Stocks tumbled Thursday as big bank earnings kicked off with disappointing results and traders assessed the possibility of even tighter U.S. monetary policy on the back of June’s inflation data.

The Dow Jones Industrial Average shed 625 points, or 2.02%, while the S&P 500 dropped 2.09%. The Nasdaq Composite tumbled 2.11%.

Earnings results from major banks on Thursday offered further clues into the health of the U.S. economy. JPMorgan Chase sank 5% after reporting quarterly earnings that missed analyst expectations and halted buybacks. Morgan Stanley also dipped following a miss on the top and bottom lines. Goldman Sachs, which is set to report earnings Monday, slipped 4%.

Earnings for big banks season continues on Friday with results from Wells Fargo and Citigroup.

All stocks in the Dow fell on the day, led by declines from JPMorgan, Goldman Sachs and Chevron. Energy, materials and financials led the S&P 500′s losses, down 2% each. Tech stocks Meta Platforms, Salesforce, Tesla and Amazon fell more than 1%.

Volatile oil prices also dropped on Thursday, with West Texas Intermediate crude hitting its lowest level since February.

Thursday’s market moves come after the consumer price index for June came in hot at 9.1% and opened the door for a big Federal Reserve rate increase later this month, with the fed funds futures market now pricing in a hike of as much as 100 basis points. The Beige Book, released Wednesday by the Fed, showed worries of an upcoming recession amid high inflation.

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June’s CPI report also affected Treasurys and sent the inversion, which is a popular signal of a looming recession, to its widest since 2000 on Thursday.

“The takeaway for investors is that Fed policy remains data-dependent and the central bank will continue on an aggressive tightening path until inflationary pressures peak decisively,” strategists at BCA Research wrote in a note. “Persistent price pressures call for another jumbo hike at the July 26-27 FOMC, but there is still room for the data to improve before the September meeting, 8 weeks later.”

June’s producer price index report, which measures prices paid to producers of goods and services, showed wholesale prices rise 11.3% last month as energy prices jumped and offered further insights into the health of the economy.

Source: | This article originally belongs to Nbcnews.com

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