More commotion in the bond markets sent equities off to a rocky start for the week – though what was shaping up to be a significant gashing turned out to be just a scrape.
The yield on the 10-year Treasury jumped yet again Monday, to as high as 1.808% after starting 2021 at 1.510%.
“While rates have been volatile throughout 2021, the 10-year has not reached this level since prior to the pandemic,” says Lindsey Bell, chief money and markets strategist for Ally Invest. “Information received since the start of the new year is making the case for Mister Market that the Fed is going to raise rates and remove liquidity from the market at a faster pace than what was thought just over a week ago.”
Remember: The Federal Reserve’s members have signaled expectations for at least three hikes to the central bank’s benchmark interest rate in 2022. Kiplinger forecasts the Fed will raise rates four times, and over the weekend, Goldman Sachs predicted the same. JPMorgan Chase (JPM) CEO Jamie Dimon upped the ante Monday, saying “I’d personally be surprised if it was just four.”
However, heavy selling pressure Monday morning mercifully relaxed into the afternoon as 10-year rates backed off their highs.
Fresh off its worst week in 11 months, the Nasdaq Composite dropped by as much as 2.7% at its nadir, to 14,530 – just about 80 points from official correction territory (a drop of 10% or more from a peak) – but managed to finish with a marginal gain to 14,942. The Dow Jones Industrial Average (-0.5% to 36,068) and S&P 500 (-0.1% to 4,670) closed down but were well off their intraday lows.