US markets settle deeply in red amid interest rate concerns

14 Jun 2022 Evaluate

The US markets settled deeply in red on Monday, magnifying their previous session’s losses, with the S&P 500 tumbling to a fresh low for the year and closing in bear market territory as recession fears grew. Weakness on the markets reflected lingering concerns about inflation and the outlook for interest rates after last Friday’s report showing a jump in consumer prices. The Federal Reserve is scheduled to announce its latest monetary policy decision on Wednesday, with the central bank expected to continuing raising interest rates in an effort to combat inflation. A private report stated that the Fed would consider raising rates by 0.75% on Wednesday, more than the half-point increase currently expected.

Meanwhile, the 10-year Treasury rose more than 20 basis points higher to top 3.3%, as investors continued to bet the Fed may have to get more aggressive to squash inflation. Prices move inversely to yields and 1 basis point equals 0.01%. The 2-year Treasury yield was last up roughly 30 basis points to about 3.3%.  Besides, shares of Boeing, Salesforce and American Express fell 8.7%, 6.9% and 5.2%, respectively, dragging down the Dow as recession fears picked up. Beaten-up tech shares also took a hit with Netflix, Tesla and Nvidia down more than 7% as the Nasdaq touched a fresh 52-week low and its lowest level since November 2020. Travel stocks also slipped on Monday as Carnival Corporation and Norwegian Cruise Line plummeted about 10% and 12%, respectively. Delta Air Lines dropped more than 8% while United tumbled about 10%.

Dow Jones Industrial Average fell 876.05 points or 2.79 percent to 30,516.74, Nasdaq dropped 530.8 points or 4.68 percent to 10,809.23 and S&P 500 was down by 151.23 points or 3.88 percent to 3,749.63.

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