Stock Market Today: Stocks Resume Slide as Treasury Yields Rise

Thursday marked another day of choppy trading for stocks as investors thorough a round of data that showed the U.S. economy remained hard-wearing even in the face of the Federal Reserve’s aggressive rate-hike battle.

Ahead of this morning’s open, data from the Labor Sphere showed weekly jobless claims fell for a fifth honest week, underscoring might in the labor market. Additionally, the Buying Sphere said retail sales rose 0.3% month-over-month in August, beating economists’ expectations for a slight decline in consumer costs. 

“This [retail sales] report is not excellent for the Fed’s goals of slower inflation,” says José Torres, senior economist at Interactive Brokers. “The Fed want to see patrons slow down their costs and debt growth to slow down inflation. Higher rates provide an incentive to save, not to spend, and that’s part of the reason why tighter fiscal policy brings down demand and inflation.” As such, Torres says the market is not only in the family way a 75 basis-point rate hike at next week’s Fed meeting, but one at the November meeting too. (A basis point is one-one hundredth of a percentage point.)

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By the close, the market had taken a earnest turn lower as the 10-year Reserves yield jumped 3.5 basis points to 3.447%. The tech-heavy Nasdaq Composite suffered the worst of it, slumping 1.4% to 11,552. But, the S&P 500 Index (-1.1% to 3,901) and the Dow Jones Manufacturing Average (-0.6% at 30,961) also finished solidly in the red.

Price chart for Dow, S&P 500 and Nasdaq on Thursday, September 15

Other news in the stock market today:

  • The small-cap Russell 2000 shed 0.7% to 1,825.
  • U.S. crude futures fell 3.8% to settle at $85.10 per barrel.
  • Gold futures plummeted 1.9% to $1,677.30 an ounce, their lowest agreement price since April 3, 2020, according to Dow Jones Market Data.
  • Bitcoin slipped 0.8% to $19,800.53. (Bitcoin trades 24 hours a day; prices reported here are as of 4 p.m.) Everyplace else, Ethereum spiraled 6.3% to $1,499.28 after the Ethereum Merge. “The merge paves the way for the world’s second-largest cryptocurrency to become more energy-well-methodical and to operate on a ‘proof-of-stake’ network,” says Edward Moya, senior market strategist at currency data source OANDA. “Crypto traders are often used to ‘sell the event’ reactions in the cryptoverse and this Merge proved to be another example of just that.”
  • Adobe (ADBE) plunged 16.8% after the Creative Cloud parent said it is buying design software firm Figma in a cash-and-stock deal valued at roughly $20 billion. “This would be by far Adobe’s largest-ever acquisition,” says Scott Kessler, global sector lead for Equipment Media and Telecommunications at Third Bridge. “About four years ago it bought Marketo for around $5 billion. Meanwhile, its closest peer and competitor in some ways, Salesforce.com (CRM), has been far more aggressive with M&A, most just buying Slack last year in a deal valued at nearly $30 billion.” ADBE also reported higher-than-probable fiscal third-quarter return of $3.40 per share on inline revenue of $4.4 billion.
  • Netflix (NFLX) jumped 5.0% after Evercore ISI analyst Mark Mahaney upgraded the streaming stock to Go one better than from Inline, the equivalents of Buy and Hold, correspondingly. The analyst believes NFLX’s ad-supported donation and its crack down on password sharing make “catalysts that can drive a notes reacceleration of revenue growth.” Mahaney adds that these catalysts are now not priced into the stock.

Stocks Making the Most of Supply-Chain Woes

Supply-chain disruptions have been front and center for most of the endemic and the likelihood for another disturbance came back to the front spot this week as a the makings railroad strike loomed. While the latest headlines suggest that the strike will be averted as both sides reach a tentative deal, the breakability of the system remains a concern for investors. 

“Supply chains were built for efficiency in the past,” says Tony DeSpirito, chief investment officer at BlackRock’s U.S. Essential Active Equities. “And that meant the lowest cost, where on earth it was.” But COVID “underscored the need for flexibility of supply chains,” he adds. “And that’s what we’re early to see – the trend away from globalization to onshoring or reshoring operations. It’s in effect a shift from efficiency to resiliency.” This shift is making a tough small-term background for investors, DeSpirito adds, but he reminds us that it helps to take a long-term perspective. 

And over the long term, companies should benefit from a go to more dependable processes. With that in mind, we’ve come up with five stocks that stand to win as supply chains falter. Most of the list is made up of manufacturing stocks, but the tech sector makes an advent too.