Friday, February 28, 2025

Stocks Get Hit as Economic Jitters Spur Bond Rally: Markets Wrap

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(Bloomberg) — Stocks closed at a five-week low and bonds surged as another disappointing reading on the US consumer fueled concern about the health of the world’s largest economy.

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Another slide in the Nasdaq 100 pushed its four-day loss to around 5%, the most since early September. A gauge of megacaps extended a plunge from its peak to more than 10% – passing the threshold that meets the definition of a correction. Selling was heaviest in speculative corners of the market, with a 6% slide in Bitcoin spurring a plunge in exchange-traded funds specializing in crypto. A rally in Treasuries drove yields to their lowest levels in 2025.

US consumer confidence fell the most since August 2021 on concerns about the outlook for the broader economy. The data followed recent disappointments on the retail, services and housing fronts. That’s prompted traders to boost their bets on Federal Reserve rate cuts this year even as inflation pressures seem to be intensifying.

“The market still seems more worried about growth than inflation,” said Chris Verrone at Strategas.

At Brown Brothers Harriman, Elias Haddad says “red flags are emerging,” and another month or two of weak US data would deliver “a blow to the US exceptionalism narrative.” To Keith Lerner at Truist Advisory Services, while the primary stock-market uptrend remains intact and recession risks remain relatively low, the near-term risk/reward appears more mixed.

The S&P 500 fell 0.5%. The Nasdaq 100 slid 1.2%. The Dow Jones Industrial Average rose 0.4%. A gauge of the Magnificent Seven megacaps sank 2.25%. Nvidia Corp. lost 2.8% ahead of its results. In late hours, Super Micro Computer Inc. jumped after meeting a deadline for submitting outstanding financial reports to regain compliance to stay listed on the Nasdaq.

The yield on 10-year Treasuries sank 11 basis points to 4.29%. Money markets are fully pricing in two quarter-point rate cuts by the Fed this year. A dollar gauge slid 0.2%.

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“Markets have suddenly begun declining on fears over a slowdown in growth. Wasn’t everyone just worried about too-strong growth and higher inflation a couple of weeks ago?” said Bespoke Investment Group strategists. “We would also note that three of the five Fed manufacturing reports released in February were all in growth territory. So not all the news is bad. The economic outlook is uncertain, but isn’t it always?”

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