The Week In Review

4/1/22

The major averages closed modestly higher on Friday as investors assessed a new quarter of trading and a troublesome bond market recession indicator. The S&P 500 rose 15 points or 0.34% to 4,545, while the Nasdaq Composite gained 40 points or 0.29% to 14,261. The Dow Jones Industrial Average added 139 points, or 0.40%, to close at 34,818 after being down more than 100 points earlier in the session. Stocks closed near session highs.

The gains for stocks came on the first trading day of April and the second quarter. Wall Street is fresh off its first negative quarter in two years, but there were positive signs for investors on Friday.

The price of U.S. benchmark West Texas Intermediate fell below $100 per barrel as the Biden administration pledged to release more strategic oil reserves. Energy prices surged earlier this year as Russia's invasion of Ukraine disrupted global supply, leading to some worry that the high prices could hurt economic growth.

Investors were also digesting the official jobs report for March, which showed the U.S. economy adding 431,000 jobs. The result was below the composite estimate of 490,000 from Dow Jones but above some of the lower end estimates.

Materials stocks moved higher, with Freeport-McMoRan rising more than 2% and gold miner Newmont rising more 4.2%. Health care, utility and energy stocks also outperformed. Edwards Life Sciences and Illumina rose more than 4%, making them two of the top performers in the S&P 500. Walmart rose more than 1%.

U.S.-listed Chinese stocks jumped on Friday after a report that China was considering sharing company audits with foreign regulators.

Investors appeared to largely shake off a recession signal from the bond market that was triggered after the closing bell Thursday and again on Friday morning. The 2-year and 10-year Treasury yields inverted for the first time since 2019.

For some investors, it's a signal that the economy is headed for a possible recession, though the inverted yield curve does not predict exactly when it will happen and history shows it could be more than a year away or longer.

Lerner added that the market appeared to be shifting toward leadership by more defensive stocks in recent days.

Bank stocks struggled on Friday after the inversion, with Citigroup losing 2%. Chip stocks fell again on Friday, with Intel dropping about 3% and Advanced Micro Devices losing about 1%, amid growing concern about personal computer demand.

There were some more negative economic readings on Friday, with February construction spending data and March manufacturing data from ISM coming in below expectations.

The three major averages slumped on Thursday to close out the first negative quarter for stocks in two years, with losses accelerating in the final hour of trading. The Dow and S&P 500 ended the quarter down 4.6% and 4.9% respectively during the period, and the Nasdaq dropped more than 9%.

The start of the Fed's rate hiking cycle, persistently high inflation and the ongoing war in Ukraine contributed to the rough quarter for stocks.

For the week, the S&P 500 squeaked out a slight gain while the Dow and Nasdaq saw mild losses.

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