises fastest when stocks are falling, market strategists said.
The lack of a clear signal that bears are reaching a point of exhaustion has made some analysts wonder if the market’s lows might still lie ahead.
See: Wall Street’s ‘fear gauge’ still not signaling stock-market bottom is near, analysts say
“Volatility seems too low,” said Danny Kirsch, head of the options desk at Piper Sandler, during a phone interview with MarketWatch this week. “I’d say the VIX should be in its mid-to-high 20s, as opposed to barely 20.”
“We had a really terrible year. There was massive wealth destruction, and yet the cost to hedge going forward hasn’t really changed,” Kirsch added.
Is the VIX ‘broken’?
Comparing the VIX’s 2022 performance to 2008 recently led Michael Kramer, founder of Mott Capital, to conclude that the gauge may be “broken” in a tweet published on Wednesday.
Others have pushed back against this notion, arguing that while the VIX has been “somewhat low,” it’s still elevated compared with recent market history.
To wit, the VIX’s current level is still more than twice its record low from Nov. 3, 2017, when the volatility gauge closed at 9.14, according to data from FactSet. This occurred at a time when U.S. stocks were drifting consistently higher. The S&P 500 went on to finish 2017 with a gain of more than 20%.
“It’s been a high VIX year, just not as high as some people think it should have been, given volatility elsewhere in markets,” said Rocky Fishman, the head of index volatility research at Goldman Sachs Group Inc.
The VIX has also maintained its strong inverse correlation to the S&P 500, as Callie Cox, a U.S. equity analyst at eToro, pointed out. Data shared by Cox showed that the VIX has moved inversely with the S&P 500
SPX,
+1.75%
roughly 80% of the time since its inception in 1990.Why so low?
So, why has the VIX been so subdued? Cox, Kirsch and others rattled off several factors that might be contributing to its malaise.
One popular explanation is that as institutional investors dumped stocks and shifted more of their portfolios to cash this year, they were left with smaller levels of long-equity exposure in need of hedging.
“VIX is basically a measure of demand for hedges by the biggest investors in the market. But when institutional investors are liquidating their equity positions, they no longer have a need for the associated hedges, so they unwind those positions in the derivatives markets and ultimately that pressures” the VIX, said analysts at Sevens Report Research in a note entitled “Is the VIX broken?” published earlier this month.
Also, a generally bearish outlook for markets means that institutional investors are “fairly well hedged,” Kirsch said, which helps keep a lid on the VIX when large selloffs materialize.
Others cited traders’ increasing reliance on short-term options for tactical trades.
While the VIX is designed to interpret increased options buying as a sign that investors are growing more anxious, it specifically incorporates only options with roughly one month left until expiration.
This has become an issue as trading in shorter-dated options, including contracts with less than one day left until they expire, has surged in popularity this year, according to data from Goldman Sachs.
Trading in zero-day to expiration S&P 500 options has surged in the fourth quarter to more than four times its average level from 2021, according to data shared by Goldman in a research note dated Dec. 15.
“The VIX doesn’t accurately measure fear these days because there’s so much trading in short-dated options,” said Steve Sosnick, chief strategist at Interactive Brokers.
Is a blowup looming?
The question for investors now is whether a subdued VIX might lead to a volatility-inspired reckoning for markets, like what happened in February 2018, when a popular short-volatility trade rapidly unwound, contributing to the death of short-volatility products like the VelocityShares Daily Inverse VIX Short Term ETN.
It’s possible that markets could undergo a volatility-driven “washout” as some of the trades helping to suppress the VIX are unwound, Kirsch said. Although he doesn’t expect the impact on markets to be as severe as it was in 2018 or 2020, he told MarketWatch.
But whatever happens, it’s possible analysts who rely on the VIX to inform their trading might need to adjust their expectations around what constitutes a capitulation signal, Cox told MarketWatch. Still, this doesn’t necessarily mean that the VIX is “broken.”
“It’s still measuring what it’s intended to measure,” she said. “This is more a story of how much the options market has evolved over the past few years.”
“People just aren’t using classic one-month options to hedge or speculate as much. Investors are choosing to get more precise with their options strategies, which makes a lot of sense — it’s cheaper and more adaptable,” Cox added.
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U.S. stocks close sharply higher in year-end rally after jobless claims data deemed ‘welcome news for the Fed’
U.S. stock indexes finished sharply higher on Thursday, the second-to-last trading session of the year, with the Nasdaq Composite jumping 2.6%, erasing losses from earlier in the week.
The three main indexes built on premarket gains after U.S. weekly jobless claims data showed the number of workers receiving benefits has climbed to the highest level since February, a tentative sign that the Federal Reserve’s interest-rate hikes might be slowing economic growth and inflation.
How stocks traded
-
The S&P 500
SPX,
+1.75%
rose 66.06 points, or 1.8%, to end at 3,849.28. -
Dow Jones Industrial Average
DJIA,
+1.05%
added 345.09 points, or 1.1%, finishing at 33,220.80. -
Nasdaq Composite
COMP,
+2.59%
climbed 264.80 points, or 2.6%, to finish at 10,478.09.
On Wednesday, the Nasdaq Composite dropped 1.4% to 10,213, its lowest closing level of the year. The S&P 500 is up more than 6% from its 2022 low from mid-October, but the large-cap index remains down 19.2% year-to-date, FactSet data show.
What drove markets
The penultimate session of 2022 showed tentative signs of delivering some much needed festive cheer for the stock market as a hope for “Santa Claus rally” had earlier failed to materialize.
MarketWatch Live: Is that you, Santa Claus?
Stocks advanced on Thursday as data showed the number of Americans receiving more than a single week of unemployment benefits had climbed by 41,000 last week to 1.71 million, the highest level in 10 months.
The jobless-claims data “points to a loosening in the labor market, which is welcome news for the Fed,” said Larry Adam, chief investment officer at Raymond James, in a tweet.
However, analysts at Citi still think the claims data indicates a still-very-tight labor markets compared to historical levels.
“While both initial and continuing claims increased this week, they remain within the levels of late 2019,” wrote Gisela Hoxha, U.S. economics research analyst at Citi. “Anecdotes of company layoffs have increased in recent months, particularly in the tech sector. While it could be hard to disentangle the seasonal effects from the announced layoffs, in our view there is no significant evidence of them showing up in the claims data yet.”
Some of those layoffs could be taking effect a couple months later as employees might be kept on payroll for some time after the announcement, which will become significant signs of weakness in the labor market in 2023, Hoxha added.
Stocks were on track to finish what’s set to be the worst year since 2008 not far from 2022 lows. The S&P 500’s 52-week closing low at 3,577.03 was hit on Oct. 12.
Still, the three indexes managed to erase losses from earlier in the week on Thursday. Nasdaq Composite was down 0.2% this week, while the S&P 500 gained 0.1% and the Dow was nearly flat as of Thursday’s close. If the S&P 500 can hold on to weekly gains through Friday, it would mark the end of a three-week losing streak that has been the index’s longest since September, FactSet data show.
Companies in focus
-
Tesla Inc.
TSLA,
+8.08%
shares finished 8.1% higher on Thursday after posting its first rise in eight sessions Wednesday. The electric-vehicle maker’s shares had declined in seven consecutive sessions, their worst losing streak since a seven-session run that ended on Sept. 15, 2018. -
Southwest Airlines
LUV,
+3.70%
remains in focus as the airline tries to recover from logistical issues that caused thousands of flight cancellations over the past week. The stock fell 11% over the past two days, but rose 3.7% in Thursday session. -
General Electric’s
GE,
+2.17%
spinoff of GE HealthCare Technologies will join the S&P 500 index when it begins trading as a separate public company on Jan. 4. GE HealthCare will replace Vornado Realty Trust
VNO,
+1.63% ,
which will move to the S&P MidCap 400. Vornado will replace logistics company RXO
RXO,
+8.39% ,
which will move to the S&P SmallCap 600. GE HealthCare — trading on a when-issued basis — rose 0.9%, while Vornado gained 1.6% and RXO jumped 8.4%. -
Cal-Maine
CALM,
-14.50%
shares ended 14.5% lower after its quarterly earnings came in below Wall Street forecasts. Cal-Maine reported record sales for the quarter as an avian flu outbreak continued to limit the supply of eggs, driving prices sharply higher. The company also said there were no positive tests for avian flu at any of its production facilities, as of Wednesday.
— Jamie Chisholm contributed to this article
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The S&P 500
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‘Five days that killed the year’: These trading sessions accounted for 95% of the S&P 500’s losses in 2022
Just five trading sessions accounted for more than 95% of S&P 500 index losses in 2022, according to an analysis by Datatrek co-founder Nicholas Colas in a note published Wednesday, as stocks headed for their worst year since 2008.
He described them in the note as the “five days that killed the year”: Two were caused by disappointing inflation data, while the others were triggered by weak corporate earnings and commentary from Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell.
September 13 (-4.3%)
On the worst day for stocks since 2020, the release of the August U.S. consumer price index report sent traders into a panic when the data showed annual headline and core inflation running hotter than expected.
The headline number came in at 8.3% for the 12 months through August, while core inflation — which strips out volatile food and energy prices — accelerated at 6.3%.
Economists and analysts were particularly rattled by the monthly core inflation number, which came in at 0.6%, double the expected rate of 0.3%, stoking concerns about stubbornly high housing costs as energy prices began to decline after earlier being the biggest driver of this year’s inflation.
May 18th (-4.0%).
Retail giant Target Corp.
TGT,
+0.04%
missed first quarter earnings expectations by a wide margin, elevating worries about the U.S. consumer’s ability to cope with inflation into a full-blown panic one day after Walmart Inc.
WMT,
-1.64%
highlighted similar concerns.Adding to the pressure on the market, during an event hosted by the Wall Street Journal Powell acknowledged that “there could be some pain involved” as the FOMC raised interest rates.
June 13 (-3.9%)
This day’s punishing selloff was also triggered by the release of CPI data, as the numbers for the month of May came in higher than expectations. The S&P 500 finished the session in bear-market territory for the first time in 2022, down 21.8% from the record highs reached in early January.
April 29 (-3.6%)
The market’s decline on this day was also triggered by a corporate earnings disappointment. However, this time, the focus was on e-commerce, and the ripple effects sent many of the megacap technology stocks reeling.
Amazon.com Inc.
AMZN,
-1.16%
— which like both Target and Walmart is a member of the consumer discretionary sector of the S&P 500 — missed earnings expectations for the first quarter while reducing its guidance. The stock ended the day down 14%, its biggest single-session decline since 2006. Apple Inc.
AAPL,
-2.94% ,
Microsoft Corp.
MSFT,
-0.68%
and Google owner Alphabet Inc.
GOOGL,
-1.48%
were also down sharply.May 5 (-3.6%)
Markets tumbled one day after Powell assured investors during a post-meeting press conference that the Fed wasn’t considering interest-rate hikes of greater than 50 basis points. Of course, this statement didn’t age well, as the central bank went on to hike interest rates by 75 basis points at the following four consecutive meetings.
According to Colas, investors can glean some helpful insights about the root causes of this year’s market misery from these five sessions.
To wit, investors had clearly realized by the spring that stubbornly high inflation would force the Fed to raise its benchmark interest rate more aggressively than it was letting on. Also, inflated expectations for corporate earnings helped contribute to the pain as U.S. consumer spending waned.
U.S. stocks sold off far more often than they traded higher this year, a deviation from the historic pattern since World War II whereby stocks typically climb far more often than they fall. Through Tuesday’s session, the index fell during 141 trading days (including Tuesday), while finishing higher during 107 up days.
The S&P 500 was on track to finish 2022 down more than 20% as of midday on Wednesday as all three of the main indexes were trading in the red, with the S&P 500
SPX,
-1.03% ,
Nasdaq Composite
COMP,
-1.20%
and Dow Jones Industrial Average
DJIA,
-0.88%
adding to their losses with just two more trading days left in the year. -
Eat, drink and be merry: Here’s where shoppers have been spending the most money this holiday season
Restaurants are set to become the biggest winners of a holiday season that could turn out to be the most normalized since the onset of the pandemic.
That’s according to a new Mastercard SpendingPulse survey released on Monday, which showed spending at dining establishments surging 15.1% over the 2021 holiday period. Total retail expenditures for the Nov. 1–to–Dec. 24 period in 2022 rose 7.6%, with in-store spending up 6.8% and online spending up 10.6%.
Restaurant spending beat out several other categories, such as apparel, where spending was up 4.4% from 2021, and electronics and jewelry, where a respective 5.3% and 5.4% less were spent, and department stores, which saw spending rise 1%.
“This holiday retail season looked different than years past,” said Steve Sadove, senior adviser for Mastercard and former CEO and chairman of Saks Inc. “Retailers discounted heavily but consumers diversified their holiday spending to accommodate rising prices and an appetite for experiences and festive gatherings postpandemic.”
Government data for November showed consumer spending was up just 0.1%, reflecting cautiousness among households and price cutting by retailers to lure those hesitant shoppers in. But the data also showed more spending on holiday recreation and travel, expected to go in the books as a busy season even if deadly winter storm may have wreaked havoc on the plans of many Americans over the Christmas weekend.
Of course, even as some merrymakers felt confident enough to make more plans and see more friends and family this year, the virus of course continues to cause illness and death. The U.S. reported 70,000 newly diagnosed cases for the first time since September on Thursday, while 422 people died of COVID-19 on Wednesday.
Don’t miss: As COVID cases rise, how to steer clear of viruses during the holiday season
Also see: 4 tips for staying healthy while traveling during this ‘tripledemic’ cold and flu season
The Mastercard SpendingPulse data measure in-store and online retail sales for all payment forms and are not inflation-adjusted.
As for the companies that might be benefiting from that increased traffic, the year-end cheer probably won’t be enough to make a dent in what has been a difficult year with would-be consumers juggling worries over inflation, rising interest rates and a war in Europe.
The Invesco Dynamic Leisure & Entertainment exchange-traded fund
PEJ,
+0.79% ,
whose holdings include Chipotle Mexican Grill
CMG,
+0.32% ,
McDonald’s
MCD,
+0.68%
and First Watch Restaurant Group
FWRG,
+0.42% ,
has gained 6.5% to date in the fourth quarter and is down 20% for the year as of Thursday. The broad benchmark S&P 500
SPX,
+0.59%
is poised for a nearly 20% loss in 2022.Read: How a Santa Claus rally, or lack thereof, sets the stage for the stock market in first quarter
And: Best stock picks for 2023: Here are Wall Street analysts’ most heavily favored choices
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Asian shares rise in thin holiday trading, with U.S., European markets closed
BANGKOK (AP) — Shares rose Monday in Asia in thin post-Christmas holiday trading, with markets in Hong Kong, Sydney and several other places closed.
Tokyo’s Nikkei 225 index
NIK,
+0.65%
gained 0.6% to 26,393.32 and the Kospi
180721,
+0.15%
in Seoul added 0.2% to 2,318.54. The Shanghai Composite index
SHCOMP,
+0.65%
rose 0.5% to 3,061.93 and the SET
SET,
+0.47%
in Bangkok added 0.6%.Bank of Japan Gov. Haruhiko Kuroda indicated in a widely watched speech Monday that the central bank does not intend to alter its longstanding policy of monetary easing to cope with pressures from inflation on the world’s third-largest economy.
Last week, markets were jolted by a slight adjustment in the target range for the yield of long-term Japanese government bonds, viewing it as a sign the Bank of Japan might finally unwind its massive support for the economy through ultra-low interest rates and purchases of bonds and other assets.
A widening gap between interest rates in Japan and other countries has pulled the Japanese yen sharply lower against the U.S. dollar and other currencies and accentuated the impact of higher costs for many imported products and commodities.
But the BOJ has kept its key lending rate at minus 0.1%, cautious over risks of recession.
Kuroda told the Keidanren, the country’s most powerful business group, that with economies facing likely downward pressure, and with Japan’s economy not fully recovered from the impacts of the pandemic, the BOJ “deems it necessary to conduct monetary easing and thereby firmly support the economy. …”
On Friday, the S&P 500
SPX,
+0.59%
reversed a 0.7% loss to close 0.6% higher, at 3,844.82. With one week left of trading in 2022, the benchmark index is down 19.3% for the year. The Dow Jones Industrial Average
DJIA,
+0.53%
rose 0.5% to 33,203.93, while the tech-heavy Nasdaq
COMP,
+0.21%
edged 0.2% higher, to 10,497.86.Small company stocks also rose. The Russell 2000 index
RUT,
+0.39%
picked up 0.4% to 1,760.93.Mixed economic news weighed on stocks early on, but the indexes rebounded by late afternoon amid relatively light trading ahead of the long holiday weekend. U.S. and European markets will be closed Monday.
Markets are in a tricky situation where relatively solid consumer spending and a strong employment market reduce the risk of a recession but also raise the threat of higher interest rates from the Federal Reserve as it presses its campaign to crush inflation.
The government reported Friday that a key measure of inflation is continuing to slow, though the inflation gauge in the consumer spending report was still far higher than anyone wants to see. Also, growth in consumer spending weakened last month by more than expected, but incomes were a bit stronger than expected.
Last week’s reports were the last big U.S. economic updates of the year. Investors will soon turn their focus to the next round of corporate earnings.
The Fed has said it will keep raising interest rates to tame inflation, even though the pace of price increases has continued to ease. The Fed’s key overnight rate is at its highest level in 15 years, after beginning the year at a record low of roughly zero.
The key lending rate, the federal funds rate, stands at a range of 4.25% to 4.5%, and Fed policymakers have forecast that the rate will reach a range of 5% to 5.25% by the end of 2023.
Given the persistence of high inflation, “many are starting to believe the main story is that there will be no scope for Fed cuts in the year ahead and that central banks will maintain these relatively high rates until underlying inflation is truly cracked — and that process will take time,” Stephen Innes of SPI Asset Management said in a commentary.
The Fed’s forecast doesn’t call for a rate cut before 2024, and the higher rates have raised concerns the economy could stall and slip into a recession in 2023. High rates have also been weighing heavily on prices for stocks and other investments.
In currency dealings, the U.S. dollar
DXY,
-0.10%
slipped to 132.62 Japanese yen from 132.82 yen late Friday. The euro rose to $1.0629 from $1.0614.