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Closing Market Report

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Inflation concerns
bring down stocks


NEW YORK >> Investors' growing dread of higher interest rates sent stocks sliding sharply yesterday, with a solid retail sales report and expectations of higher inflation providing the latest catalyst for a selloff.

The Commerce Department's latest retail sales figures showed a larger-than-expected increase in sales, indicating consumers' hunger for a wide variety of goods. While the data was evidence of an economy on sound footing, it also fed concerns that pent-up demand could drive prices higher.

Should economic reports over the next couple of weeks continue on this track -- particularly a key gauge of inflation due out today -- the Federal Reserve may feel the need to raise interest rates by a half percentage point at the end of the month, instead of the quarter point Wall Street has been expecting.

"The benign pace of rates the market has discounted may not be the case now," said Russ Koesterich, U.S. equity strategist at State Street Corp. "That doesn't really make stocks look attractive. There's no real reason to go out and sell everything you own, but no real catalyst to buy, either."

The Dow Jones industrial average sagged 75.37, or 0.7 percent, to 10,334.73.

Broader stock indicators were also lower. The Standard & Poor's 500 index was down 11.18, or 1 percent, at 1,125.29. The Nasdaq composite dropped 29.88, or 1.5 percent, to 1,969.99.

The Treasury's two-year note fell 732 to 99632, with its yield rising 12 basis points to 2.93 percent. The 10-year note lost 1732 to 99 2/32, with its yield gaining 7 basis points to 4.87 percent.

Financial stocks were hit the hardest, along with technology shares and other companies dependent on ready capital, which would become more expensive as rates go higher.

Retail sales were up 1.2 percent in May, 0.2 percent higher than expected, the Commerce Department said. Automotive sales rose a strong 2.7 percent, the biggest gain since November, while all other goods were up 0.7 percent for the month. In contrast, April's retail sales fell 0.6 percent.

Consumers also want foreign-made goods. The U.S. trade deficit rose to a record $48.3 billion in April, up 3.8 percent from March's previous all-time high, the Commerce Department said in a separate report. Higher oil prices contributed to the new record, as well as a drop in U.S. exports.

Investors worried that these figures might be a precursor to a jump in today's Consumer Price Index report, a key measure of inflation closely watched by investors.

"My suspicion is that the market is nervous ahead of that CPI report, since it could give the Fed increased opportunity to raise interest rates," said Brian Bush, director of equity research at Stephens Inc. "With the Fed promising to be more aggressive on inflation, it suggests that the Fed is now looking for a reason, almost."


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