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Dow falls 150 points, as Powell says hikes at consecutive meetings are possible

U.S. stocks opened lower on Wednesday, led by the technology sector after a report that Washington will issue a new ban on exports of AI related products to China, while investors were also monitoring comments by Federal Reserve Chair Powell at an ECB conference in Portugal.

How are stocks trading

  • The Dow Jones Industrial Average
    DJIA,
    -0.42%
    lost 108 points, or 0.3% to 33,815

  • The S&P 500
    SPX,
    -0.11%
    dipped 13.8 points, or 0.3% to 4,365

  • The Nasdaq Composite
    COMP,
    +0.17%
    fell 32 points, or 0.2% to 13,523

On Tuesday, the Dow Jones Industrial Average rose 212 points, or 0.63%, to 33927, the S&P 500 increased 50 points, or 1.15%, to 4378, and the Nasdaq Composite gained 220 points, or 1.65%, to 13556.

What’s driving markets

Nasdaq futures were leading early declines following a report that the Biden administration is considering a new ban on sales of AI chips to China.

The dip in the tech-heavy index dented the latest rally, which came after traders on Tuesday welcomed some upbeat U.S. data on durable-goods orders, home sales, and consumer confidence, analysts noted.

“The rebound has been clipped a bit overnight” after the AI chip ban report, said Jim Reid, strategist at Deutsche Bank.

“Nvidia, which makes 20% of its revenues in China, has produced lower-end chips that don’t require an external export licence. However, the article suggests that even these may be included going forward. Nvidia and AMD are both down over 3% after hours, with China AI-related stocks slumping more,” Reid added.

Nvidia
NVDA,
-1.07%
stock was down 1.9% Wednesday, and Advanced Micro Devices
AMD,
+0.07%,
another AI chip maker, dropped 1.3%.

In U.S. economic data, the trade deficit in goods narrowed 6% in May due to lower oil prices and less demand among consumers for imports, perhaps a sign of a softer U.S. economy. The trade gap in goods declined to $91.1 billion from a six-month high of $97.1 billion in April, the Census Bureau said. U.S. advanced retail inventories in May jumped 0.8%, while U.S. advanced wholesale inventories in May drop 0.1%.

Traders were also will be keeping an eye on Sintra in Portugal, where the European Central Bank is holding its annual forum on central banking, including at 2:30 p.m. BST (9:30 a.m. Eastern time) a panel containing Jay Powell, the Federal Reserve chair, alongside the heads of the U.K., eurozone and Japan central banks.

Investors remain wary of the prospects for higher borrowing costs as monetary guardians continue to battle stubborn inflationary pressures, so any comments on that topic, particularly from Powell, may color the market’s mood.

However, Mark Newton, head of technical strategy at Fundstrat reckons recent market action portends further gains.

“Tuesday’s rally back to multi-day highs looked important and positive in having halted the recent decline in its tracks. Following five days lower out of the past six, SPX [S&P 500] managed to rally sharply enough to recoup nearly 50% of the entire pullback since mid-June highs,” wrote Newton in a note.

“As discussed in recent days, the lack of severe downside breadth on recent weakness was thought to be encouraging, and a few days of large-cap technology weakness largely camouflaged market performance, as many sectors performed quite well throughout last week. Going forward, I view Tuesday’s strong gains as having been constructive, and should lift SPX back to test and exceed mid-June highs, which could help prices surpass SPX-4500,” Newton added.

Companies in focus

  • General Mills
    GIS,
    -4.71%Inc.’s
    stock slid 4.9% Wednesday, after the parent of brands including Cheerios, Nature Valley, Blue Buffalo pet products and Pillsbury, posted a steep decline in profit and weaker-than-expected sales for its fiscal fourth quarter.

  • Shares of Mullen Automotive Inc.
    MULN,
    -15.64%
    sank 15% Wednesday. The continued selloff comes even after the company said Tuesday that it received an additional $100 million in funding from certain investors, which leaves the company with more than $235 million in cash and cash equivalents on its balance sheet. 

  • Roivant Sciences Ltd. 
    ROIV,
    +3.54%
    shares went up 1.9% after the company said Wednesday it had a net loss of $33.6 million, or 20 cents a share, for its fiscal fourth quarter to March 31, narrower than the loss of $270.1 million, o4 39 cent a share, in the year-earlier period.

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