By Nicholas Jasinski
| Thursday, September 1
U-Turn. Stocks mostly
rebounded today, reversing their morning losses to close at their highs of the
session. The S&P 500 and Dow
Jones Industrial Average each broke a four-day losing streak.
Today's economic
data releases included the Institute for Supply Management’s
manufacturing purchasing managers' index for August, which held steady at
52.8—solidly in expansion territory. That was above expectations.
The internals of the index were relatively
promising, as well. The new orders component returned to expansion, as did
employment. And, perhaps most importantly for the market, the prices paid
component of the index showed much slower growth than in recent months. It's
still rising, but nowhere near as quickly as before. That's another sign of
potentially peak inflation already being behind us.
Also released this morning, the latest weekly initial
jobless claims came in at a below-consensus 232,000—the lowest
level since June—while continuing claims rose only slightly from the prior
week.
That's all relatively good news for the
economy, but stocks appear to be in a good-news-is-bad-news mood lately. That
goes back to the Federal Reserve and the odds of
even higher interest rates. A stronger economy means more cover to hike rates
in the fight against inflation.
So stock indexes opened deep in the red today
as bond
yields spiked. The yield on the 2-year U.S. Treasury
note rose 0.07 percentage point today, to 3.52%. That's
its highest yield since late 2007. On the long end of the curve, the 10-year U.S.
Treasury note yield ticked up 0.13 percentage point, to
3.26%—its highest since June.
Higher bond yields tend to be a negative for
stocks, and have been behind much of the decline in valuation multiples this
year. But with the S&P 500 already down 9% in
the past two weeks and on a multi-day losing streak, at least a short-term
rebound was in the cards today.
Some of that may be down to technical factors:
"With the sharp pullback from the highs, the percentage of stocks in the
S&P 500 that are oversold, or stretched to the downside on a short-term
basis, has moved to an extreme of about 80%," wrote Truist
Advisory Services' co-CIO Keith
Lerner. "This is a similar reading to what
was seen near the June lows."
After being down as much as 1.3% at its
morning lows, the S&P 500 rallied into the close to finish the day up 0.3%.
The Dow Jones Industrial Average
overcame a similar morning slump to gain 0.5%, while the Nasdaq
Composite couldn't quite make it. The growth stock-heavy and
particularly rate-sensitive index lost 0.3% today, for its fifth-straight
decline. The Nasdaq had been down as much as 2.2% earlier in the day, though.
There will be plenty more focus on the
economic data tomorrow. The August jobs report comes out at 8:30 a.m. ET.
"In more normal times, investors wish for
a strong labor market—more jobs and lower unemployment—as a reflection of
economic vibrancy," wrote Credit Suisse's chief U.S. equity
strategist Jonathan Golub today.
"However, with labor in painfully short supply, inflation troublingly
high, and the Fed espousing their hawkishness, readers of Friday’s Employment
report will be focused almost exclusively on its inflationary
implications."
In other words, good news could turn out to be
bad news once again.
DJIA: +0.46% to 31,656.42
S&P 500: +0.30% to 3,966.85
Nasdaq: -0.26% to 11,785.13
The Hot Stock: DXC Technology +7.8%
The Biggest Loser: Nvidia -7.7%
Best Sector: Health Care +1.6%
Worst Sector: Energy -2.5%
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