Unlock stock picks and a broker-level newsfeed that powers Wall Street.

Stock market news live updates: Nasdaq sinks by 1.2%, entering correction as tech rout extends

In This Article:

Stocks ended a volatile session sharply lower on Wednesday, as investors nervously eyed soaring bond yields and mixed earnings results from some major index components.

[Click here to read what's moving markets on Thursday, Jan. 20]

The Nasdaq Composite dropped another 1.2% and entered a correction, logging a closing level more than 10% below its recent record high from November.

Meanwhile, Bank of America (BAC) shares gained after the company topped estimates for quarterly loan growth and posted a jump in profits in its key consumer banking business. Procter & Gamble (PG) also rose after the company exceeded expectations in its latest results and raised its sales guidance for the full year, with higher prices from the company helping boost results.

Treasury yields gave back some recent gains, and the benchmark 10-year yield retreated after nearing 1.9% a day earlier for its highest level since January 2020. Commodity prices advanced further, and U.S. West Texas intermediate crude oil futures rose above $86 per barrel in its highest level since 2014.

According to many strategists, the recent volatility across risk assets has largely reflected investors' ongoing reassessment of highly valued asset prices, with interest rate hikes and an attenuation of liquidity out of the Federal Reserve looming.

Though Fed officials are in a blackout period before their next meeting next week, policymakers over the past several weeks have telegraphed that they are gearing up to raise interest rates and eventually draw down the nearly $9 trillion on the Fed's balance sheet as the economic recovery continues and inflation soars.

"At this point, it's very clear that the first rate hike will be at the March meeting," Jason Ware, Albion Financial Group partner and chief investment officer, told Yahoo Finance Live on Tuesday. "What we're going to be looking at is the language around inflation because at the end of the day, inflation is what's driving Fed policy."

Other strategists offered a similar take.

"I think it's definitely a repositioning of the market to deal with really what the Fed has done. And the Fed has basically created some certainty around the fact that there will be rate rises," David Bailing, Citi Global Wealth chief investment officer and head of global wealth investments, told Yahoo Finance Live on Tuesday. "Then the question is, how much do they actually release from their portfolio? And it's that that creates the enormous uncertainty."

"What we're seeing now is a broad-based reevaluation of the highest growth shares, which obviously are the most sensitive to interest rates. But what's happened is it's taking place across the board," he added. "This is going to present a buying opportunity in areas like fin tech, in areas like cybersecurity, where you have very steady growth, you have increased cash flows and potentially profitability, as opposed to the more speculative shares."