Wall Street all but guaranteed multiple-rate cuts. Without, dare we say it, paying enough attention to the warning signs.
Stocks slumped in an ugly way on Friday. The Standard & Poor’s 500 Index, whose components represent roughly 75% of the market value of U.S. stocks, dropped nearly 1.6% for the week, its second weekly loss in a row.
The Dow Jones industrials fell 2.4% in its second straight weekly loss.
The Nasdaq-100 Index, heavily weighted to favor the biggest tech stocks, fell 0.52% and fell for a third straight week.
And the Russell 2000 Index, which has large concentrations of regional banks and companies struggling to be profitable, fell 3.2%.
Markets may continue to slide, perhaps for a month or so, until rates do move lower (or the Fed acts), and stock prices of strong companies hit levels that make them irresistible.
There have been signs markets were vulnerable
These were increasing warning signs that markets would be pressured, at the very least, before the end of the week.
Oil prices. West Texas Intermediate, the benchmark U.S., was rising more quickly than many expected. Brent Crude, the global benchmark finished at $90.45, up 33% since the end of 2023. Many economists concede Brent will breach $100 a barrel in the not-too-distant future.
Interest rates. The 10-year Treasury yield closed at 4.532% on Friday, up 16.8% from its 2023 close of 3.881%. Mortgage rates are at about 7.3%, about where they were in late November, according to Mortgage News Daily.
Tech stocks stopped soaring. Nvidia (NVDA) may be up 78% for the year and 121% since the October market bottom. But the shares are down 9.5% since peaking on March 8. The Nasdaq-100 Index last set a 52-week high on March 21.
Tax selling. Some investors may have been selling to settle up with the Internal Revenue Service.
A market that was too enthusiastic?
It may be fair to say that investors’ enthusiasm had gotten way ahead of itself.
That was especially true of Wall Street banks and money managers. Many had begun 2024 believing the Fed would cut rates perhaps as much as seven times this year because the economy would slump without rate cuts.
That meant stocks and proxies like crypto currencies would surge without end. Bitcoin was at about $68,800 on Saturday afternoon, up 50% on the year. But it has fallen more than 13% from peaks reached in mid-March.
So far, the Fed has left its base rate, the federal funds rate, at 5.25% to 5.5% since July 2023. Multiple Fed officials wanted more progress on the fight against inflation.
Domestic inflation had hit 9% in the summer of 2022 and came down as interest rates moved from near 0% in late 2021 to current levels.
The fed funds rate is the rate banks are supposed to charge each other for loans to meet regulatory requirements. All U.S. interest rates start from that point.
Stay Ahead of the Curve: Subscribe Now to Receive Instant Breaking News Alerts Directly to Your Inbox!