Wild Week On Wall Street Continues As Stocks Turn Lower
Technology and energy companies led a broad sell-off on
The S&P 500 lost 1.8% after having been up briefly by 0.8% in the early going. The slide cut deeply into the benchmark index's 2% gain on Wednesday. The latest gyrations follow a wild stretch where the S&P 500 careened from its worst three-day slump since June to its best day in nearly three months.
Tech stocks accounted for the biggest share of the broad sell-off. The sector has been at the center of the market's swings, hurt by criticism that their recession-defying surge in recent months was overdone. The Nasdaq, which is full of tech stocks, slumped 10% from last Thursday through Tuesday and recovered for a 2.7% gain Wednesday. It lost most of that ground Thursday, falling 2% after shedding an early gain.
Health care stocks and companies that rely on consumer spending also took hefty losses. Energy companies fell the most as the price of
The market will likely lack any solid direction for the next few months as investors weigh several key issues, said
"Two things everybody is waiting for: Who is going to win the election, and are we going to find a vaccine for the virus?" he said. "Those two questions are impossible for us to answer in this particular quarter."
The S&P 500 fell 59.77 points to 3,339.19, its fourth decline in five days. The index is on pace for its second straight weekly loss. The Dow Jones Industrial Average dropped 405.89 points, or 1.5%, to 27,534.58. The Nasdaq gave up 221.97 points to 10,919.59. The Russell 2000 index of smaller company stocks lost 18.73 points, or 1.2%, to 1,507.75.
Thursday's selling followed a batch of new economic data on jobs and wholesale prices. The government said that 884,000 workers applied for unemployment benefits last week. The number was flat from last week's number, which was revised higher, and it's the lowest it's been since the number of layoffs began exploding in March due to the coronavirus pandemic.
But the tally was still higher than economists expected, and it's an indication that layoffs remain stuck at a dispiritingly high level. Economists called the report disappointing.
A separate report showed that inflation remains very weak at the wholesale level, though it was stronger last month than economists had forecast. The
Von Lipsey said big investors are either waiting on the sidelines or in a neutral position on expectations that markets will stay volatile through the uncertainty.
"We're not all sure where the economy is going to head from here," he said.
The market's focus continues to be on big technology stocks, in large part because they've grown so big that their movements can move broad market indexes almost by themselves. Apple, Microsoft, Amazon, Facebook and Google's parent company alone account for 23% of the S&P 500, for example.
Many analysts say the recent tumult for technology stocks isn't that surprising given how high they had soared. Apple more than doubled in less than five months through the pandemic, Tesla surged 74.1% last month alone and
While Big Tech is indeed benefiting from the shift to online life that the pandemic and ensuing stay-at-home economy has accelerated, critics said their stocks prices simply shot too high. This past week's sell-off blew off some of that steam, but analysts question how much selling is left in the pipeline.
Apple rose as much as 2.7% Thursday morning, but lost its gains and closed 3.3% lower. Tesla rose 1.4%, while Zoom slid 1.3%.
The selling comes as the odds grow longer that
European stock markets closed mostly lower. The German DAX lost 0.2%, and the French CAC 40 fell 0.4%. The


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