Inflation Jitters Send Market Lower, but Investors Buy the Dip at the End of the Week

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The Stock Market Finished The Week In Negative Territory, But It Could Have Been A Lot Worse After Hot Inflation Data Upset The Market Mid-Week. The Nasdaq Composite (-2.3%) And Russell 2000 (-2.1%) Were This Week's Losers With Losses Over 2.0% While The S&P 500 (-1.4%) And Dow Jones Industrial Average (-1.1%) Declined Closer To 1%.

Through the first three sessions of the week, the Dow was down 3.4%, the S&P 500 was down 4.0%, the Nasdaq was down 5.2%, and the Russell 2000 was down 6.0%. Over the next two days, the Dow gained 2.4%, the Nasdaq gained 3.0%, the S&P 500 gained 2.7%, and the Russell 2000 gained 4.2%.

The horrible start was attributed to negative momentum in the growth stocks, rotational factors, and a noticeably hot Consumer Price Index (CPI) report on Wednesday. The m/m changes in consumer prices exceeded expectations, and when looking at the last six months to exclude easy base effect comparisons, total CPI was running at an annualized pace of 5.0%.

Investors used the weakness as an opportunity to buy the dip with a little help from several factors:

  • A retracement in long-term interest rates, signaling that the Treasury market wasn't concerned about inflation even after receiving additional hot inflation data apart from the CPI report.

  • Apple (AAPL) reclaiming its 200-day moving average (123.28) and the S&P 500 respecting its 50-day moving average (4064).

  • The CDC saying fully vaccinated people can engage in most activities without masks.

  • A view that the market was oversold on a short-term basis and was likely due for a bounce.

Eight of the 11 S&P 500 sectors still ended in negative territory, though, including the consumer discretionary (-3.7%), information technology (-2.2%), and communication services (-2.0%) sectors amid weakness in their mega-cap components. The consumer staples (+0.4%), financials (+0.3%), and materials (+0.1%) sectors closed higher.

It'll be interesting to see how the growth/technology stocks perform moving forward when money has been flowing into the cyclical/value stocks on reopening/inflation expectations and analysts have been calling for sustained underperformance. Many growth stocks are down substantially from their peaks in February.

The 10-yr yield increased six basis points to 1.64% from last Friday's settlement, but this was below the 1.70% settlement on Wednesday. Copper prices decreased 2% to $4.648/lb., representing many of the commodities that cooled off this week.