With the indexes breaking records day after day, it was only a matter of time before there was a pullback. And wouldn’t you know that the day would come just two days after the Dow finally broke through its February records, weeks after the S&P, months after the Nasdaq. So today the naysayers who have been lamenting all along through this bull market that everyone was being entirely too optimistic like there were blinders on that didn’t recognize the pandemic and faltering economy finally got their way. Of course, if you say every day that the market is going to crash, eventually you’re going to be right. So all three indexes had big retreats today, the S&P and Nasdaq their worst since June 11, the Dow its worst since June 26th. Was it triggered by the extraordinarily high unemployment, or a new report showing a slowing in the services sector, or the fading prospects of the new stimulus or businesses reopening? Or was it as today’s expert suggests it’s just another “rotation out of technology stocks. I don’t think it’s anything ominous.” Ominous or not, it spooked the market in that volume was considerably above average at nearly 12 billion.
thu
SEPTEMBER 3, 2020 /8:23 pm
Tech tumble jams Wall Street into reverse; sharpest fall since
June
DJ: 29,100.50 +454.84 NAS: 12,056.44 +116.78 S&P: 3,580.84 +54.19 9/2
DJ: 28,292.73 -807.77 NAS: 11,458.10 -598.34 S&P: 3,455.06
-125.78 9/3
NEW YORK (Reuters) - Wall
Street’s main indexes closed sharply lower on Thursday, marking their deepest
one-day declines since June as investors dumped the high-flying technology
sector, while economic data highlighted concerns about a long and difficult
recovery. The Nasdaq led the pullback
with a decline of almost 5% a day after it and the S&P 500 posted record
closing highs. The Nasdaq’s biggest
drags came from heavyweights Apple Inc (AAPL.O),
Microsoft Inc (MSFT.O), Amazon.com Inc (AMZN.O),
Tesla Inc (TSLA.O) and Nvidia Corp (NVDA.O). The S&P tech sector .SPLRCT and the
Philadelphia chip index .SOX both fell almost 6% on the day.
Markets had soared from March lows, powered by fiscal and
monetary support hopes for a swift economic recovery. But some participants said investors
had become too optimistic. “Think
about the mounting number of risks the market has been shrugging off over the
last couple of months here,” said Emily Roland, co-chief investment strategist
at John Hancock Investment Management. “We’re 60 days away from the election. That may be an area
where investors are getting a bit spooked.” She added: “Looking at the data today, the market has had the
ability to power higher and hasn’t
paid any attention to a macro environment which, yes, is improving which
is encouraging, but the economy
remains fragile here.”
Earlier in the day, data showed the number of Americans filing
new claims for unemployment
benefits fell more than expected last week, but remained extraordinarily high. The next
big data focus for investors is Friday morning’s monthly payrolls report. Separately, a survey showed U.S. services industry growth slowed
in August, likely as the boost from the reopening of businesses and
fiscal stimulus faded.
The
Dow Jones Industrial Average .DJI fell 807.77 points, or 2.78%, to close at
28,292.73, the S&P 500 .SPX lost 125.78 points, or 3.51%, to 3,455.06
and the Nasdaq Composite .IXIC dropped 598.34 points, or 4.96%, to
11,458.10.
While S&P
and Nasdaq’s percentage declines on Thursday were their deepest since June 11, it
was the Dow’s biggest one-day plunge since June 26. It was the Nasdaq’s third-biggest one-day fall from a record
close, according to data from Bespoke Investment Group. Wall Street’s fear gauge crossed its 200-day moving average to
hit its highest level in weeks. It closed up 7 points at 33.60.
Still, some
investors seemed unconcerned in the face of the sell-off. “(Investors) are in love with tech stocks and it’s going to take
more than this for them to fall out of love with them,” said Mike Zigmont, head
of trading and research at Harvest Volatility Management in New York. Sebastian Leburn, senior portfolio manager at
Boston Private in Florida, said the decline was “just a rotation” out of technology stocks: “I don’t think it’s anything
ominous.”
Another key Nasdaq component, Tesla Inc
(TSLA.O), tumbled 9% on Thursday after falling
sharply the previous two sessions. PVH
Corp (PVH.N) rose 3.3% after the Calvin Klein owner
posted a surprise quarterly profit, boosted by strong online demand for
comfortable and casual clothing during the coronavirus-led shift to work from
home.
Declining issues outnumbered advancing ones on the NYSE by a
4.14-to-1 ratio; on Nasdaq, a 4.20-to-1 ratio favored decliners. The S&P 500 posted 18 new 52-week highs
and no new lows; the Nasdaq Composite recorded 24 new highs and 53 new lows.
About 11.98
billion shares changed hands in U.S. exchanges, compared with the 9.22
billion daily average over the last 20 sessions.
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