For the third day in a row the big sell off out of tech continues dropping the Dow another 244 points and the Nasdaq 117 marking a rapid decline since the peak on September 2nd, the biggest weekly losing streak for all three indexes in a year. The consensus remains that it’s all just some very overdue profit-taking. There’s also some caution being exercised in light of the new spikes in coronavirus overseas hinting at the much feared second wave. (Is it really a second wave when the first wave never ended?) Because today marked the quarterly expiration of options contracts, the so-called “quadruple witching” effect has volume greatly exaggerated at over 14 billion. We’ll have to wait until Monday to find out what the real volume is. Have a good weekend.
FRI SEPTEMBER 18, 2020 5:36 pm
Wall Street posts third week of
declines as tech slide drags on
DJ: 27,901.98 -130.40 NAS: 10,910.28 -140.19 S&P: 3,357.01 -28.48 9/17
DJ: 27,657.42 -244.56 NAS: 10,793.28 -117.00 S&P: 3,319.47 -37.54 9/18
(Reuters)
- U.S. stocks fell on Friday as technology shares sold off for a third day in a
row, while all three major U.S. indexes posted a third straight week of
declines. It
was the Nasdaq’s first such weekly streak since August 2019, and S&P 500
and Dow’s first since early October 2019.
Apple Inc AAPL.O,
Microsoft Corp MSFT.O,
Amazon.com Inc AMZN.O and
Alphabet Inc. GOOGL.O, which
helped to fuel the market's rally off the March lows, were among the biggest
drags on the S&P 500 and Nasdaq on Friday, while the S&P 500 technology
index .SPLRCT fell
1.7%, the biggest weight among the S&P 500 sectors. Apple was down 3.2%.
“We
had a market peak on Sept. 2, and then we had a rapid decline and a lot of that
came in technology and
growth stocks that had done so well,” said Tom Martin, senior portfolio manager
at Globalt Investments in Atlanta. But
even though the market has had a sell-off in technology and growth, “it doesn’t
mean the (valuation) extremes are fully worked off,” he said.
Friday marked the quarterly expiration of U.S.
stock options, stock index futures and index option contracts, known as
“quadruple witching,”
bringing increased trading volume at the market close. Volume on U.S. exchanges was 14.31 billion shares, the highest
since this year’s reconstitution by FTSE Russell of its indexes in June.
The Dow
Jones Industrial Average .DJI fell 244.56 points,
or 0.88%, to 27,657.42, the S&P 500 .SPX lost 37.54 points, or
1.12%, to 3,319.47 and the Nasdaq Composite .IXIC dropped 117.00
points, or 1.07%, to 10,793.28. The Dow ended just barely lower on the week, while the S&P
500 fell 0.7% and the Nasdaq dropped 0.6% for the week.
Strategists said investors appeared to
be continuing a recent
rotation out of high-flying tech-related stocks and into other sectors. “It
looks to be sentiment
driven and, to some extent, it appears to be rotational to us,” said Rob
Haworth, senior investment strategist at U.S. Bank Wealth Management in
Seattle. “We’re not sure this really
indicates there’s a problem with economic growth, but rather, it’s some profit-taking, some
adjustment and rotation” between sectors, he said. “You’re moving from the
biggest weights in the market to the smallest weights.”
The S&P 500 materials .SPLRCM is the best-performing sector so far
this month, while S&P 500 technology is the worst. Investors kept a close
eye on rising coronavirus cases
overseas. European countries from Denmark to Greece announced new
restrictions on Friday to curb surging coronavirus infections in some of their
largest cities, while Britain was reported to be considering a new national
lockdown.
Tesla rose 4.4% as two analysts raised
their price targets on the electric carmaker’s shares ahead of its highly
anticipated “Battery Day” event next week.
Declining issues outnumbered advancing
ones on the NYSE by a 2.02-to-1 ratio; on Nasdaq, a 1.12-to-1 ratio favored
decliners. The S&P 500 posted 13 new
52-week highs and no new lows; the Nasdaq Composite recorded 67 new highs and
26 new lows.
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