NEW YORK, Nov 14 (Reuters) - Wall Street's main indexes
sank on Friday, weighed down by technology stocks, while Federal
Reserve officials cast doubt on a potential interest rate cut in
December.
Concerns about stretched AI stock valuations have triggered
declines in recent weeks, putting the Nasdaq on course for its
longest losing streak since April.
The Dow Jones Industrial Average fell about 0.6% in
morning trading in New York. The FTSE 100 slid more than 1%.
Expectations for a 25-point rate cut in December fell to 53%
from last week's 67%, according to CME Group's FedWatch tool,
after policy makers expressed reticence on more monetary easing.
QUOTES:
SEEMA SHAH, CHIEF GLOBAL STRATEGIST, PRINCIPAL GLOBAL
INVESTORS, LONDON:
"Markets are getting a view that the labour market is
slowing down. But because the Fed doesn't have enough confidence
in the alternate data, they would rather still hold.
"So you have markets that are concerned about the growth
outlook. If the data is correct in the way it seems to be
trending, the economy does require rate cuts.
"This is where, for the first time, the government shutdown
really does have a sustained impact on the economy.
"So, we just have to see if that data is going to come
through. It always makes sense for the Fed to step in ahead of
time rather than waiting for the (unemployment) numbers to start
moving higher.
"The lack of a Fed cut in December would be quite negative.
And we would expect that the market would continue to respond
quite negatively until we get an indication that a Fed rate cut
is coming.
"We are overall overweight in equities and we're still
overweight U.S. equities."
BILL FITZPATRICK, MANAGING DIRECTOR AND PORTFOLIO MANAGER AT
LOGAN CAPITAL MANAGEMENT, CHICAGO:
"There's a bit of a natural unwind in that valuations were a
bit lofty in some of the big tech names, and you had a few large
investors lightening up on their positions. I think it just
speaks to the point that the starting point does matter and
these are terrific companies, their stock price has performed
very well and to get a bit of a rotation is not too surprising.
"The hope is that instead of a bubble mentality, we just get
a broadening-out of some of the leadership. Some of the more
stable sectors that have not participated the last couple of
years are starting to gain more recognition and perhaps we'll
see some more stable sectors do well.
"Investors should be continuing to diversify their portfolio
away from the one sector that has been driving the bus for so
long. The message is to continue to diversify broadening-out the
leadership. The timing of this sell-off or unwind is going to be
too difficult to gauge."
MATTHEW PALLAI, CHIEF INVESTMENT OFFICER AT NOMURA CAPITAL
MANAGEMENT, NEW YORK:
"I don't think this is a bubble, so to speak, either in
credit or on the equity side. However, I do think there is a
significant amount of liquidity that has been out there in the
market and that is driving both.
"It has driven credit spreads to fairly tight levels in
several but not all credit markets, and some widening is
probably healthy for the market at the moment, given the fact
that in the macro backdrop there's more uncertainty now around
things like unemployment and tariffs and geopolitics.
"On the equity side... markets have done well for a fairly
long period of time now, and people are willing to buy the dip,
and if that continues to happen over and over again we can get
to levels that are pretty steamy. I think it's healthy to have
some correction from those levels, especially if it's on the
backdrop of more uncertainty in the macro environment."