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Wall St. ends sharply lower due to mixed earnings, inflation that is sticking, and geopolitical concerns

U.S. shares fell on Friday, after the results of major U.S. financial institutions failed to impress. This capped a week that was marked by market-moving data about inflation, changing expectations for U.S. Federal Reserve policies, and looming tensions in geopolitics.

The three major indices all fell by more than 1% and recorded losses for the week.

The Dow Jones Industrial Average suffered its worst weekly loss since March 2023, and the S&P 500 index experienced its largest weekly percentage decline since January.

Mike Dickson is the head of Horizon Investments' research in Charlotte, North Carolina. Everyone is a little jittery, with an intense focus on how high earnings must be.

The unofficial start of the first-quarter earnings period was marked by three big banks.

JPMorgan Chase & Co., the largest U.S. Bank by assets, reported a 6% increase in profit, but its forecast for net interest income fell short. Its shares fell 6.5%.

Wells Fargo & Co.'s stock dipped after profits dropped 7% due to a drop in net interest income on weak borrowing demands.

Citigroup reported a loss following the expenditures on employee severance pay and deposit insurance. Its stock fell 1.7%.

Investors have re-evaluated their expectations for the U.S. Federal Reserve rate cut this year after this week's economic data, especially Wednesday's Consumer Price Index report that was hotter than expected.

Dickson added that, while he doesn't expect a rate hike, the Fed probably would prefer to keep rates high for longer.

There's no evidence that the Fed should lower rates.

Boston Fed President Susan Collins expects two rate cuts in this year even though inflation could take some time to reach its target level.

Austan Goolsbee said he is still focused on the Personal Consumption Expenditures report (PCE), due on April 26, to get a better picture of the inflation's progress towards the central bank's goal.

The geopolitical tensions are continuing to simmer, as Iran threatens to retaliate against Israel for its April 1 airstrike in Damascus on the embassy. This has added momentum to the stock market.

The CPI would be negatively affected by the geopolitical risk.

The Dow Jones Industrial Average dropped 475.84 or 1.24% to 37,983.24. The S&P500 lost 75.65, or 1.45%, at 5,123.41, and the Nasdaq Composite fell 267.10, or 1.52%, to 16,175.09.

Materials suffered the largest percentage loss of all 11 major S&P 500 sectors.

Advanced Micro Devices (AMD) and Intel (INTC) fell by 4.2% and 5.2% respectively following a report that Chinese authorities told the largest telecom company in China earlier this year they would phase out foreign chip technology by 2027.

U.S. Steel fell 2.1% after its shareholders approved a merger proposal with Nippon Steel Corporation.

On the NYSE, declining issues outnumbered advancing ones by a ratio of 4.19 to 1. On Nasdaq a ratio of 3.16 to 1 favored decliners.

The S&P 500 recorded 12 new 52-week lows and nine new highs. The Nasdaq Composite registered 35 new highs, and 211 new lowers.

The volume on U.S. Exchanges was 11,67 billion shares compared to the average of 11.41 billion for the entire session in the past 20 trading days.

(source: Reuters)