US close: Stocks slide as bond yields continue to rise
Wall Street stocks closed lower across the board on Tuesday as rising bond yields, negative data points, and testimony from Federal Reserve chairman Jerome Powell all weighed on the market.
At the close, the Dow Jones Industrial Average was down 1.63% at 34,299.99, while the S&P 500 was 2.04% weaker at 4,352.63 and the Nasdaq Composite saw out the session 2.83% softer at 14,546.68.
The Dow closed 569.38 points lower on Tuesday, easily erasing gains recorded in the previous session, as the yield on the benchmark 10-year Treasury note continued to advance early on Tuesday, sitting at around 1.545%. The yield on the 30-year Treasury note also rose to 2.094%.
Market participants thumbed over testimony from Federal Reserve chair Jerome Powell, who, in prepared remarks delivered in front of the Senate Banking Committee, cautioned that inflation might persist longer than originally expected.
"Inflation is elevated and will likely remain so in coming months before moderating," Powell said. "As the economy continues to reopen and spending rebounds, we are seeing upward pressure on prices, particularly due to supply bottlenecks in some sectors. These effects have been larger and longer-lasting than anticipated, but they will abate, and as they do, inflation is expected to drop back toward our longer-run 2.0% goal."
Traders were also focussed on goings-on in Washington this week, with lawmakers needing to act on a funding plan before the end of the week in order to avoid a government shutdown and an expected White House vote on the $1.0trn bipartisan infrastructure bill on Thursday.
On the macro front, the US goods trade deficit widened to $87.6bn last month from a revised $86.8bn in July, according to the Commerce Department, as an increase in foreign-made consumer goods led to imports outpacing exports. Economists were expecting a print of $87.3bn.
Elsewhere, house prices rose nationwide in July, up 1.4% month-on-month and 19.2% year-on-year, according to the Federal Housing Finance Agency, while the previously reported 1.6% price change for June was revised upward to 1.7%.
Still on data, the Conference Board's September consumer confidence report revealed its consumer confidence index had fallen to a seven-month low of 109.3, down from a revised print of 115.2 in August.
Lastly, the Richmond Fed's September manufacturing index came in at -3, well and truly short of analyst's expectations for a reading of 12.
In the corporate space, chipmaker Micron Technology forecast first-quarter results that came in shy of estimates.