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Stocks took it on the chin for the 2nd time this week.
Recall that on Tuesday, the S&P index fell by -1.17%, rebounded by 0.37% on Tuesday, but declined by another -1.02% today.
For the tech heavy NASDAQ index, it fell by 2.04% on Tuesday rebounded by 0.65% yesterday but fell another -1.76% today.
Some big losers today included Palantir which is now down -15.51% since announcing earnings earlier this week. Meta fell another -2.67% and is now down -17.78% since it’s earnings last week. Nvidia fellows 3.65% and is down -11% from Monday’s high. AMD shares fell -7.27% today.
Things could have been worse.
Celsius −26.57%
DoorDash −17.48%
Robinhood Markets −10.81%
Tapestry −9.54%
SoFi Technologies −9.49%
U.S. employers announced 153,074 job cuts in October, marking a sharp rise from a year earlier and bringing total layoffs for 2025 to more than one million. The surge was driven largely by cost-cutting measures, automation initiatives tied to artificial intelligence, and a slowdown in demand across several sectors. Companies are continuing to adjust payrolls to preserve margins amid higher financing costs and economic uncertainty. The report reflects growing caution in the labor market, with layoff levels approaching those typically seen in the early stages of economic downturns.
Fed commentary – apart from the Fed dove Miran – was more worrisome on inflation.
First for the dove Miran:
The other Fed officials were not has dovish:
At the start of the NA, the Bank of England held its Bank Rate at 4.00% in a tight 5–4 vote, with Breeden, Ramsden, Dhingra, and Taylor favoring a 25 bps rate cut. The Committee noted that CPI inflation has peaked and that underlying disinflation is progressing, supported by a still restrictive policy stance. However, the balance of risks has shifted, with less concern about persistent inflation and greater attention to weaker demand pressures. The BOE said that as rates begin to fall, the degree of restrictiveness will lessen, and any further reductions will depend on how inflation evolves. Most members acknowledged that domestic inflationary pressures may be easing faster than expected, though Greene, Lombardelli, Mann, and Pill argued for maintaining tight policy due to risks of inflation persistence. Governor Bailey described the outlook as more balanced but preferred to wait for further evidence before cutting. The dissenters viewed policy as overly restrictive and warned that elevated household savings could curb consumption. With the vote finely split and Bailey pivotal, the groundwork for a December cut is in place, though the autumn budget could heavily influence the BOE’s next move. Despite the more dovish stance, the GBP rose by 0.67% vs the greenback.
Overall, the dollar was mixed with the greenback falling vs the EUR (-0.47%), JPY (-0.67%), GBP (-0.65%) and the CHF (-0.51%), but rising vs the commodity currencies with risk off sentiment. The USD was higher vs the CAD (0.07%), the AUD (0.40%) and the NZD (0.51%).
IN the US debt market, yields fell with the 10 year falling by 7 bps to 4.087%. The 2 year fell by -7.3 basis points to 3.559% and the 30 year fell by -5.7 basis points to 4.679%.
The US government shutdown continues with the airports Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy saying that traffic at 40 major airports would be reduced by as much as 10% as a safety measure. Air-traffic controllers and airport security agents aren’t being paid in the shutdown, which federal officials said has led to stretched staffing, flight delays and long security lines. IN Houston there were reports of TSA lines of 3 hours..
This article was written by Greg Michalowski at investinglive.com.
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