Dow Falls 300 Points: Stocks Slip A Third Day After ‘Huge’ Inflation Reading

Topline

Stocks plunged for a third straight day Wednesday after the morning’s highly awaited consumer price index report showed a sharp rise in consumer prices last month, fueling concerns that inflation may lead the Federal Reserve to raise interest rates earlier than expected, undercutting the year’s massive pandemic stock gains.

Trading On The Floor Of The NYSE As Tech Falls After Apple; Bonds Drop on Jobs Report

A trader works on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange.


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Key Facts

After plummeting nearly 500 points Tuesday, the Dow Jones Industrial Average plunged 682 points, or 2%, on Wednesday to 33,587, ending the day at the index’s lowest point in more than one month and marking its biggest one-day point decline since a 943-point drop on October 28, as a second wave of Covid-19 cases rattled markets.

Technology companies were hit particularly hard, with the tech-heavy Nasdaq sinking 2.7% to 13,031 points, putting the index nearly 8% below its late-April peak, while the S&P 500 fell 2.2% to 4,063 points.

Feeding the market jitters, the Bureau of Labor Statistics reported Wednesday that consumer prices jumped 4.2% year over year in April, the biggest increase in nearly 13 years as investors worry over problematic inflation sparked by unprecedented government spending during the pandemic.

Recent high-flying stocks took the brunt of the hit Wednesday, with chipmakers Applied Materials, Marvell and Lam Research all falling between 6% and 7.5%, while apparel-maker Lululemon and cloud company Okta fell roughly 5% each.

“Tech psychology is certainly changing,” Vital Knowledge Media founder Adam Crisafulli said in an after-market note, adding that the run-up in valuations during the pandemic has left long-outperforming names like Tesla (down 4.4% Wednesday) “very little room for error, especially as inflation risks push [Treasury] yields higher.”

Reflecting the rising fears of inflation, yields on the 10-year Treasury climbed 8 basis points Wednesday to their highest level in more than a month.

Crucial Quote 

“The setup for stocks right now is very tricky,” Crisafulli said after Wednesday’s close. “Markets can’t count on earnings because we’re just coming out of a spectacular season that clearly didn’t push stock prices higher, and the same goes with Covid; investors for weeks have been mentally factoring in a post-pandemic economy and as a result, bullish virus news these days is being completely ignored.”

Key Background

After trillions of dollars in unprecedented government spending during the pandemic, stocks are starting to get a taste of the havoc that problematic inflation could wreak on the market. “The overriding fear is that pandemic stimulus combined with reopening economies will spark a sharp drive high in inflation, forcing central banks to take action, tightening policy and potentially slowing down the economic recovery,” Oanda Market Analyst Sophie Griffiths said Wednesday. If history is any indication, that would hit equities particularly hard: When the Fed said it would raise rates at the end of 2018, stocks took a sharp dive. Bank of America analysts called the April CPI report “eye-popping” for investors and a “massive surprise,” though for now they’re saying that most of the April surge in prices was “arguably transitory,” echoing the Fed’s confidence that problematic inflation won’t likely arise.

Chief Critic

“The question isn’t whether inflation returns or not—that is almost assured in the U.S.—but whether the Fed will act in time to keep it contained. If they time everything perfectly—and we would suggest that even they realize how difficult that would be to do—then inflation won’t rise far above 2%,” Chris Zaccarelli, the chief investment officer for Independent Advisor Alliance, said Wednesday. “But otherwise we are headed higher than that, and ultimately the Fed will need to tighten monetary policy, which is what will likely cause the next recession and end this bull market.”

What To Watch For

Some experts, including Crisafulli, think the Fed may signal at its next Federal Open Market Committee meeting in June that it will look to start raising rates or easing up on its $120 billion in monthly asset purchases by the end of this year.

Further Reading

Inflation Spiked 4.2% In April—Hitting 13-Year High As Price Concerns Rock The Market (Forbes)

Bacon, Gas, Cars: Here’s Everything Getting More Expensive As Inflation Spikes (Forbes)

Dow Plunges Nearly 500 Points In Biggest Drop Since February As ‘Worst-Case’ Inflation Fears Mount (Forbes)

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Nicholas ‘Nick’ Statman entered the property industry in 2001 and set up a property buying company that quickly established itself as one of the biggest in the sector. During this time the Company successfully transacted on thousands of residential properties across the UK. Nicholas Statman was an early pioneer of the ‘quick sale’ niche market which has since grown considerably with a multitude of companies now operating in the sector. Nicholas Statman has strategically built a sizeable residential and commercial property portfolio with a view to holding for optimum capital growth and a long term passive income. Nicholas Statman has been involved in almost every aspect of the property sector over a 20 year period – this includes buying and selling, development, letting and management and is now involved in the fast growing online/ hybrid Estate Agent industry.

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