#RussiaUkraine #bonds #bitcoin #Biden #Stockmarket #coronavirus #memestocks #Fed
#YahooFinance #investing #stockmarket #bitcoin #crypto
Get the latest up-to-the-minute continuous stock market coverage and big interviews in the world of finance every Monday–Friday from 9 am to 5pm (ET).
U.S. stocks fell on Wednesday to extend selling sparked amid growing concerns about the impact of inflation on company profits and the broader economy. Traders also awaited the Federal Reserve's meeting minutes later in the day, which may help further clarify the path of monetary policy in the near-term.
The S&P 500 edged lower to build on losses after Tuesday's renewed rout. The Dow and Nasdaq each also opened lower. Treasury yields declined on the long end of the curve, and the benchmark 10-year yield fell to hold just above 2.7%.
Investors this week have eyed a growing list of companies citing the effects that inflation have had and will have on results going forward. Retailers including from Walmart and Target last week to Dick's Sporting Goods (DKS) and Abercrombie & Fitch (ANF) this week slashed their earnings forecasts for the year as the companies absorbed rising goods and transportation costs. And elsewhere, Snap (SNAP) warned earlier this week that it would post weaker-than-expected sales and profit results this year as the macroeconomic environment "deteriorated further and faster than anticipated." This was taken as a harbinger of softer results for a bevy of ad-driven tech stocks, sending the Nasdaq Composite to its lowest close since Nov. 2020 on Tuesday.
As the grim company guidance piles up, Wall Street is looking for signs that the Federal Reserve's interest rate hikes and monetary policy tightening will achieve bringing down inflationary pressures. The Fed is set to release the minutes from its early May meeting Wednesday afternoon, which will offer additional details about how policymakers have been thinking of adjusting policy further to rein in rising prices. Fed Chair Jerome Powell earlier this month suggested additional 50 basis point rate hikes would likely be appropriate at the Fed's next two meetings.
"The challenge right now is we’re in this new chapter of the inflation story. If you’ll recall, last year it started with whether it’s transitory — turns out, it wasn’t. Then it became about the Fed at the end of last year and earlier this year, whether or not they would tighten significantly. And they did, and now all that’s priced in," James Liu Clearnomics founder and CEO, told Yahoo Finance Live. "And now what the market is looking at is are basically the fundamentals around how inflation affects corporate profitability and consumer demand."
And beyond the domestic concerns, a myriad of international concerns — from Russia's war in Ukraine, to China's ongoing COVID outbreak — have further infused volatility into the market.
"The Fed can't really do anything about what's going on between Russia and Ukraine, they can't really do anything about China's COVID zero policies ... and a lot of traders are starting to get concerned," Shawn Cruz, TD Ameritrade head trading strategist, told Yahoo Finance Live.
"The way the market to me is reacting to that, is one, there's de-leveraging going on. There are some liquidation events out there as well, and that is one of those 'selling begets more selling' type of environments. And then the other one is, there's just not enough confidence out there to come in there and meaningfully put money back to work," he added. "Once you start to see leverage start going back up, cash coming in from the sidelines, that to me would be an indication that there is at least a little bit more certainty in the outlook for a lot of these people on the sidelines to come back in."
For more on this article, please visit: https://finance.yahoo.com/news/stock-market-news-live-updates-may-25-2022-112741714.html
0 Comments