Market news
Do you remember the 2000 movie ‘The Perfect Storm’ starring George Clooney?
It showed fisherman going out, hitting several raging weather fronts. And collide to produce one of the fiercest storms of modern history.
Investors feel too, that they were hit by a ‘Perfect Storm’, coming from all sides. It started with the Japanese stock market crash, then the unemployment report showing signs of weakness, escalation in the Middle East, and more. When these sudden storms collide, remember to ‘zoom out’, and think about your time horizon. And eventually this storm will pass.
Stocks fell broadly last week as investors looked past upbeat Fed comments and focused on disappointing corporate reports and weaker-than-expected economic data.
The Dow Jones Industrial Average lost 2.20 percent, while the Standard & Poor’s 500 Index fell 2.06 percent. The Nasdaq Composite Index dropped 3.35 percent. By contrast, the MSCI EAFE Index, which tracks developed overseas stock markets, gained 0.19 percent for the week through Thursday’s close.1
Volatile Week of Trading, leads to the perfect storm
Stocks were under pressure early in the week as investors appeared to focus on the Fed’s meeting, which ended on Wednesday. It was a big week for Q2 corporate reports, with five of the ten largest names in the S&P 500 (by market capitalization) reporting numbers. But attention was mainly on the Fed’s meeting.2,3
Stocks rallied on Wednesday when Fed Chair Powell indicated a September interest rate cut was “on the table.”4
But selling picked up on Thursday as investors’ attention quickly shifted to disappointing corporate reports and weak economic data. Friday morning’s disappointing June jobs report raised even more concerns about the economy’s strength. The Nasdaq ended the week in correction territory, down more than 10 percent from its recent all-time high.5,6
Economic Concerns
Fresh economic data suggested weakening manufacturing, construction, and employment outlooks. On Friday, the Labor Department’s July jobs report showed a sharper-than-expected job growth slowdown and an unemployment uptick to 4.3 percent—the highest rate in 2½ years.
At Wednesday’s Fed press conference, investors welcomed Powell’s unusually candid and upbeat comments. However, as the week progressed, investors started questioning whether the Fed was misreading the economy and moving too slowly in adjusting interest rates.7