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Dow briefly tumbles more than 600 points as surging prices rattle the market

US stocks sold off Tuesday and the Dow briefly tumbled more than 600 points around mid-morning, as investors grow increasingly concerned about raw material price spikes, shortages and inflation.

Prices are rising all over the place as commodities, shipping costs and more related categories become more expensive.

“Although we are coming off a record earnings season, continued supply chain and labor shortages are adding to potential inflationary pressures,” said Ryan Detrick, Chief Market Strategist for LPL Financial.

Even though the shortages and global supply issues have been lurking in plain sight for months, these worries are really weighing on stocks Tuesday.

The price jumps affect broader measures of inflation, which in turn could force the Federal Reserve to change its monetary policy stance sooner than expected. For now, the central bank’s interest rates are ultra-low and it buys billions of dollars worth of assets every month. But eventually that will change, and a prolonged increase in inflation could bring about that shift.

So far, Fed Chairman Jerome Powell has been steadfast in his view that it’s too early to talk about policy changes as both labor market improvements and higher inflation over the medium term would have to happen first.

After all, the employment situation is improving slowly but surely. Tuesday data shows March job openings rose to 8.1 million, the highest number recorded since the government started tracking that metric in December 2000.

Yet investors are still worried, and tech stocks are being hit hardest by the inflation fears.

The Dow, too, slipped 1.3%, or 430 points at midday after slipping as many as 667 points earlier in the session.

The Nasdaq Composite traded down 0.3%, recouping some of its earlier losses. The broader S&P 500 also fell 0.9%, also down from its lows..

The weakness isn’t confined to the stock market, either.

“The US dollar is trading defensively, alongside weaker stocks and declining major bond markets as investors appear to be in ‘sell (almost) everything’ mode ahead of tomorrow’s US CPI [consumer price] figures,” wrote Scotiabank analysts Shaun Osborne and Juan Manuel Herrera in a note to clients.

US inflation figures for March are due Wednesday morning.

The 10-year US Treasury bond yield, which is a proxy for interest rate expectations, was flat at 1.61%. Meanwhile, the ICE US dollar index was 0.2% lower at midday.

In the commodities world, US oil prices fell earlier in the day but rose 0.1% to $64.97 around midday. Oil prices are increasing following the Colonial pipeline hack over the weekend. Gold prices are down 0.3% at $1,831 an ounce.

Article Topic Follows: Biz/Tech

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