It was another total bath today though for much of the session the Dow was only down about a hundred points until news got out that Treasury Secretary Mnuchin was calling a meeting of financial regulators in order to take preventative measures to ensure “normal market operations.” This should have been taken as goods news, a move to protect bank liquidity. And we should remember they did exactly the same thing in the immediate wake of 9/11 to prevent a market panic. Then it worked great. Today it was taken as just another nail in the coffin to be added to government shutdown, trade wars, and the possible firing of Powell. It was just another nail that said that D.C. is in a state of disarray.
It was akin to asking whether there were enough lifeboats on Titanic and instead of relief that precautions are being taken, the response is, “Why are they asking unless they expect the ship to sink?” So once again, the entire latter session was a rout, the Dow closing 653 points down. For the third straight day, more than 2600 stocks reached a 52-week low. This is all despite the fact that the banks to which Mnuchin made his inquiry all assured him they had more than adequate liquidity. The market closed early at 1 p.m. for the holiday. The VIX is up 6 more points to 36 and volume was 5.9 billion. That’s considerably lighter than recent averages but it was a considerably shorter session. The bright spot is that the market is still hoping for the traditional post-Christmas “Santa Claus rally” that happens between Christmas and New Year’s. Yes, here’s hoping.
mon DECEMBER 24, 2018 / 3:36 pm
Wall Street selloff worsens on
Mnuchin move, Washington drama
DJ: 21,792.20 -653.17 NAS: 6,192.92 -140.08 S&P: 2,351.10
-65.52 12/24
(Reuters) - The S&P
500 tumbled to the brink of a bear market on Monday as U.S. stocks extended
their steep sell-off in a pre-holiday shortened session, with investors rattled
by the U.S. Treasury secretary’s convening of a crisis group and by other
political developments. All three major
indexes ended down more than 2 percent the day before the Christmas holiday.
The S&P 500 finished about 19.8 percent below its Sept. 20 closing high,
just shy of the 20 percent threshold commonly used to define a bear market.
Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin called top U.S. bankers on Sunday amid the
pullback in stocks and said he was calling a meeting of financial regulators to discuss ways to
ensure “normal market operations.” Investors also were grappling
with the federal government
shutdown and reports that President Donald Trump privately discussed the
possibility of firing the
Federal Reserve chairman. “The headlines we are seeing
today, yesterday, over the weekend are not great,” said Vinay Pande, global head of trading
strategies at UBS Global Wealth Management.
“The market is concerned about what is happening
in D.C.,” he said. “In the face of a large correction in the market,
there seems to be disarray
and disunity and people aren’t speaking with one voice, which I think is
discouraging to anybody in the market.”
The
Dow Jones Industrial Average .DJI fell 653.17 points, or 2.91 percent, to
21,792.20, the S&P 500 .SPX lost 65.52 points, or 2.71 percent, to
2,351.10 and the Nasdaq Composite .IXIC dropped 140.08 points, or 2.21 percent, to
6,192.92.
Last week, the S&P
500 suffered its biggest weekly percentage drop since August 2011, while the
Dow had its biggest weekly drop since October 2008.
All 11 S&P 500 sectors finished down on the day on Monday, and all
were in negative territory for the year. The index posted its lowest closing
level since April 2017. Roughly
three-fourths of the S&P 500 was trading in bear market territory. All 30
components of the Dow industrials finished in the red on Monday.
For the third straight
day, more than 2,600 New
York Stock Exchange- and Nasdaq-listed stocks hit 52-week lows, reflecting a depth of selling
not seen in the market since the height of the financial crisis a decade ago.
Mnuchin spoke on Sunday with the heads of the six largest U.S. banks,
who confirmed they have
enough liquidity to continue lending and that “the markets continue to function
properly.” But investors said his
move to convene a call with the President’s Working Group on Financial Markets,
known as the “Plunge
Protection team,” may have weighed on sentiment on Monday. “When
the Dow is down 600 points, it’s hard to say it was a positive,” said J.J.
Kinahan, chief market strategist at TD Ameritrade in Chicago. “Although his
intention was a very good one, the net feeling I think was, ‘Is there a bigger problem that
we don’t know about?”
Adding to jitters, Trump’s acting chief of staff, Mick Mulvaney,
on Sunday said a partial
U.S. government shutdown could continue to Jan. 3, when the new Congress
convenes and Democrats take control of the House of Representatives.
The stock market
closed at 1 p.m. EST (1800 GMT), ahead of Tuesday’s Christmas holiday. About 5.9 billion shares changed hands in U.S.
exchanges, compared with the 8.9 billion-share daily average over the last 20
sessions.
The CBOE Volatility Index .VIX, a widely followed options-based barometer of
expected near-term volatility for stocks, finished up 5.96 points, at 36.07, its highest close since
Feb. 5.
Declining issues outnumbered advancing ones on the NYSE by a
3.56-to-1 ratio; on Nasdaq, a 2.68-to-1 ratio favored decliners. The S&P 500 posted no new 52-week highs
and 242 new lows; the Nasdaq Composite recorded five new highs and 837 new
lows.
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