S&P 500 Hit in Worst Day Since ‘Post-Fed Tantrum’: Markets Wrap


(Bloomberg) — Stocks got hammered and bond yields climbed alongside the dollar, with traders slashing their bets for Federal Reserve interest-rate cuts after a blowout jobs report.

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A 1.5% slide in the S&P 500 Friday wiped out its advance in the nascent year. The gauge saw its worst rout since Dec. 18 — when the Fed roiled markets by signaling caution over how quickly it can continue reducing rates. Riskier corners of Wall Street sold off, with small caps down about 10% from previous highs. A slide in Treasuries briefly drove 30-year yields above 5%. Swaps are now pricing in less than 30 basis points of Fed cuts this year.

The US economy in December added the most jobs since March and the unemployment rate unexpectedly fell, capping a surprisingly strong year. Separate data fueled concerns about stubborn price pressures, with consumers’ longer-term inflation expectations rising to the highest level since 2008. And a surge in oil only added to anxiety on that front.

Neil Birrell at Premier Miton Investors says that any hope of a quiet start to the year has well and truly disappeared now.

“Good news for the strength of the economy and bad news for those hoping for interest-rate cuts, as inflation will stay bang at the top of the Fed’s agenda now,” he noted. “The jump in bond yields looks set to continue, which is bad news for equities. Could a 5% yield on the 10-year Treasury really be hit?”

At Interactive Brokers, Steve Sosnick says equity traders once again revealed their “liquidity addiction.”

“Stock traders are once again more concerned about the potential for monetary accommodation rather than the type of robust economy that can improve corporate fundamentals,” he added.

The S&P 500 briefly breached its 100-day moving average. The Nasdaq 100 sank 1.6%. The Dow Jones Industrial Average dropped 1.6%. A gauge of the “Magnificent Seven” megacaps fell 1.2%. The Russell 2000 index of small firms lost 2.2%. Wall Street’s favorite volatility gauge — the VIX — surged to around 20.

The yield on 10-year Treasuries advanced seven basis points to 4.76%. The Bloomberg Dollar Spot Index rose 0.5%.

Following Friday’s solid jobs data, economists at some big banks revised their forecasts for additional Fed rate cuts.

Bank of America Corp., which previously expected two quarter-point reductions this year, no longer expects any, and said there’s a risk the next move is a hike. Citigroup Inc. — whose rate-cut outlook is among Wall Street’s most hopeful — still looks for five quarter-point cuts, but says they’ll start in May. Goldman Sachs Group Inc. sees two cuts this year versus three.


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