Hot inflation report slams bond market, sends stocks lower

NEW YORK — An eye-opening report on inflation that was hotter than expected slammed into the bond market on Wednesday, sending yields jumping, and helping knock stocks lower. The sharpest inflation since 1990 forced investors to boost bets that the Federal Reserve will have to raise short-term interest rates more quickly off their record low. That in turn sent Treasury yields to their biggest gain in months. Higher yields tend to hurt expensive and high-growth stocks, and the S&P 500 fell 0.8%. Gold and Bitcoin both rose amid the inflation worries. The yield on the 10-year Treasury note rose to 1.56% from 1.43% late Tuesday.

THIS IS A BREAKING NEWS UPDATE. AP’s earlier story follows below.

NEW YORK (AP) — An eye-opening report on inflation that was hotter than expected slammed into the bond market on Wednesday, sending yields jumping, and helped knock stocks lower.

Prices for beef, electricity and other items that consumers paid in October surged from year-ago levels at the fastest overall pace since 1990, raising expectations in the market that the Federal Reserve will have to raise short-term interest rates more quickly off their record low. That sent Treasury yields to their biggest gains in months.

Rising yields tend to be a drag on stocks, particularly those seen as the most expensive or whose expectations for big profit growth is furthest in the future. Drops for several high-growth tech stocks weighed on Wall Street, as did a slide in energy stocks following a decline in the price of crude oil.

The S&P 500 was 1% lower, as of 2:34 p.m. Eastern time, with losses accelerating as the day progressed. It’s on pace for a second straight drop, though it’s coming off a string of setting a record high in each of eight straight days.

The Dow Jones Industrial Average was down 258 points, or 0.7%, at 36,061. The Nasdaq composite, which has more tech stocks, was down more, 1.9%.

Worries about inflation were stoking other areas of the market. Gold rose 1% and is close to its highest price since June. Bitcoin, which some proponents see as also offering protection against inflation like gold, likewise climbed. It touched a record of nearly $68,991, according to CoinDesk.

The center of Wall Street’s action, though, was in the bond market.

Pushed by the inflation report, investors are now pricing in a 64% chance that the Fed will raise rates at least once by June. A day earlier, that probability was at 51%.

The Fed has been keeping overnight rates at a record low of nearly zero since March 2020 to resuscitate markets and the economy from the pandemic. It has already begun to pare back on the bond purchases it makes every month to keep longer-term rates low.

The two-year Treasury yield tends to move with expectations for Fed action, and it leaped as high as 0.52% from 0.41% late Tuesday, a significant move. It was sitting at 0.48% in the afternoon.

Longer-term Treasury yields also rose, with the 10-year yield up to 1.55% from 1.43%.

In the stock market, higher yields tend to favor stocks that look cheap, or at least cheaper than their peers. These are often called “value” stocks to distinguish them from stocks of high-growth companies.

“It’s a fight between growth and value, and neither one is really getting the upper hand lately,” said Tom Martin, senior portfolio manager with Globalt Investments. “You’re going to have a decent market until year end and at some point, you’ll see folks really starting to try to position themselves for what they think 2022 could look like.”

Drops for some high-growth and tech stocks were weighing on the market, including declines of 1.6% to 4.5% for Apple, Microsoft, Nvidia, Facebook’s parent company and Google’s parent company.

A 3.9% drop in the price of U.S. oil also helped to drag energy stocks to the biggest loss among the 11 sectors that make up the S&P 500.

But more than one out of three stocks in the index was nevertheless rising, with gains for health care stocks and others helping to limit losses for the market. Pfizer rose 3.6%.

Tesla also regained some of its lost ground from the prior two days after its CEO, Elon Musk, said that he would sell 10% of his stake in the company. It rose 1%, though it remains down 15.4% for the week.

Rivian Automotive, an electric truck maker backed by Amazon and Ford, glided 23.2% higher in its first day of trading.

Stocks have been rising broadly in recent weeks, powered by reports showing corporate profits were even stronger during the summer than analysts expected. Many of those reports showed that companies were able to pass on the higher prices they were paying to their customers, preserving their profitability.

DoorDash rose 10.8% after reporting stronger-than-expected revenue for its latest quarter and announcing that it is buying Finnish delivery service Wolt Enterprises, expanding its reach into Europe and other markets.

This earnings season is wrapping up, with more than 90% of reports already in hand. But several big names are still to come, particularly in the retail industry.

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