Finance

Stocks give up most of the day’s gains after first omicron case in U.S., Dow last up 100 points

The Dow Jones Industrial Average gave up a 500-point gain and turned negative briefly after the CDC confirmed the first case of omicron in the U.S.

The Dow was up 520 points at the high of the day. It then fell into negative territory briefly. It was last up about 79 points, continuing a volatile streak of the last four sessions as the omicron threat emerged.

The gains follow a Tuesday sell-off on Wall Street over fears about the new omicron Covid variant and the Federal Reserve mulling a quicker-than-planned exit from its easy monetary policy.

The U.S. 10-year Treasury rose as much as 9 basis points to around 1.5% earlier in the session but has since retreated to 1.45%.

Some energy shares posted gains, with Baker Hughes each rising 2% as West Texas Intermediate prices climbed about 4% to nearly $69 a barrel. Financial names also rose. JPMorgan and Wells Fargo gained 2% apiece and Goldman Sachs added 1.5%.

Retail and apparel stocks were also in the green, Ralph Lauren adding more than 2% and PVH gaining nearly 2%. Home Depot and Lowe’s were each up 2%.

The moves came a day after the Dow lost more than 650 points, the S&P 500 shed 1.9% and the tech-focused Nasdaq Composite dipped 1.6%. The small-cap benchmark Russell 2000 tumbled 1.9% as cyclical names dragged on the markets.

“Our sense is that the recent selloff is a longer-term buying opportunity. However, investors that want to avoid a potential big drawdown (while giving up some potential upside) may want to wait until the [Fed’s] Dec. 15 meeting,” Wolfe Research strategist Chris Senyek said in a note to clients.

Fed Chairman Jerome Powell jolted markets on Tuesday after he said the central bank is expected to discuss speeding up the taper of its minimum $120 billion a month bond-buying program. Despite the potential disruption of omicron, the Fed chief said he thinks reducing the pace of monthly bond buys can move quicker than the $15 billion-a-month schedule announced earlier this month.

“I think that the taper need not be a disruptive event in markets. I don’t expect that it will be. It hasn’t been so far. We’ve telegraphed it,” Powell said during Congressional testimony on Wednesday.

Goldman Sachs said it projects the Fed will double the pace to $30 billion a month and enact its first rate hike of the pandemic era in June.

Stocks took a leg higher on Wednesday morning after the November manufacturing report from ISM, which matched expectations and showed a decline in prices paid.

The major averages have seen several volatile sessions, starting last Friday when the Dow Jones Industrial Average experienced its worst day since October 2020 on concerns about the new Covid variant that was first detected in South Africa. Stocks rebounded on Monday, only to turn downward again on Tuesday.

Stocks wrapped up a volatile month of trading on Tuesday. The Dow lost 3.7% for its second month of losses in three. The S&P 500 fell 0.8%, while the Nasdaq Composite gained 0.25% in November. The Russell 2000 shed 4.3% in November, its worst month since March 2020.

Still, the major averages are up solidly for the year. The Dow is up 12.7% and the S&P 500 is up 21.6% in 2021. The Nasdaq Composite is up an impressive 20.6% this year.

ADP’s private payroll data for November showed 534,000 jobs added that month, above expectations of 506,000.

Elsewhere, November’s IHS Markit manufacturing PMI came in at 58.3, lower than expected. October construction spending also rose slower than expected, but there was a positive historical revision to help offset the miss.

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