Wall Street stocks fall, big weekly drop as market waits for Fed to move
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[September 07, 2024] By
Chibuike Oguh
NEW YORK (Reuters) -U.S. stocks fell on Friday, weighed down by a jobs
report that showed a continued labor market slowdown but left traders
uncertain about how far the Federal Reserve will go in cutting interest
rates.
All three main indexes were lower, with the 11 sectors of the benchmark
S&P 500 losing ground led by declines in communication services,
consumer discretionary and technology equities.
The S&P 500 and the Dow had their biggest weekly drop since March 2023,
with the Nasdaq registering its biggest weekly drop since January 2022.
U.S. Labor Department data showed U.S. employers added 142,000 jobs in
August, shy of analyst expectations, while jobs growth for July was
revised down to 89,000, also below estimates.
The report means Federal Reserve chair Jerome Powell must cut rates
later this month, but also suggests he may be too late for the economy
to achieve a soft landing, said Lou Basenese, president and chief market
strategist at MDB Capital in New York.
"If we start seeing layoffs in the next month or two, it's going to
suggest his timing was too late. Stocks are going to go down until next
week when the Fed makes it definitive that they're cutting, which could
put pressure on them to do 50 basis points versus 25 bps. I think 25 bps
is all but guaranteed," Basenese said.
Fed Governor Christopher Waller said on Friday "the time has come" for
the U.S. central bank to begin a series of interest rate cuts, adding he
is open-minded about the size and pace.
Traders' bets for a 25-basis point rate cut in September stood at 73%,
according to the CME Group's FedWatch Tool, while those for a 50-bps
reduction in rates were at 27%, down from a brief rise to 51% after the
report.
"I still think the Fed is going to move 25 basis points," said Tony
Roth, chief investment officer at Wilmington Trust in Radnor,
Pennsylvania. "I don't think that the Fed is really ready at this point
to push the panic button."
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Traders work on the floor at the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) in
New York City, U.S., August 8, 2024. REUTERS/Brendan McDermid/File
Photo
The Dow Jones Industrial Average fell 410.34 points, or 1.01%, to
40,345.41, the S&P 500 lost 94.99 points, or 1.73%, to 5,408.42 and
the Nasdaq Composite lost 436.83 points, or 2.55%, to 16,690.83.
Losses in leading megacap growth stocks dragged the indexes,
including the so-called Magnificent Seven: Nvidia fell 4%, Tesla <TSLA.O>
slumped 8.4%, Alphabet lost 4%, Amazon shed 3.7%, Meta declined
3.2%, Microsoft dropped 1.6%, and Apple weakened 0.70%.
Broadcom sank 10.4% after the chipmaker forecast fourth-quarter
revenue slightly below estimates, hurt by sluggish spending in its
broadband segment.
Other chip stocks were down. Marvell Technology fell 5.3% and
Advanced Micro Devices ended down 3.7%. The Philadelphia SE
Semiconductor index finished lower by 4.5%. The semiconductor index
logged its biggest weekly drop since March 2020.
Super Micro Computer dropped 6.8%. J.P. Morgan analysts had
downgraded AI server maker's shares to "neutral" from "overweight".
Declining issues outnumbered advancers by a 3.08-to-1 ratio on the
NYSE. On the Nasdaq, 1,006 stocks rose while 3,183 fell as declining
issues outnumbered advancers by a 3.16-to-1 ratio.
Total volume across U.S. exchanges was about 11.8 billion shares, up
from a 20-day moving average of 10.7 billion shares.
(Reporting by Chibuike Oguh in New York; additional reporting by
Johann M Cherian and Purvi Agarwal in Bengaluru; Editing by David
Gregorio)
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