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Wall St closes down as bank rating cuts trigger broader sell-off.

Wall Street Benchmarks Finish Lower ​Amid Credit Rating ⁤Downgrades

By David⁤ French

(Reuters) – All three⁢ major Wall Street ‍benchmarks finished lower on Tuesday in a broad sell-off after‌ the ‌downgrading‍ of several lenders by⁤ credit rating agency⁢ Moody’s reignited fears ​about ⁤the health of U.S. banks and the economy.

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After a five-month rally ​pushed the benchmark S&P ⁤500 and‍ Nasdaq Composite within 5% of ‍their lifetime highs, August has now ​recorded five losing ⁣sessions ⁣out of six. The S&P is down 2%​ this ⁤month, with⁢ the Nasdaq dropping 3.2%.

Tuesday’s decline was triggered ⁢after the agency cut​ ratings on 10 small- to mid-sized​ lenders by​ one notch and placed six ⁤banking giants, ‌including Bank of New⁤ York Mellon, U.S. Bancorp, State Street and Truist Financial, on review ‌for potential downgrades.

Moody’s also warned that⁢ the⁣ sector’s credit strength would likely be tested⁣ by funding risks and weaker profitability.

Market confidence in U.S. banks has‍ been gradually returning after ⁣the ‌failures of three lenders‌ earlier this year, including Silicon​ Valley ⁢Bank, shocked the financial system.

The S&P 500 Banks⁢ index has slipped​ 2.5% year to date, compared with a⁣ 17.2% gain by ⁤the S&P 500, and the downgrades exposed the fragility of investors’ confidence towards financial ⁢stocks.

The banks index slid 1.1% on Tuesday, while the KBW Regional Banking index dipped ⁣1.4%.

Big banks ⁤Goldman Sachs and Bank of‌ America each eased around 1.9%,⁢ while Bank of New York⁣ Mellon⁢ dropped 1.3% and Truist fell ‍0.6%.

Jason Pride,⁣ chief of investment strategy and research at Glenmede, ‌noted that Moody’s downgrades, ‍as well as the notice given to larger banks about possible future action, were a ​public statement about the agency’s concerns for ‌the health of⁣ the banking ⁣system, and how it affects ‌the wider economy.

“I think it’s a⁤ big deal in the bigger ‌picture of how the‍ economy operates, because regional banks’ lending is one ‌of⁤ the main lubricants of the economy,” he said.

“If it slows down, the engine just ​doesn’t work ‍as⁣ well.”

Reaction to the bank downgrades pushed up the CBOE Market⁤ Volatility index, Wall Street’s fear gauge, at​ one point hitting a two-month high.

The Dow Jones Industrial Average fell 158.64 points, or 0.45%, to 35,314.49, the S&P 500 lost​ 19.06 ​points, or 0.42%,⁣ at 4,499.38 and the Nasdaq⁤ Composite dropped 110.07 points, or 0.79%, to ‍13,884.32.

Eight​ of the 11 ​major S&P 500 sectors fell. While financials was, understandably, one of the biggest decliners, materials and consumer ​discretionary also weighed heavily.

The energy index ⁤overcame an initial⁤ slump, ⁣caused⁣ by disappointing trade ⁢data from top-consumer China weighing on crude prices, to trade 0.5% higher. It​ rebounded​ along with oil prices after⁣ a U.S.⁣ government agency projected a ‌rosier economic outlook. [O/R]

Healthcare shares also‍ advanced, ‌supported by Eli Lilly jumping⁤ 14.9% to a record‌ close on news of its upbeat quarterly profits.

Drugmakers globally rose ‌after Denmark-based Novo Nordisk​ said its obesity drug, Wegovy, reduced the risk of⁢ heart disease.

Dish Network jumped 9.6% as the pay-TV provider disclosed⁢ plans to merge ⁣with satellite ⁣communications vendor EchoStar, which also rose 1%.

United Parcel Service slipped 0.9% after the U.S. economy bellwether cut its annual revenue forecast.

Volume on ‍U.S.⁣ exchanges was 10.94 billion shares, in line with the average over the last ⁢20 trading days.

The S&P 500 posted 13 ‍new 52-week highs and 17 new lows; ⁤the ⁢Nasdaq Composite recorded 46 new highs and 195 new lows.

⁢(Reporting by Bansari Mayur Kamdar and Johann M Cherian in Bengaluru and David French​ in New York; Editing by Sriraj Kalluvila, Vinay Dwivedi and ⁣Richard Chang)

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