Connect with us

Investing

U.S. stocks are falling after stronger-than-expected retail sales

Published

on

© Reuters.

Investing.com — U.S. stocks were falling on Tuesday as disappointing data out of China and stronger-than-expected retail sales data in the U.S. fueled concerns about interest rates.

At 9:34 ET (13:34 GMT), the was down 159 points or 0.4%, while the was down 0.4% and the was down 0.2%.

Data on China’s industrial output and retail sales pointed to a slowing economy in the past month. China’s central bank, in a surprise move, marginally cut key interest rates on Tuesday.

In the U.S. the main equities indices posted gains on Monday, with the tech-heavy Nasdaq Composite the star performer, closing 1.1% higher. This sector has been fueled this year by expectations that the Federal Reserve is nearing the end of its interest rate increases.

Sentiment among global investors improved in August to its least bearish since February 2022, a Bank of America survey showed on Tuesday, with cash allocations falling to 4.8% from 5.3% and the underweight in equities narrowing to the smallest since April 2022.

Retail sales, Home Depot earnings in focus

The is widely expected to pause its rate-hiking cycle in September at its next policy meeting, but there continues to be debate about whether July’s rate increase would be the final one.

The latest U.S. data, for July rose more than expected and could be a factor in the Fed’s next move. The yearly reading was up 3.17% versus expectations for a gain of 1.5%, while the was 0.7% versus expectations for 0.4%. The reading matches the trend of a resilient consumer even in the face of rising rates though the Fed may decide it has more work to do to calm inflation.

There are also earnings reports from a number of top retailers due this week, starting with Home Depot (NYSE:), which beat expectations on profit but posted a dip in same store sales. The report could firm up expectations on consumer spending trends heading into the crucial holiday sales months this fall. Home Depot shares rose 1.9%.

Despite the dip, the home improvement retailer reported a smaller-than-expected decline in quarterly same-store sales, as demand was buoyed by Americans spending on small-scale home-improvement projects amid signs of stabilization in the housing market. It also announced a $15 billion stock buyback plan.

Tesla launches U.S. cheaper versions

Elsewhere, Tesla (NASDAQ:) will be in focus after the electric vehicle manufacturer launched two cheaper versions of its Model S sedan and Model X SUV in the U.S. with shorter driving ranges.

Homebuilders D.R. Horton (NYSE:) and Lennar (NYSE:) both gained premarket after Warren Buffett’s Berkshire Hathaway (NYSE:) revealed new positions in the stocks, while Discover Financial (NYSE:) slumped after the announcement of the resignation of its chief executive.

Crude retreats as China’s economic growth slows

Crude prices fell Tuesday, after weak and data in China showed that growth in the second-largest economy in the world slowed further last month, likely reducing demand for crude.

was down 1% to $81.66 a barrel, while was down 0.7% to $85.64 a barrel. fell 0.5% to $1,934.

China’s unexpectedly cut key policy rates for the second time in three months earlier Tuesday to try and support its struggling economy, but this was deemed insufficient to turn sentiment, especially after Russia’s hiked its key interest rate by 350 basis points to 12%.

Attention will turn to the U.S. market, with the release of inventory data from the industry group later in the session, as a precursor to official inventory data from the U.S. on Wednesday.

(Peter Nurse and Oliver Gray contributed to this item.)

Read the full article here

Trending