US Stocks Slip as Rate Pressure Rises

NEW YORK (AP) -- U.S. stock indexes are slipping in early trading on Tuesday as another swell higher for Treasury yields adds pressure on big technology stocks.

The S&P 500 was 0.4% lower after the first 15 minutes of trading, a day after dipping from its record. The Dow Jones Industrial Average fell 60 points from its all-time high set a day before, or 0.2%, to 33,110, The Nasdaq composite was lagging, with a 0.9% drop, hurt by its heavier concentration of tech stocks.

The spotlight was again on the bond market, where the yield on the 10-year Treasury rose to 1.74% from 1.72% late Monday. It has jumped from roughly 0.90% at the start of the year with rising expectations for coming economic growth and possibly inflation. President Joe Biden is set to unveil details Wednesday about plans to spend what could be more than $3 trillion on infrastructure and other measures to help the economy and environment.

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When bonds pay more in interest, they can make investors less willing to pay high prices for stocks, particularly those seen as the most expensive. Companies that ask their investors to wait years for big profit growth to come to fruition are also hard hit, which has many big technology stocks feeling the most pain from rising rates.

Stocks of software companies and semiconductor companies fell to some of the morning's sharpest losses, including a 2.5% drop for Paycom, a 2.9% fall for Citrix Systems and a 2.8% fall for Broadcom. Tech giants also fell, including drops of more than 1.3% for Apple and Microsoft. They were some of the biggest winners earlier in the pandemic, rallying on expectations that they can grow in the future, regardless of whether the economy is locked down by a virus.

Despite the pressure on big tech stocks, most professional investors remain optimistic that the broader market can keep rising. A stronger economy thanks to COVID-19 vaccinations and massive spending by the U.S. government should help boost profits for many companies this year, particularly those like banks, energy producers and airlines.

Roughly 40% of the stocks in the S&P 500 were rising, and the smaller stocks in the Russell 2000 were holding up better than the S&P 500, whose movements are dominated by a handful of Big Tech companies. The Russell 2000 was down 0.1%.

Financial stocks were rallying, in part because higher longer-term interest rates help mean bigger profits from making loans.

Big financial stocks also climbed as investors see losses for the industry due to soured trades for a big U.S. hedge fund last week staying isolated to a few players, rather than cascading through the financial system. Japanese bank Nomura and Swiss bank Credit Suisse said Monday that they're facing potentially significant losses because of their dealings with a major client. Nomura estimated the claim against its client could be about $2 billion.

Comerica gained 3.5% Goldman Sachs rose 2.3% and Morgan Stanley gained 2.3%.

Stock markets around the world were mostly stronger. In Europe, Germany's DAX returned 0.7%, and France's CAC 40 rose 0.6%. The FTSE 100 in London was virtually flat.

In Asia, South Korea's Kospi rose 1.1%, Japan's Nikkei 225 added 0.2% and Hong Kong's Hang Seng gained 0.8%. Stocks in Shanghai rose 0.6%.

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