Skip to Content

Stocks are mixed as a solid jobs report juices inflation fears

So much for good economic news actually being treated as good news on Wall Street.

Although stocks opened sharply higher following a solid February jobs report Friday, with 379,000 jobs added last month, the enthusiasm quickly faded in what has turned out to be a volatile day of trading.

The Dow climbed more than 300 points after the opening bell, or 1%, while the S&P 500 and the Nasdaq each rose about 1% as well.

But by early afternoon, the Dow was up just slightly — after briefly dipping into negative territory — and the S&P 500 was lower. The Nasdaq fell 1.1%.

Investors may be spooked because the jobs gains were much bigger than expected and the unemployment rate inched down to 6.2%. That’s raising fears about inflation.

And it’s why investors are on edge as the economy recovers from the Covid-19 pandemic.

The jobs gains were much bigger than expected and the unemployment rate inched down to 6.2%. (To be sure, a lot of work remains to be done: The United States is still down 9.5 million jobs from February 2020 before the pandemic hit.)

That sounds like good news — but as the economy recovers from the Covid-19 pandemic, investors are on edge about rising inflation pressures.

Stocks plunged Thursday after Federal Reserve chairman Jerome Powell suggested that the central bank was willing to tolerate higher inflation and rising bond yields.

Tech stocks have been hit particularly hard, sending the Nasdaq into correction territory — more than 10% below its closing high of 14,095.47 on February 12.

The Nasdaq is down nearly 5% in the past week alone, compared to just a 1.3% drop for the S&P 500. The Dow is flat for the week.

Shares of Amazon, Netflix and Tesla have all been slammed during this momentum stock sell-off.

Tesla plunged 10% alone Friday and is down 17% this week. That electric slide has also hurt the popular ETF Ark Innovation that’s run by Cathie Wood, who has been a big backer of Tesla and other momentum darlings. Ark Innovation fell 6% Friday and is down about 15% this week.

“There is a continuation of this rotation out of growth stocks and other crowded trades into more cyclical companies,” said Jeff Schulze, investment strategist at ClearBridge Investments.

Along those lines, energy stocks are market leaders this year as oil prices surge on economic recovery hopes. Banks and other financials also are doing well. That’s not necessarily a bad thing.

“Investors are having to do some repricing of stocks,” said Steve Wyett, chief investment strategist of BOK Financial. “Last year, the market outperformed the economy. This year, the economy is going to outperform the market.”

This trend may not end anytime soon. Bond yields crept higher again Friday morning after the jobs report, with the 10-year Treasury bond inching up to about 1.58%. While that is still historically low, it is a significant spike from levels below 1% at the start of 2021.

Schulze said that rates are still low enough to support a continued economic rebound. But the trend is worth watching.

“Higher rates are a positive, not a negative. Rates are going up for the right reasons – better growth and an economic recovery,” he said. “As long as the rate rise is measured, the Fed will be okay with that. But if the 10-year yield gets to 2% in short order, we could get change of the Fed’s rhetoric.”

Article Topic Follows: Consumer

Jump to comments ↓

CNN

BE PART OF THE CONVERSATION

KYMA KECY is committed to providing a forum for civil and constructive conversation.

Please keep your comments respectful and relevant. You can review our Community Guidelines by clicking here

If you would like to share a story idea, please submit it here.

Skip to content