U.S. stocks sink at Friday's open as 10-year Treasury yield falls below 1.4% to cap Fed week,Nasdaq Composite Index declines 0.9%,Dow trades 0.5% lower; S&P 500 down 0.6%.
Shares of FedEx (FDX) jumped after the shipping giant raised its full-year earnings forecast, delivered better-than-expected fiscal second-quarter results and authorized a new $5 billion stock buyback program. Rivian (RIVN), meanwhile, saw shares sink following its first quarterly report since its IPO last month. The electric-vehicle makersaid in its shareholder letterit expected to be "a few hundred vehicles short" of its prior target of producing 1,200 units by the end of this year.
Investors' main focus this week has remained fixed on the Federal Reserve's updated outlook on monetary policy for next year, with the central bank's projections delivered mid-week suggesting the Fedcould hike interest rates three times next year.
The specter of higher rates — and a lower-liquidity environment as the central bank also speeds up the tapering process of its asset purchases — has continued to weigh heavily on longer-duration technology and growth stocks valued heavily on future earnings potential. The Nasdaq Composite has fallen by 5% over the past month through Thursday's close. And shares of some notable technology stocks extended declines on Friday, with Apple (AAPL) shares dropping by more than 1% in early trading after a nearly 4% decrease on Thursday.
On the other hand, cyclical stocks in the energy and financials sectors outperformed on Thursday, with the prospects of higher interest rates and stronger growth seen as benefitting these sectors.
"The thing investors have to understand is, we're going through a major transition in monetary policy," Troy Gayeski, FS Investments chief market strategist,told Yahoo Finance Live on Thursday."The Fed has been running emergency policies arguably far longer than they should have been, and as that money supply growth slows down as they ease off the balance sheet expansion and ultimately hike next year, one would at least expect more volatility in markets. And that's really what we've been seeing the last month."
"The biggest difference between now and six months ago, or even more than a year ago, is you could pretty much go long anything and you were confident it was going to go up. The economy was booming, we had a lot of fiscal stimulus, we still had unprecedented monetary policy stimulus," he added. "And it's a very different environment in 2022 where you're going to have to pick and choose much more carefully."
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