skip to main content

Wall Street shares sink amid inflation worries

The S&P 500 sank 3.9% to finish the day at 3,749, a drop of more than 20% from its most recent peak on January 4 - the definition of a bear market
The S&P 500 sank 3.9% to finish the day at 3,749, a drop of more than 20% from its most recent peak on January 4 - the definition of a bear market

Wall Street stocks officially entered "bear market" territory last night after another drubbing as investors bet on more aggressive Federal Reserve rate hikes to address inflation.

The S&P 500, the broad-based equity index, plummeted 3.9% to finish the day at 3,749, a drop of more than 20% from its most recent peak on January 4 - the definition of a bear market.

The Dow Jones lost 2.8% to end at 30,516, while the tech-rich Nasdaq Composite Index sank 4.7% to close at 10,809.

It was Wall Street's fourth day of losses in a row and comes ahead of tomorrow's Fed decision.

More market watchers believe the US Fed will need to ratchet up its monetary tightening in light of Friday's consumer price index report.

US inflation jumped 8.6% compared to May 2021, hitting a fresh 40-year high, topping expectations and dashing hopes that price pressures had peaked.

The Fed has signaled plans for a second large 0.5 percentage-point interest rate hike tomorrow night.

But more voices are projecting a three-quarter point increase. Barclays said the more aggressive move was called for "to reinforce credibility and get ahead of inflationary pressures."

The Fed's increasingly aggressive posture "is causing indigestion for the markets," said Angelo Kourkafas, investment strategist at of Edward Jones.

The concerns sent the yield on the 10-year US Treasury note, a proxy for interest rates, above 3.3 percent, the highest level in more than 11 years.

Beyond the concerns about US inflation, analysts also pointed to worries about the continued drag of Covid-19 on the Chinese economy and the global supply chain.

Beijing started a new round of mass testing in its most populous downtown district after a rapidly spreading outbreak linked to a bar saw Covid rules tightened again in the capital.

All 11 sectors of the S&P 500 finished with losses of more than 2%. Among large companies, Apple fell 3.8%, Disney lost 3.7% and Boeing slumped 8.9%.