US markets end lower as Treasury yields trade near three-month highs

29 Sep 2021 Evaluate

The US markets ended lower on Tuesday as Treasury yields traded near three-month highs and lawmakers in Washington continued their budget stalemate. The 10-year Treasury yield continued its speedy climb on Tuesday, rising as high as 1.567% as investors bet the Fed would carry through on its promise to curb its emergency bond-buying stimulus as inflation jumps.  Also weighing on sentiment was a budget showdown in Washington. Senate Republicans blocked a House-passed bill Monday that would have funded the government into December and suspended the debt ceiling until December of 2022. Further, adding to the negative sentiment on markets, the Conference Board released a report unexpectedly showing a continued deterioration in US consumer confidence in the month of September.

The Conference Board said its consumer confidence index tumbled to 109.3 in September from an upwardly revised 115.2 in August. The decrease surprised participants, who had expected the index to inch up to 114.8 from the 113.8 originally reported for the previous month. Besides, technology shares fell as a rapid rise in rates makes their future cash flows less valuable, and in turn makes the popular stocks appear overvalued. Higher rates also hinder tech companies’ ability to fund their growth and buy back stock. Facebook, Microsoft and Alphabet lost more than 3%, while Amazon dropped more than 2%. Large chip stocks struggled, with Nvidia sliding 4.5%.

Dow Jones Industrial Average dropped 569.38 points or 1.63 percent to 34,299.99, The Nasdaq fell 423.29 points or 2.83 percent to 14,546.68 and S&P 500 was down by 90.48 points or 2.04 percent to 4,352.63.

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