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Why does the stock market matter? CNBC report December 9, 2021 ... U.S. futures point to lower open following three days of gains

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Original article: https://www.cnbc.com/2021/12/08/stock-market-futures-open-to-close-news.html
Burgess COMMENTARY
The news media pays a lot of attention to movements of the stock market. The question is why ... and does it really matter?
Peter Burgess
MARKETS ... Stocks are lower as investors digest this week’s rally, Dow falls 100 points

https://www.cnbc.com/video/2021/12/09/us-futures-point-to-lower-open-following-three-days-of-gains.html

PUBLISHED WED, DEC 8 20216:03 PM EST

Pippa Stevens @PIPPASTEVENS13

U.S. futures point to lower open following three days of gains

U.S. stocks dipped on Thursday, after the major averages posted a third straight day of gains as traders bet that the omicron variant’s economic impacts won’t be as severe as initially thought.

The Dow Jones Industrial Average slid 148 points, or 0.4%. The S&P 500 and Nasdaq Composite each fell 0.3%.

Stocks were set to give back some of their gains in recent days, with the moves higher spurred by the belief that the omicron variant of Covid looks less severe than earlier forms.

Several travel-related stocks, which led the market higher throughout the week, were lower Thursday morning. Shares of Carnival fell 2%, although both stocks are still outperforming for the week. Casino stocks Wynn Resorts and Las Vegas Sands fell 1%. United and Delta Airlines were 1% lower too.

Separately, shares of Rent The Runway tumbled by 12% after reporting swelling losses and lower than pre-pandemic subscriber growth for its most recent quarter. Electric vehicle maker Lucid saw shares fall 4% premarket after announcing a $1.75 billion offering of convertible senior notes.

Still, there were some positive morning moves as well. CVS gained 2% after it issued upbeat guidance ahead of its Investor Day. Home retailer RH soared about 10% after it reported blowout earnings and lifted the low end of its revenue outlook.

The moves come a day ahead of important inflation news as the Labor Department on Friday releases the consumer price index for November. Economists surveyed by Dow Jones expect the year-over-year growth rate to be 6.7%. If that is the case, it will mark the biggest move since June 1982.

Federal Reserve officials are expected to react to the burst in inflation by announcing next week that it will begin pulling back on its economic aid.

The first step will be accelerating the reduction in the central bank’s monthly bond purchases, with markets expecting the Fed to double the taper to $30 billion. That in turn could pave the way for interest rate hikes as soon as the spring of 2022 and mark the latest Fed policy pivot under Chairman Jerome Powell.

On Thursday the Labor Department reported initial claims for unemployment insurance totaled 184,000, compared to the 211,000 estimated by economists surveyed by Dow Jones.

During regular trading Wednesday, the Dow and S&P 500 advanced 0.1% and 0.3%, respectively, with each registering a third straight day of gains. The S&P’s gain over the last three days is the strongest of the year, according to MKM Partners.

The Nasdaq Composite advanced 0.64%, also registering a third day of gains. Apple had the most positive impact on the index, while Nvidia was the biggest drag.

Equities got a boost after Pfizer and BioNTech said Wednesday morning that a booster dose of their vaccine provides a high level of protection against the new omicron variant.

“The range of possibilities is still wide, but in the bigger picture, we think the odds are still very much in favor of the pandemic phase winding down,” Bank of America wrote in a note to clients following the announcement. “In our view, COVID is here to stay, but a shift to the endemic phase is approaching where infections are common but severe outcomes / lockdowns / travel restrictions are not,” the firm added.

With Wednesday’s gain, the S&P 500 is now just 0.9% below its all-time intraday high from Nov. 22.

Ed Moya, senior market analyst with Oanda, said that the market is in a wait-and-see mode ahead of Friday’s inflation report, which could “fuel further Fed rate hike bets.” Economists are expecting the report to show that prices rose 0.7% in November month-over-month, according to estimates from Dow Jones.

“While growth and labor markets have provided reasons to be optimistic about the economy, inflation is also running hot and sits at a 30-year high,” UBS wrote in a recent note to clients. “With the omicron variant entering the picture, investors are now questioning what monetary policy will look like going forward. The pandemic has already greatly increased the uncertainty over the economic outlook,” the firm added, noting that its base case is that the Fed will be patient.

There are some notable earnings reports on Thursday, including from Oracle, Broadcom and Lululemon, all of which report after the market closes.
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