Stocks imploded in April, what’s ahead for May?
- annex-chemiseou
- May 1, 2022
- 2 min read
The Federal Reserve is expected to raise interest rates by 50 basis points on Wednesday
Equity investors long the market got roughed up in April amid steep swings and losses not seen in decades.
The S&P 500 and the Dow Jones Industrial Average posted the worst April since 1970 down 8.8% and 4.9%, respectively. The Nasdaq Composite’s 13.2% drop was the most since April of 2000, as tracked by Dow Jones Market Data Group.
Abysmal April for Stocks
DJIA: -4.9% S&P 500: -8.8% Nasdaq Composite: -13.2% Source: Dow Jones Market Data Group
"It was a catastrophe" James Bianco, President Bianco Research LLC told FOX Business. "The markets are starting to come to the realization that the Fed is going to be very aggressive" he added. Bianco predicts policymakers will hike rates 50 basis points at every meeting this year, including this week’s on Wednesday, with the possibility of even a larger hike at one of two of those meetings later this year.
Investors may be in for more downside volatility in May unless inflation begins to abate. "What ends this cycle is inflation, moderate inflation and that gets the Fed to back off" Bianco added.
The consumer price index, which tracks multiple items including food, gas, rents, and health care, jumped 8.5% in March from the year-ago period, the fastest pace since December 1981, when inflation hit 8.9%. The producer price index is even higher, rising 11.2%. The diesel fuel component rose 20.4% driving the bulk of the increase. Fresh updates are due mid-May.
Last week the U.S. economy surprisingly contracted 1.4% during the first quarter raising fresh concerns about a recession.
Ticker Security Last Change Change %SP500S&P 5004131.93-155.57-3.63%
In a recent research note titled "Recalibrating our views" Bank of America’s Savita Subramanian, Equity & Quant Strategist described what’s changed so far this year. "War, GDP cuts, Fed on steroids…" she detailed. As a result, she trimmed her year-end target for the S&P 500 to 4,500 which still implies a yearly advance of 8.9% from Friday’s closing price.
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