U.S. stocks slid on Thursday as investors were discouraged by a worse-than-expected jobless claims reading as well as a gloomy forecast from Walmart.
The Dow Jones Industrial Average fell 130 points. The S&P 500 fell 0.5%, while the Nasdaq Composite slipped 0.8% as investors continued to rotate out of high-flying tech.
Walmart shares dropped nearly 6% after its fourth-quarter earnings fell short of Wall Street estimates. The big-box retailer also sees sales growth slowing this year as the pandemic momentum ebbs.
Shares of Apple fell another 2.4%. The tech giant is down 4.6% so far this week as investors take some profits in the Big Tech stocks that have led the market back to a record. Tesla dipped 2.5%, bringing its week-to-date losses to 4.6%.
“Stocks are sliding across the board with high-multiple growth names getting hit the hardest thanks to the unrelenting rise in yields,” Adam Crisafulli, founder of Vital Knowledge, said in a note. “Earnings were underwhelming too, with Walmart’s EPS miss and big spending guidance unnerving investors.”
Meanwhile, the latest jobless claims number signaled a setback in the labor market recovery. First-time filings for unemployment insurance totaled 861,000 last week, the highest level in a month and above the Dow Jones estimate of 773,000, the Labor Department reported Thursday.
“This is not the direction that you want to see jobless claims go but keep in mind this could be a small bump in the road as the pace for vaccinations continues to accelerate and cases are down across the country,” said Mike Loewengart, chief investment officer at E-Trade Financial.
The recent jump in bond yields coupled with rising inflation expectations made some investors worried about a pullback for stocks in the near term. High-growth technology companies, which led the market’s epic comeback, are especially vulnerable to higher interest rates and inflation pressures.
Many still believe a fresh stimulus deal could provide another move higher for the markets even if it is somewhat priced in already.
“When you think about how the additional stimulus can affect the average consumer, with the CARES Act 1.0 and the second round of checks really boosting savings, at this point we really feel strongly that additional stimulus will go directly into the economy,” said Cliff Hodge, the chief investment officer at Cornerstone Wealth.
The Congressional hearings on the GameStop saga began on Thursday, with leaders of Melvin Capital and Robinhood joining Reddit trader Keith Gill at the U.S. House of Representatives’ Committee on Financial Services.