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Stocks Pare Losses; Sovereign Debt Yields Rise: Markets Wrap

Published 2019-09-09, 03:23 p/m
Stocks Pare Losses; Sovereign Debt Yields Rise: Markets Wrap

(Bloomberg) -- U.S. stocks were mixed as investors ditched the companies behind the latest risk-on rally, while sovereign bond yields rose in Europe and America.

High-flying health-care shares led declines Monday, as some on Wall Street including Goldman’s Asad Haider sounded the alarm to a “potential onslaught of drug pricing headlines in the coming weeks following Congress’s August recess.” Megacap tech names also retreated. Stocks coveted for their high dividend yields, including real-estate and utility names, retreated as the 10-year rate topped 1.6%.

“The fact that we’ve had a bit of a reversal in the Treasury market has scared some of the momentum players,” said Charlie Smith, founding partner and chief investment officer at Fort Pitt Capital Group in Pittsburgh.

German bunds led the drop in sovereign debt, with yields on longer-dated notes climbing more than shorter-dated securities, as traders pared back expectations that the European Central Bank will unveil a big stimulus package this week. Rates on longer-dated Treasury notes climbed more than those on shorter-dated securities, reversing an inversion in the yield curve.

Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin said earlier that the U.S. and China have made “lots of progress” on trade talks.

“Trade sentiment is driving the market movements on the margin up and down,” Aaron Clark, portfolio manager at GW&K Investment Management, said by phone. “The commentary that we’ve heard over the past week or so, clearly markets have taken note of that and already priced some of that in.”

Elsewhere, oil advanced after Saudi Arabia’s new energy minister signaled that OPEC and its allies will continue with production cuts, as the group prepares to gather in Abu Dhabi. A benchmark for emerging-market shares climbed for a fourth straight session, putting it on track for the highest close in five weeks.

Here are some key events coming up this week:

  • OPEC’s monthly oil market report, which includes demand forecasts and production estimates, is due Wednesday.
  • The ECB policy meeting Thursday is widely expected to see a cut to interest rates and a review of all options, including QE. Policy makers will also publish forecasts for growth and inflation. ECB President Mario Draghi will hold a press conference.
These are the main moves in markets:

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