Market Snapshot: U.S. stocks open lower after best day in three weeks as Friday’s jobs report keeps traders on edge

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U.S. stocks saw their losses accelerate on Thursday, reversing most of the S&P 500’s gains from its best session in three weeks a day earlier, as Treasury yields whipsawed, keeping investors on edge ahead of Friday’s monthly jobs report from the Labor Department.

What’s happening

  • The S&P 500
    SPX
    was off by 30 points, or 0.7%, at 4,233.

  • The Dow Jones Industrial Average
    DJIA
    fell by 111 points, or 0.4%, to 33,011.

  • The Nasdaq Composite
    COMP
    declined by 138 points, or 1%, to 13,098.

On Wednesday, the Dow Jones Industrial Average rose 127 points, or 0.39%, to 33,130, snapping a three-day losing streak, while the S&P 500 gained 34 points, or 0.81%, to 4,264 for its biggest percentage-point gain in three weeks, FactSet data show.

What’s driving markets

Treasury yields were volatile in early trade on Thursday, which added to pressure on U.S. stocks as investors digested a batch of fresh economic data ahead of Friday’s all-important September jobs report.

The yield on the 10-year Treasury note
BX:TMUBMUSD10Y
was last pegged at 4.73%, near a 16-year high reached earlier this week. Bond yields move inversely to prices.

“I think the momentum is still on the down side,” said Liz Ann Sonders, chief investment strategist at Charles Schwab, in a phone interview with MarketWatch. “There’s nothing specific that you could point to today.”

A weekly report on jobless-claims data showed no sign that layoffs have been increasing. Rising layoffs are seen as a necessary prerequisite for the Federal Reserve to start easing its monetary policy, which has weighed on both stocks and bonds since early 2022. Government data showed the number of Americans who applied for unemployment benefits last week rose slightly to 207,000, but remained near pandemic-era lows.

See: U.S. jobs report forecast: 170,000 new workers and 3.7% unemployment

Investors also received data on the U.S. international trade deficit which suggested some weakness in consumer spending, but analysts chiefly blamed the jobless claims numbers for the impact on yields and stocks.

Rising Treasury yields, particularly on the long end of the yield curve, have been widely blamed for driving the selloff in stocks that has taken place since early August. But as stocks continued to fall on Thursday with no obvious driver in sight, equity strategists see signs of investors simply following the latest trend.

“Financial markets have been rattled in the last few days,” said Bill Adams, Chief Economist for Comerica Bank. “The yield on the 10-year Treasury note has jumped about 0.6 percentage points since the beginning of September, extending a steady march higher since the early summer.”

“There are competing explanations for the surge in interest rates and they have very different implications. Treasury issuance is way up this year with a higher deficit, and the Fed is no longer a buyer; rising interest rates would be the classic warning that the deficit is starting to crowd out private-sector access to capital. But Treasury yields rose in August, too, even though the Federal government ran a monthly surplus in the month.”

“On net the increase in long Treasury yields makes the Fed more likely to choose an earlier peak in short-term interest rates and an earlier pivot to rate cuts in 2024.”

Several senior Fed officials are set to speak on Thursday, including Cleveland Fed President Loretta Mester, who spoke at the Chicago Payments Symposium at 9 a.m., and San Francisco Fed President Mary Daly, who is set to speak in New York at noon. Richmond Fed President Thomas Barkin is set to speak in North Carolina at 11:30 a.m. Eastern.

Choppy trading in recent days sent the Cboe VIX index
VIX,
a gauge of expected equity-market volatility, to 20 for the first time in four months as stocks tumbled. Some analysts see a near-term rebound ahead, but many argue the direction of bond yields remains critical for stocks.

Looking ahead to Friday, economists polled by The Wall Street Journal expect 170,000 jobs were created last month, which would be lower than the 187,000 created during the month prior.

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