Around 2:05 p.m. GMT, the Dow Jones lost 1.36%, the Nasdaq index lost 2.00%, and the S&P 500 index lost 1.73%.

After three consecutive sessions of decline, the New York place was still entitled to a "terrible opening", according to the expression of Peter Cardillo, of Spartan Capital.

"Indexes are poised to drop to year-to-year lows, driven by fear of higher interest rates and, of course, a Fed that may go too far in monetary tightening," he said. 'analyst.

The S&P 500 is, in fact, less than 100 points from its low of the last 52 weeks, which dates back to mid-June.

After a summer rebound, the indices suffered three setbacks, with Fed Chairman Jerome Powell's proactive speech at the end of August, a worse-than-expected CPI inflation index at the beginning of September, and the Fed's communication on Wednesday.

"The question is whether we cross these thresholds," summed up Peter Cardillo.

"I expect us to bounce off of it."

Goldman Sachs analysts have significantly lowered their forecasts for the S&P 500 and now see the index widened to 3,600 points at the end of the year, against 4,300 so far.

It was moving slightly below 3,700 points on Friday.

After a wild climb since the start of the week, bond rates stabilized on Friday.

The yield on 10-year US government bonds eased slightly, to 3.70%, against 3.71% the day before.

“The bond market is disorderly, which creates a complicated situation for the stock market,” according to Patrick O'Hare of Briefing.com.

"But it's not exclusive to the United States. Things are choppy elsewhere too," with central banks around the world ramming rates up.

Despite Friday's bond market pause, many stocks fell to their lowest level in at least a year on Friday, particularly in the technology sector, which has been particularly hard hit by soaring rates, which is tightening financing conditions for their growth.

Among them, Dell (-1.57%), HP (-1.93%), Intel (-1.98%), Micron (-1.16%) or Nvidia (-2.10%), which has lost almost two-thirds of its capitalization in one year.

But the berezina was not limited to tech, and several "old" economy heavyweights were also at their lowest since at least this time last year, from the chemical group Dow (-2.99% ) to the 3M conglomerate (-0.52%), via Visa (-1.20%), the telecommunications operator AT&T (-1.39%) or Nike (-2.05%).

The mood is all the more gloomy as nothing seems able to reorient Wall Street in the short term, pending the publication of the PCE price index, for August, next Friday.

Elsewhere on the stock exchange, Boeing was grounded (-4.20% to 132.89 dollars) after the announcement, Thursday after the stock market, of an amicable agreement with the American market regulator, the SEC, which accused the aircraft manufacturer for lying about the risks presented by its 737 MAX aircraft.

The transaction provides for the payment of an indemnity of 200 million dollars.

FedEx was again backtracking (-2.73% to 150.32 dollars) after publishing results well below market expectations, a week after a first early communication.

The group has announced a savings plan of 2.2 to 2.7 million dollars on an annual basis and an increase in its prices of at least 6.9% on average on January 1 next.

The chain of semi-wholesale supermarkets Costco was shunned (-2.31% to 475.93 dollars) despite the publication of a quarterly profit above expectations.

The group has seen the cost of its goods increase faster than its turnover.

© 2022 AFP