U.S. equities traded sharply lower Monday as investors weighed a possible Federal Reserve rate hike in December.
"It's a pretty light week [in terms of data]," said Randy Frederick, managing director of trading and derivatives at Charles Schwab. "Aside from that, it's going to be a continuation of this conversation about a December rate hike."
The odds of the Fed raising
rates for the first time in about a decade rose dramatically after the
October nonfarm payrolls report — released Friday — showed the U.S.
economy added 271,000 jobs.
According to the CME Group, the probability of a December rate hike rose from about 58 percent to about 70 percent.
U.S. stocks opened lower and soon proceeded to extend losses, with the
Dow Jones industrial average falling over 200 points in late-morning
trading. The blue chips index also fell back into negative territory for
the year as IBM (IBM) contributed most of the losses.
The S&P 500 dropped over 1 percent in late-morning trading as consumer discretionary fell over 1.5 percent.
"The market giving back here is a reflection of weak growth," said Nick Riach, CEO of The Earnings Scout.
Overnight, China said October exports fell 6.9 percent from a year
ago, while imports dropped 18.8 percent, both missing expectations.
The major indexes posted a six-week winning streak on Friday, gaining at least 1 percent.
"We're coming off a very good week and the narrative has certainly
changed in terms of monetary policy," said Art Hogan, chief market
strategist at Wunderlich Securities. "We've been too low for too long,
and I think the path toward normalization starts in December."
The jobs report also sent U.S. Treasury yields and the dollar surging.
"The market is going to focus on a number of factors [including] the
narrowing of the yield curve, which suggests the Fed is gearing up for a
rate hike," said Peter Cardillo, chief market economist at Rockwell
Global Capital.
Benchmark 10-year yields held at 2.36 percent while two-year yields traded at 0.89 percent.
The dollar gained over 1 percent against a basket of currencies on the jobs report but traded near the flatline Monday.
"Parity with the euro is on sight," Cardillo said, adding that it will not be a problem for the market.
"Everyone should keep an eye on the [dollar index]," Raich said. "If
that keeps rising, you know what it will do to corporate earnings."
There are no major economic data points due Monday, but Friday will feature October retail sales.
However, "the pivotal decision
will be in the November jobs report, which we won't get for another
four weeks," Frederick said.
"We're back at [about] $45 on
WTI; that's constructive," Hogan said. "If you look at the correlation
between oil and S&P 500, it's been very tight over the past three
months."
U.S. oil (New York Mercantile Exchange: @CL.1) slipped 38 cents, or about 0.86 percent, to $43.91 per barrel.
European equities traded lower on weak Chinese export data.
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