On Wall Street, not so bad is no longer good enough. Stocks extended the week's losses Friday, further chilling the market's spring rally. Traders who last week sent stocks higher on economic news that wasn't as bad as expected are now selling. And analysts say it will take more upbeat data to restart the rally that swept major stock indicators up more than 30 percent from 12-year lows in early March.
The Labor Department said Friday that consumer prices in April were flat, as economists predicted. Manufacturing activity in the New York area and industrial production contracted less than economists expected. And a Reuters/University of Michigan index of consumer sentiment rose to an eight-month high in May, a possible harbinger of improved consumer spending.
But even with this handful of silver-lining economic data, traders found little incentive to buy. Instead, a drop in the price of oil hit energy companies, while financial stocks slid on worries that the economic recovery could be further off than traders had been betting in recent months.
Wall Street's rally has also hit a lull now that the government's stress tests of banks are done, earnings reports are winding down and the first wave of April economic data has been released. Traders aren't clear what the next catalyst might be to pump the market higher — or whether the gains might erode.
"We've gotten through the panic point, and what will get us to the next level is seeing the economy actually grow. It'll happen, but it's a matter of when," said Douglas Kreps, managing director at Fort Pitt Capital Group.
The Dow Jones industrial average fell 62.68, or 0.8 percent, to 8,268.64. The broader Standard & Poor's 500 index fell 10.19, or 1.1 percent, to 882.88, and the Nasdaq composite index fell 9.07, or 0.5 percent, to 1,680.14.
Dreyfus Chief Investment Officer Phil Maisano contends the break makes sense. He said the market is fairly valued where it stands and is now factoring in a severe recession instead of a depression.
"We're clearly not going to have any form of a V-shaped recovery," Maisano said, referring to the pace of the rebound from the economy's tumble in the fall. "It will be a longer slog."
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