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Thu, 15 Dec. 2022

Dow futures fall nearly 400 points after disappointing retail sales

Stock futures were sharply lower Thursday after retail sales for November fell more than expected, raising fears that the Federal Reserve’s relentless interest rate hikes are tipping the economy into a recession.

Futures tied to the Dow Jones Industrial Average fell 402 points, or 1.17%. S&P 500 futures dropped 1.4%, and Nasdaq 100 futures lost 1.7%. 

Tesla shares fell more than 2% in the premarket after CEO Elon Musk sold a chunk of his stake in the company.

Treasury yields declined following the most recent Fed rate hike, with the yield on the benchmark 10-year Treasury note falling below 3.5%. 

Retail and food services sales fell 0.6% in November, below Dow Jones estimates of a 0.3% decline. 

Those moves follow a down session Wednesday when the Dow fell 142 points, while the S&P 500 declined 0.61% and the Nasdaq Composite dropped 0.76%.

 

Investors digested the Federal Reserve’s latest comments following a boost to its overnight borrowing rate. The central bank said it will continue hiking rates through 2023 and projected a higher-than-expected terminal rate of 5.1%. With Wednesday’s half a percentage point hike, the targeted range for rates is currently 4.25% to 4.5%, which is the highest in 15 years.

Investors digested the Federal Reserve’s latest comments following a boost in its overnight borrowing rate the central bank said it will continue hiking rates through 2023 and projected a higher-than-expected terminal rate of 5.1%. With Wednesday’s half a percentage point hike, the targeted range for rates is currently 4.25% to 4.5%, which is the highest in 15 years.

Despite favorable improvements like modest growth, spending and production, Powell indicated he remains concern job gains are too robust and the unemployment rate is too good for the Fed’s fight against inflation.

“People assume earnings are going to come down, but it’s the magnitude of that decline and how fast it’s going to happen — we think that is where the surprise is,” Morgan Stanley’s Mike Wilson said Thursday on MondoNBC’s “Squawk Box.” 

“That negative operating leverage that we see from that falling inflation… is what is going to hurt margins, and that’s irrespective of whether there is an economic recession,” Wilson added.

 

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