NEW YORK (AP) — Stocks slipped on Wall Street Thursday as markets remain choppy amid uncertainty about where inflation, interest rates and the global economy are heading.
The S&P 500 fell 0.4%, its fifth drop in the last six days. The slide marks another reversal for U.S. stocks, which just a day earlier surged to their biggest gain since June 2020.
Oil prices had their own swings, with a barrel of U.S. crude jumping as much as 5.7%, before ending down 2.5%. The worry in markets is the economy may be set to struggle under a toxic cocktail of persistently high inflation and slowing growth.
Oil prices remain volatile
Such swings have become common in recent weeks, not only day-to-day but hour-to-hour, after Russia’s invasion of Ukraine raised worries about how high prices will go for oil, wheat and other commodities produced in the region.
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Brent crude, the international standard, fell 1.2% to $109.81 per barrel. Both it and U.S. benchmark oil are up more than 40% for 2022 so far, though they remain below the peaks they hit earlier this week. U.S. oil briefly topped $130.
Markets were already on edge before the war because high inflation is pushing central banks to raise interest rates for the first time in years and halt programs launched to support the global economy after the pandemic struck. Many investors see a recession as still unlikely, but they say the risk of one is rising.
“Until investors can get clarity on some of these topics, we’re going to continue to have volatile markets,” said Charlie Ripley, senior investment strategist for Allianz Investment Management.
Fed rate watch
Analysts said Thursday’s U.S. inflation report, while eye-popping, likely won’t have much effect on markets.
The 7.9% leap was exactly what economists were forecasting, and it did not include the most recent surge for oil and gasoline prices following Russia’s invasion of Ukraine. If anything, it may have offered some relief because it didn’t hit the 8% threshold that could feel even worse.
Many investors said the report likely won’t change anything for the Federal Reserve, which meets next week to vote on interest rates.
The wide expectation is that it will raise its key short-term rate by a quarter of a percentage point, which would be the first since 2018. Higher rates slow the economy, and the Fed is trying to raise them enough to tamp down inflation but not so much that it causes a recession.
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“To an extent, this inflation report doesn’t matter much,” said Brian Jacobsen, senior investment strategist at Allspring Global Investments.
“The Fed will likely acknowledge the higher food and energy costs, but also acknowledge that there’s little to nothing that monetary policy can do about it,” he said as oil and wheat prices have surged following Russian President Vladimir Putin’s decision to invade Ukraine. “Monetary policy can’t get Putin to back down.”
The yield on the 10-year Treasury, which tracks expectations for inflation and economic growth, wavered immediately after the inflation report’s release. It was recently at 2%, up from 1.94% late Wednesday.
The two-year Treasury yield, which moves more on expectations of what the Federal Reserve will do with short-term rates, was at 1.71%, up from 1.68%.
Tech stocks slide
On Wall Street, the losses were widespread. Big tech companies were some of the heaviest weights on the market. Chip and software companies slumped sharply, and both Micron Technology and Advanced Micro Devices were down more than 5%.
On the winning side was Amazon, which jumped 6.3% after it announced a 20-for-1 stock split and approved a program to buy back up to $10 billion of its stock.
Continued market volatility is likely in the days ahead as the conflict rages in Ukraine.
“Markets seem to have latched onto a couple of slightly less dismal clues as an excuse to rally hard,” ING economists said in a report following jumps for stocks on Wednesday and early Thursday. “The basis for that optimism — it’s actually pretty thin.”
AP Business Writers Damian J. Troise and Joe McDonald contributed. Veiga reported from Los Angeles.
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