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Stocks Rebound From 2022 Low, Dow Closes Up More Than 500 Points and Snaps Six-Day Losing Streak

Spencer Platt | Getty Images

The Dow Jones Industrial Average mounted a big comeback from its 2022 low as the Bank of England said it would buy bonds to stabilize its financial markets, a stunning reversal in the monetary tightening policies implemented this year by most central banks to stifle inflation.

The move stabilized the British pound, which became the center of attention in markets this week as it tumbled to a record low against the U.S. dollar. U.S. Treasury yields retreated from their highest levels in more than a decade, easing concerns that higher rates were choking the economy.

The Dow jumped 548.75 points, or 1.88%, to 29,683.74. The S&P 500 rose 1.97% to 3,719.04, one day after notching a new bear market low. The Nasdaq Composite was up 2.05%, ending the session at 11,051.64.

The Dow and the S&P 500 snapped a six-day losing streak. The Dow is now 19.7% off its 52-week high, while the S&P 500 is 22.8% below its record. The Nasdaq is down 31.8%.

The Bank of England said it would temporarily purchase long-dated UK government bonds in an effort to stabilize its plunging currency. Sterling recovered and was last trading roughly 1.4% higher against the dollar at $1.0881.

The 10-year U.S. Treasury yield ended the day at about 3.7% after earlier breaking above 4% for the first time since 2008.

The rally was broad-based. One notable outlier was Apple which was down about 1.3% after a Bloomberg report, citing people familiar with the matter, said the tech company is ditching plans to increase new iPhone production after demand fell short of expectations.

Some on Wall Street are worried that investors have not priced in an earnings slowdown and the impact of the Federal Reserve's rate hikes. The S&P 500 breaking below its previous low is a key indicator for some that stocks still have further to fall.

"Our central case is a hard landing by the end of '23," Druckenmiller said at CNBC's Delivering Alpha Investor Summit in New York City Wednesday. "I will be stunned if we don't have recession in '23. I don't know the timing but certainly by the end of '23. I will not be surprised if it's not larger than the so-called average garden variety."

Lea la cobertura del mercado de hoy en español aquí.

Home Depot, Boeing lead Dow higher

All but one of the 30 Dow stocks are now in positive territory as the market average is up 600 points on the day.

Home Depot is the best performer in the Dow, up more than 5%. Construction stocks could be a beneficiary of national disasters, like the hurricane that hit Florida on Wednesday.

Other top performers include Boeing, up 4.8%, and Disney, up 3.8%.

The lone decliner is Apple, down 1.3%.

—Jesse Pound

Stocks making the biggest moves midday

These companies are making headlines in midday trading.

  • Apple — Apple shares fell 3.4% on Wednesday following a report that the company is ditching plans to boost new iPhone production. Instead of aiming to increase output by 6 million units in the second half of the year as it had planned, it will shoot for 90 million units, unchanged from the prior year, according to Bloomberg.
  • Biogen — Shares of the biopharmaceutical company soared 37% following upbeat results from its experimental Alzheimer's drug study and a slew of upgrades from analysts. Biogen and its Japanese partner Eisai said the drug reduced cognitive decline by 27% and slowed the progression of the disease.
  • Broadridge — Spruce Point Capital Management issued report containing a strong sell opinion, saying it sees as much as 75% downside risk.

Check out more midday movers here.

— Tanaya Macheel

10-year Treasury yield drops the most since 2020

The yield on the benchmark 10-year Treasury note dropped the most since 2020 on Wednesday, despite briefly topping 4% earlier in the session, after the Bank of England announced a bond-buying plan to stabilize the British pound.

The 10-year Treasury yield last dropped 23 basis points to 3.733%, or the most it's dropped since 2020.

It hit a high of about 4.019%, a key level that was the highest since October 2008, earlier in the day before erasing those gains.

Yields and prices move in opposite directions. One basis point is equal to 0.01%.

— Sarah Min

Stocks hit session highs midday as British pound rises

Stocks hit session highs in midday trading, with the Dow Jones Industrial Average up more than 400 basis points, as the British pound recovered.

The British pound reached a session high of $1.0875 against the dollar, up about 1%, around noontime Wednesday after falling to as much as $1.0541 earlier in the session.

Those moves come after the Bank of England said it would buy long-dated bonds as a temporary measure to stabilize the currency.

— Sarah Min

Investors should buy stocks now, not wait for market bottom, Rubenstein says

Investors shouldn't be afraid of snapping up stocks trading at a discount now, even if the market may have a bit further to fall, David Rubenstein said during CNBC's Delivering Alpha Investor Summit Wednesday.

That's because stocks are much closer to the bottom than they are to the top, The Carlyle Group co-founder said.

"It's a fools' errand to find the bottom in the market or the top in the market," he said. "Trying to wait to the absolute bottom is probably a mistake, in my view."

Read more here.

—Carmen Reinicke

There are investing opportunities everywhere right now, says JPMorgan's Erdoes

Staying invested in this turbulent market means finding the right opportunities.

"There is alpha everywhere," Mary Callahan Erdoes, JPMorgan Asset & Wealth Management CEO, said at CNBC's Delivering Alpha Investor Summit in New York City Wednesday. "It's in stocks. It's in bonds. It's in currencies. It's in real estate. It's in private markets. It's in public markets. It's everywhere, because we are in such a state of change."

Erdoes likes U.K. banks, saying they might be "the most interesting thing you can invest in."

"Last week people said don't invest in a single thing in the U.K. That is exactly when people like us, and people in the room, think, 'Let's go look right there,‴⁣ she said.

To read more of her investing ideas from the Delivering Alpha Summit, as well as those of her fellow panelists, click here.

— Michelle Fox

Market can't count on short-covering help, Strategas says

While the stock market attempts to rally after a dramatic sell-off, it is unlikely to get significant help from hedge funds covering their short positions, according to Strategas.

When stocks fall dramatically, there can sometimes be short-term relief as big funds that bet against the stock close out those positions, creating a short-term buying bump. But strategist Chris Verrone said in a note to clients on Wednesday that the market's biggest stocks do not have much short interest, limiting the benefit of any short covering.

"We were asked by a client yesterday if a 'short covering rally' was likely from here – the market is certainly very short-term oversold, but there's really not much short interest among the high profile names (MSFT 0.6% of float, AMZN 0.9%, PG 0.6%, HD 0.9%, MA 0.5%, etc.)," the Strategas note said.

Other notable stocks with short interest below 1% include Apple, Berkshire Hathaway, UnitedHealth Group, Exxon Mobil and Coca-Cola, according to Strategas.

— Jesse Pound, Michael Bloom

Eli Lilly notches all-time high, 33 S&P 500 stocks hit fresh lows

At least 33 stocks notched fresh lows in early morning trading on Wednesday while shares of Eli Lilly traded near all-time highs dating back to 1952.

Here are some of the names that hit fresh lows:

  • Paramount trading at lows not seen since May 2020
  • Warner Bros. Discovery trading at lows not seen since July 2009
  • Caesars Entertainment trading at lows not seen since August 2020
  • Domino's Pizza trading at lows not seen since April 2020
  • Hasbro trading at lows not seen since May 2020
  • YUM Brands trading at lows not seen since March 2021
  • Church & Dwight trading at lows not seen since June 2020
  • Kraft Heinz trading at lows not seen since February 2021
  • Kimberly-Clark trading at lows not seen since March 2020
  • Mondelez trading at lows not seen since March 2021
  • McCormick trading at lows not seen since April 2020
  • Altria trading at lows not seen since February 2021
  • Tyson Foods trading at levels not seen since February 2021
  • Walgreens Boots Alliance trading at lows not seen since November 2012
  • Abbott Labs trading at lows not seen since July 2020
  • Organon trading at all-time lows back to its spin-off from Merck in June 2021
  • Intel Corporation trading at lows not seen since August 2015
  • MasterCard trading at lows not seen since October 2020
  • Qualcomm trading at lows not seen since October 2020
  • Digital Realty Trust trading at lows not seen since December 2016
  • Visa trading at lows not seen since May 2020

— Chris Hayes, Samantha Subin

Apple slump on iPhone news is a buying opportunity, Keybanc says

Shares of Apple are slipping Wednesday following a report that the company is pulling back production of its new iPhone as demand falters.

That could be an opportunity for investors to snap up shares, said Brandon Nispel of Keybanc.

"We view this as negative for AAPL today, however, believe it is neutral to consensus expectations and would take advantage by buying on the pullback," he wrote in a Wednesday note.

Keybanc data suggests that hardware revenue for the iPhone is still strong, and that Apple's market share is solid and possibly improving.

"Further, AAPL was hoping to ramp up iPhone 14 units, though if the higher level of demand never materialized, it likely represents no change to consensus expectations," Nispel wrote. He added that Apple has done this before - last October, the company cut iPhone 13 production citing chip shortages.

Going forward, Nispel expects iPhone 14 mix to shift to higher end models, a positive in the longer-term.

"By no means is it surprising to us, or should be to investors, that iPhone 14 unit productions may get cut as wait times for the iPhone 14 have been effectively zero, as opposed to a couple week wait time for iPhone 14 Pro/Max," he said. "The iPhone 14 just did not receive the same level of upgrades vs. the iPhone 13 as the iPhone 14 Pro/Max received vs. the iPhone 13 Pro/Max."

—Carmen Reinicke

Stanley Druckenmiller says he sees ‘hard landing’ in 2023 with a possible deeper recession

Billionaire investor Stanley Druckenmiller believes the Federal Reserve's aggressive tightening measures will tip the U.S. economy into a recession.

"Our central case is a hard landing by the end of '23," Druckenmiller said at CNBC's Delivering Alpha Investor Summit in New York City Wednesday. "I will be stunned if we don't have recession in '23. I don't know the timing but certainly by the end of '23. I will not be surprised if it's not larger than the so called average garden variety."

And the legendary investor who has never had a down year in the markets fears it could be something even worse. "I don't rule out something really bad," he said.

Read the full story here.

— Yun Li

Short-seller Carson Block says some ESG companies are ‘money grabs’

Famed short-seller Carson Block told CNBC on Wednesday that many ESG-focused companies are "money grabs" taking advantage of the U.S. government and some investors.

"I would like to save the world," he said during an interview with "Squawk Box" outside CNBC's Delivering Alpha conference. "I believe that we do have problems. However, these companies that I've seen, are not the ones who are going to save us. Many of these are just money grabs, dressed up — clad in green."

CNBC Pro subscribers can read the full story here.

— Samantha Subin

S&P 500 opens higher

The S&P 500 bounced slightly off the new 2022 low on Wednesday following the Bank of England's bond-buying plan to stabilize the falling British pound.

The Dow Jones Industrial Average gained 37 points, or about 0.13%. The S&P 500 rose 0.11%, and the Nasdaq Composite was down 0.12%.

— Sarah Min

Treasury yields retreat, market expectations for Fed come off highs after Bank of England move

Treasury yields fell hard after the Bank of England ended plans to sell gilts and instead announced it would temporarily buy bonds to calm markets. Expectations for Federal Reserve rate hikes also declined in the futures market.

The U.S. 10-year yield fell to 3.84% after it had risen as high as 4.01% earlier Wednesday. The 2-year yield, which most reflects Fed policy, fell to 4.14% from 4.31%. Yields move opposite price.

"We've gone from QE to QT back to QE," said Greg Faranello of AmeriVet Securities. The U.K. 10-year was at 4.02%, from a high of 4.58%. QE refers to quantitative easing, or central bank bond buying, while QT refers to central banks ending purchases and potentially selling bonds instead.

"When rates move like this very, very quickly, liquidity comes into question," said Faranello. "It means collateral, it means margins, it means the potential for further dislocation...It tells you there's a problem with the plumbing. There's a problem under the hood."

Faranello said fed funds futures pointed to a terminal rate of 4.35% Wednesday morning, below the Fed's own target of 4.6% for an end point for its fed funds rate. The futures market in recent sessions had been pricing a high water mark of 4.75% for fed funds by early next year, he noted.

"We're taking froth off of Fed rate increases moving forward. It doesn't mean they're going to stop. It doesn't mean they're going to blink," he said. "Maybe the Fed doesn't stop, but they take a more measured approach."

--Patti Domm

Sterling lower after Bank of England announces long-dated bond buying

The British pound slumped, falling 1.32% against the dollar to $1.0612, Wednesday morning after the Bank of England announced it would begin temporarily buying long-dated bonds in an attempt to keep financial markets stable.

"Some might argue this is even more inflationary, so the GBP should collapse," wrote Dennis DeBusschere in a Wednesday note of the BOE's announcement. "But that is probably only true if the BoE doesn't follow through with aggressive rate hikes."

That means that even more short rate increases are now necessary, and how the GBP trades from today will be telling, DeBusschere wrote.

"If the GBP holds up, tail risk will be reduced," he said, noting that the GBP's move lower since the news is not good so far.

"Bottom line, macro uncertainty is becoming even more elevated, which will keep correlations high," said DeBusschere.

—Carmen Reinicke

Stocks making the biggest moves premarket

These companies are making headlines before the bell:

  • Biogen (BIIB) – Biogen soared 45.6% in premarket trading after Biogen and Japanese partner Eisai said their experimental Alzheimer's drug dramatically slowed the disease's progression in a study, reducing cognitive and functional decline by 27%.
  • Thor Industries (THO) – Thor Industries gained 3.6% in the premarket after the recreational vehicle maker reported better-than-expected profit and revenue for its latest quarter. Thor saw particular strength in its motorized RV segment, with a 24.5% gain over the prior year.
  • Lyft (LYFT) – Lyft said it would freeze hiring through the end of this year. That follows the ride-hailing company's previous statement that it would slow hiring "dramatically" as it seeks to cut costs. Lyft slid 2.5% in premarket trading.

Check out more premarket movers here.

— Peter Schacknow

Apple shares fall

Shares of Apple were down nearly 4% in premarket trading after a Bloomberg report, citing people familiar with the matter, said the tech company is ditching plans to increase new iPhone production after demand fell short of expectations.

Apple reportedly was aiming to increase assembly of the iPhone 14 product family by as much as 6 million units in the second half of this year before telling suppliers to stand down.

Semiconductor suppliers such as Qualcomm and Skyworks were also down following the report, falling 2.9% and 2.5% in the premarket, respectively.

The move in Apple, which has an outsized weighting in the S&P 500 given its $2.4 trillion market cap, will likely make it difficult for markets to bounce back.

— Sarah Min

British pound briefly pops after Bank of England announcement

The British pound got a brief boost Wednesday after the Bank of England said it would buy long-dated UK government bonds in an effort to stabilize the country's currency.

The pound recently hit a record low against the dollar around $1.03. On Wednesday, sterling traded 0.6% lower at $1.0672.

—Fred Imbert

European markets slide as global stocks retreat

European stocks were sharply lower on Wednesday as global markets sold off on economic concerns surrounding inflation and the growth outlook.

The pan-European Stoxx 600 fell 1.9% by mid-morning, with banks and insurance stocks plunging 4.2% to lead losses. Healthcare was the only sector in positive territory, adding 0.7%.

The negative trade in Europe comes after a torrid night for markets in the Asia-Pacific.

- Elliot Smith

CNBC Pro: Credit Suisse says now's the time to buy two green hydrogen stocks — and gives one over 200% upside

Credit Suisse says it's time to enter the green hydrogen sector, with a number of catalysts set to drive the clean energy powerhouse.

"Green hydrogen is a growth market — we increase our 2030 market estimates by [over] 4x," the bank said, forecasting that green hydrogen production will expand by around 40 times by 2030.

It names two stocks to play the boom — giving one upside of more than 200%.

CNBC Pro subscribers can read more here.

— Weizhen Tan

U.S. 10-year Treasury yield breaches 4% for the first time since 2010

The benchmark U.S. 10-year Treasury yielded breached 4% for the first time since 2010 – after topping 3.9% overnight.

The yield on the policy-sensitive 2-year Treasury was at 4.2953%. Yields and prices have an inverted relationship. One basis point is equivalent to 0.01%.

Jihye Lee

CNBC Pro: Asset manager reveals what's next for stocks — and shares how he's trading the market

Neil Veitch, investment director at Edinburgh-based SVM Asset Management, says he expects the macro landscape to remain "quite difficult" for the remainder of the year.  

Speaking to CNBC Pro Talks last week, Veitch named the key drivers that could help the stock market to turn "more constructive" and shared his take on growth versus value.

CNBC Subscribers can read more here.

— Zavier Ong

Earnings questions, potential recession mean more selling could be ahead

The Dow and S&P 500 have fallen for six straight days, with many of those seeing broad selling typical of so-called "washout" days.

That can sometimes be a contrarian buy signal on Wall Street, but many investment professionals are skeptical that the selling is over. One reason is that earnings expectations for next year still show solid growth, which would be unlikely in the event of a recession.

"We know that if we start seeing a turnaround in the 2-year yields ... and if we start seeing a turnaround in the dollar, that gives us the ability to bounce from these extremely oversold conditions," said Andrew Smith, chief investment strategist of Delos Capital Advisors in Dallas. "But I have a hard time reconciling in my mind that the earnings story is going to be as good as we expect."

Additionally, the dramatic moves in the bond and currency markets means that "something broke" and it may be smart to wait for that information to shake out, Smith said.

On the positive side, Smith pointed to a strong labor market and signs of continued spending on travel as a sign that the U.S. economy may be able to avoid a major recession.

— Jesse Pound

Futures open higher

Stock futures rose slightly after trading began at 6 p.m. Dow futures rose more than 60 points at one time, though those gains have since shrunk.

Nasdaq 100 futures had the biggest early jump of three, suggesting that tech may continue to outperform on Wednesday.

— Jesse Pound

S&P 500 takes out June low on Tuesday

Though Tuesday's closing levels showed relatively modest daily moves, the S&P 500 fell below its previous intraday low for the year during the session. That move was seen by many as confirmation that the summer rally for stocks has failed.

The S&P 500 is now 24.3% off of its record high, and the Dow is also in bear market territory, down roughly 21.2%. The Nasdaq Composite, whose decline dates back to last November, is 33.2% below its high-water mark.

The next key metric for investors in the days ahead could come from the bond market, where the 10-year Treasury yield has surged to just below the 4% level.

— Jesse Pound, Christopher Hayes

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