Wednesday, September 29, 2021

Debt limit, bond yields and Delta hammer Wall Street

The broad-based S&P 500 fell two per cent to 4,352.63, while the tech-rich Nasdaq Composite Index lost 2.8 per cent to 14,546.68. — Reuters pic
The broad-based S&P 500 fell two per cent to 4,352.63, while the tech-rich Nasdaq Composite Index lost 2.8 per cent to 14,546.68. — Reuters pic

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NEW YORK, Sept 29 ― It was a bad day for US stocks yesterday as poor consumer confidence data, rising bond yields and fears of a debt default caused indices to sink sharply.

Trading started on a sour note when the Conference Board reported its US consumer confidence index slumped for the third straight month as the fast-spreading Delta variant of Covid-19 made Americans wary of economic conditions.

There was little apparent progress throughout the day in Washington, where lawmakers must approve both a resolution to keep the government running and an increase in the debt ceiling to prevent a default, which the Treasury warned could come around October 18.

The impasse fuelled a selloff on Wall Street, and the benchmark Dow Jones Industrial Average closed 1.6 percent lower at 34,299.99.

The broad-based S&P 500 fell two per cent to 4,352.63, while the tech-rich Nasdaq Composite Index lost 2.8 per cent to 14,546.68.

Analysts at Wells Fargo pointed to an increase in yields on US Treasury bonds, saying they are “inciting a perceived 'risk off' mood.” The benchmark 10-year bond was yielding nearly 1.55 per cent shortly after markets closed.

Traders are looking ahead to tomorrow's joint testimony before Congress by Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen, and Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell.

Yellen will likely again warn of the dire consequences of not raising the debt ceiling, and also face questions about President Joe Biden's twin proposals to overhaul US infrastructure and social services at the cost of trillions of dollars.

Powell may comment on the central bank's plans to cut back on its massive monthly purchases of bonds and other securities, which was first implemented last year to help the economy as the pandemic began.

That program has been criticized for fuelling inflation, though last week, central bankers said it may “soon” be time to starting slowing them ― which could cause market turbulence, as they are seen with helping equities prosper. ― AFP




Source: Malay Mail

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