Financial Markets Wall Street
Richard Drew/AP

NEW YORK — U.S. stocks finished sharply lower Tuesday after a surprisingly wide March U.S. trade deficit raised concerns that the economy shrank in the first quarter.

The $51.4 billion March deficit was the highest in nearly 6½ years and larger than the $45.2 billion the government assumed in its snapshot of first-quarter gross domestic product last week, suggesting the economy had contracted.

It was something of a one-two punch between the trade-deficit report and higher interest rates that began overseas.


“A negative number is scary for the market,” said Alan Gayle, senior investment strategist and director of asset allocation at RidgeWorth Investments.

“It was something of a one-two punch between the trade-deficit report and higher interest rates that began overseas,” he said of Tuesday’s stock sell-off.

Long-term U.S. Treasury yields along with German Bunds rose on a host of factors including less pessimism about Europe, and easing downward pressure on U.S. and European inflation.

With corporate earnings season winding down, U.S. investors are bracing for an April payroll report due Friday that could give a hint of when the U.S. Federal Reserve will begin raising interest rates.

All 10 major S&P sectors fell, with the utilities index slumping 2.28 percent as investors dumped dividend stocks to take advantage of yields on benchmark 10-year Treasury notes at nearly two-month highs.

Despite a rally of 2 percent in oil, energy stocks were stung for a second day by criticism of fracking companies by David Einhorn, the influential head of hedge fund Greenlight Capital. The energy sector fell 1.1 percent.

Weighed down by a 2.25 percent decline in Apple (AAPL), technology stocks were the biggest drag on the three major indexes, erasing the Nasdaq’s gains of the past two days.

The Dow Jones industrial average (^DJI) fell 142.2 points, or 0.8 percent, to end at 17,927.2. The Standard & Poor’s 500 index (^GSPC) lost 25.03 points, or 1.2 percent, to 2,089.46 and the Nasdaq composite (^IXIC) dropped 77.60 points, or 1.6 percent, to end the session at 4,939.33.

Winners and Losers

Kellogg (KO) fell 1.5 percent to $63.18 after the world’s largest maker of breakfast cereals’ net sales fell 5 percent.

Cosmetics maker Estee Lauder (EL) rose 4 percent after better-than-expected profit.

After the bell, Groupon (GRPN) posted first-quarter revenue below expectations and its stock was down 2.2 percent in extended trade.

Tuesday’s decline in stocks is only the most recent of several volatile sessions. Over the two weeks through Friday, the S&P 500 moved an average of 17.79 points daily, wider than the 12.43 point range in early March.

Declining issues outnumbered advancing ones on the NYSE by 2,452 to 610, for a 4.02-to-1 ratio; on the Nasdaq, 2,084 issues fell and 676 advanced for a 3.08-to-1 ratio.

The benchmark S&P 500 posted 16 new 52-week highs and no new lows; the Nasdaq composite recorded 39 new highs and 68 new lows.

About 7.3 billion shares changed hands on U.S. exchanges, above the 7.0 billion daily average for the last five sessions, according to BATS Global Markets.

What to watch Wednesday:

ADP releases private-sector hiring for April at 8:15 a.m. Eastern time.
The Labor Department releases first-quarter productivity data at 8:30 a.m.

Earnings Season
These selected companies are scheduled to release quarterly financial results:

Activision Blizzard (ATVI)
Anheuser-Busch Inbev (BUD)
Babcock & Wilcox (BWC)
Chesapeake Energy (CHK)
Choice Hotels International (CHH)
Dynegy (DYN)
GlaxoSmithKline (GSK)
Keurig Green Mountain (GMCR)
Marathon Oil (MRO)
MetLife (MET)
Motorola Solutions (MSI)
Occidental Petroleum (OXY)
Prudential Financial (PRU)
Tesla Motors (TSLA)
The Hain Celestial Group (HAIN)
Transocean Ltd. (RIG)
TripAdvisor (TRIP)
Twenty-First Century Fox (FOX)(FOXA)
Voya Financial (VOYA)
WellCare Health Plans (WCG)
Wendy’s (WEN)
Whole Foods Market (WFM)

Wall Street Rallies on Fed Rate Hike
Fed Raises Interest Rates, Cites Ongoing US Economic Recovery
US Aerospace Sector Poised for 2015 Record Trade Surplus: Group

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