S&P 500 Tumbles Deeper Into Bear Market as Apple Leads Tech Rout By Investing.com


© Reuters.

By Yasin Ebrahim

Investing.com — The S&P 500 fell Thursday, as the respite from a day earlier proved short-lived after an Apple rout on concerns about the strength of the consumer triggered a selloff. 

The fell 2.6%, the slipped 2%, or 605 points, and the was down 2.6%.

Apple (NASDAQ:) fell more than 5% after Bank of America downgraded the company to Neutral from Buy, citing worries about a slowdown in consumer spending.

The tech giant is expected to face “material negative estimate revisions,” over the next year, Bank of America said, pointing to a slowdown in “services and relatively lackluster iPhone lead times” as signs that consumer demand will slow.

The downgrade soured sentiment on semiconductor stocks, with Apple chip suppliers including Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing (NYSE:), Qualcomm Incorporated (NASDAQ:), and Analog Devices Inc (NASDAQ:) adding to recent losses. NVIDIA’s (NASDAQ:) 5% slump, meanwhile, also weighed on chip stocks.

Rising Treasury yields, the enemy of growth sectors like tech stocks, also added pressure on the broader market as an upside revision to second-quarter inflation suggested the Federal Reserve will have to persist with rate hikes.

The price index, the fed’s preferred inflation gauge, was revised higher to a 7.3%. While the price measure, which excludes food and energy, and is closely watched was upwardly revised to 4.7% from 4.4%.

The latest weekly data, meanwhile, also suggested the Fed has more work to do as claims in the week ending Sept. 24, unexpectedly fell 16,000 to 193,000.

Cleveland Fed President Loretta J. Mester said that inflation was ‘unacceptably high,’ and reiterated the Fed’s willingness to bring back toward the 2% target even if the economy slows.

Consumer stocks, meanwhile, fell more than 3% after a more than 23% plunge in CarMax Inc (NYSE:) after the autodealer quarterly earnings that fell short of analysts’ estimates.

Bed Bath & Beyond (NASDAQ:) fell 8% after a wide-than-expected loss, paced by a decline in Buybuy Baby, its baby merchandise chain.

In other news, Peloton Interactive (NASDAQ:) fell 16% after detailing plans to sell its equipment at Dick’s Sporting Goods, a move that points to further signs of slowing demand for its fitness equipment.

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