Oil, inflation woes live on as Wall Street drops


The Dow dropped to its lowest point since March 17.

NEW YORK (AP) — Wall Street tumbled Wednesday as oil prices rebounded, fanning concerns that inflation will further pinch consumers and lead central banks to raise interest rates. The Dow Jones industrial average fell more than 200 points to its lowest close since mid-March.

Investors are uneasy about oil prices, which on Wednesday traded as high as $138.30 a barrel on the New York Mercantile Exchange before settling up $5.07 at $136.38. Having breached $139 a barrel last week, record-high crude has increasingly posed both an inflationary risk and a threat to growth.

Energy Department data Wednesday showed that gasoline supplies grew last week but that crude oil inventories fell more than analysts expected.

The Federal Reserve’s Beige Book, which provides readings on the U.S. economy by region and arrives two weeks before the Fed’s next meeting, indicated that Americans are straining under rising energy and food costs. The Fed said the economy remains “generally weak.”

The findings seemed to confirm many of Wall Street’s concerns.

“That certainly was not unexpected,” said Janna Sampson, director of portfolio management at Oakbrook Investments. “Obviously, I don’t know that the market likes hearing that, slowing spending or slowing growth and inflation at the same time.”

According to preliminary calculations, the Dow fell 205.99, or 1.68 percent, to 12,083.77. It was the lowest close for the blue chips since March 17, when the Dow closed at 11,972.25.

The biggest loser among the 30 Dow components was Alcoa Inc., which fell $3.40, or 8 percent, to $39.32 after a JPMorgan analyst said the aluminum producer is not planning to sell itself or spin off part of its business.

Broader stock indicators also declined. The Standard Poor’s 500 index fell 22.95, or 1.69 percent, to 1,335.49, and the Nasdaq composite index fell 54.93, or 2.24 percent, to 2,394.01.

Bond prices rose Wednesday. The yield on the benchmark 10-year Treasury note, which moves opposite its price, fell to 4.08 percent from 4.11 percent late Tuesday.

The dollar slipped against other major currencies, while gold prices rose.

Investors are worried that the spike in oil prices will dent consumer spending, which accounts for more than two-thirds of U.S. economic activity and is crucial to some investors’ hopes of seeing the U.S. economy rebound from a slowdown in the second half of the year. However, the prospect of a sustained elevation of prices in oil and other commodities has dimmed some of those hopes.

“There are not a lot of positive things you can point to right now,” said Michael Binger, portfolio manager at Thrivent Investment Management in Minneapolis. “We have commodity prices higher, inflation up, the prospect of the Fed raising interest rates instead of lowering, a worldwide slowdown and an economic slowdown in the U.S.”

Binger noted that one weak spot since last fall on Wall Street — the financial sector — is now faced with a new worry of higher interest rates while still trying to navigate a tight credit market and fallout from bad bets on now-souring home loans.

“If the Fed starts to raise rates because of inflation, not because the economy is good, that is not a positive on the financial stocks,” he said.