By Stan Choe and Alex Veiga
Stocks shook off a weak start and ended higher on Wall Street even as worries about banks on both sides of the Atlantic continue to weigh on markets. The S&P 500 rose 0.6% Friday, marking its second straight weekly gain. The Dow Jones Industrial Average and the Nasdaq composite also rose. Treasury yields stabilized after an early drop. Markets have been turbulent recently on worries that banks are weakening under the pressure of much higher interest rates. That’s led to rising concerns about a recession and uncertainty about what central banks will do with interest rates going forward.
THIS IS A BREAKING NEWS UPDATE. AP’s earlier story follows below.
Stocks are wavering on Wall Street Friday amid worries about banks on both sides of the Atlantic.
The S&P 500 was 0.3% higher in afternoon trading after slipping for most of the morning, on pace for its second straight weekly gain. The Dow Jones Industrial Average rose 73 points, or 0.2%, at 32,179, as of 2:53 p.m. Eastern time, while the Nasdaq composite slipped 0.1%.
Markets have been turbulent on worries that banks are weakening under the pressure of much higher interest rates. That’s led to rising concerns about a possible recession and heavy uncertainty about what the Federal Reserve and other central banks will do with interest rates going forward.
On Friday, much of the focus was on Deutsche Bank, whose stock tumbled 8.5% in Germany. Earlier this month, shares of and faith in Swiss bank Credit Suisse fell so much that regulators brokered a takeover of it by rival UBS.
Credit Suisse faced a relatively unique set of longstanding troubles. But the second- and third-largest U.S. bank failures in history earlier this month have cast a harsher spotlight across the entire banking industry.
Other big European banks also fell Friday, including a 5.5% drop for Germany’s Commerzbank, a 5.3% fall for France’s BNP Paribas and a 3.5% loss for UBS.
Bank stocks were mixed on Wall Street, including a 1.4% drop for JPMorgan Chase and a 0.9% gain for Bank of America.
In the U.S., the hunt by investors has primarily been for banks that could face a debilitating exodus of customers, similar to what helped cause the failures of Silicon Valley Bank and Signature Bank.
Investors have zeroed in on smaller and midsized banks, the ones below in size of the “too-big-to-fail” banks and seen as greater risks.
First Republic Bank was mostly unchanged.
Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen has said that in cases where the government sees a risk to the overall system, it will guarantee deposits for bank customers, even those with more than the $250,000 insured by the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. That’s what regulators did for both Silicon Valley Bank and Signature Bank.
But Yellen this week also stopped short of a blanket guarantee for all depositors at all banks.
Cash-short banks were still lining up this week to borrow money from the Fed. The Fed said Thursday that emergency lending to banks fell slightly in the past week – to $164 billion – but remained high.
A big worry is that all the pressure on banks will cause a pullback in lending to small and midsized businesses across the country. That in turn could lead to less hiring, a weaker economy and a higher potential for a recession that many economists already saw as likely.
While the job market has remained remarkably solid, other parts of the economy have already begun to weaken under the weight of higher rates. On Friday, reports on the economy came in mixed. One showed orders for long-lasting manufactured goods were slower last month than economists expected.
A second report, though, suggested the fastest uptick in business activity for almost a year. The preliminary report from S&P Global topped economists' expectations.
Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell said worries about a pullback in lending helped push the Fed to raise rates by only a quarter of a percentage point this week, instead of a more aggressive half point, in its campaign to battle inflation.
Higher rates can undercut inflation by slowing the entire economy, but they raise the risk of a recession. They also hurt prices for stocks and other investments. For Silicon Valley Bank and other banks, that meant hits to the super-safe Treasury bonds they owned.
The Fed has raised its key overnight interest rate to a range of 4.75% to 5%, up from virtually zero at the start of last year. It’s hinted it may raise rates one more time before holding them there through the end of the year.
Traders are more skeptical, though. The rising possibility of a recession has them betting heavily that the Fed will have to cut interest rates as soon as this summer to release some of the pressure on banks and the economy.
Such speculation has added to an increased drive by investors to pile into anything seen as safe, which together have caused huge, sometimes violent swings in the bond market.
On Friday, yields fell further. The 10-year yield, which helps set rates for mortgages and other loans, fell to 3.38% from 3.42% late Thursday. It was above 4% earlier this month.
The drop has been even more dramatic for the two-year Treasury yield, which more closely tracks expectations for the Fed. It sank to 3.78% from 3.83% late Thursday and from more than 5% earlier this month.
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AP Business Writers Elaine Kurtenbach, Matt Ott and Paul Wiseman contributed.