What Market Crash? S&P 500 Closes Almost Exactly Where It Was A Week Ago

Forbes Business Breaking What Market Crash? S&P 500 Closes Almost Exactly Where It Was A Week Ago Derek Saul Forbes Staff Derek Saul has covered markets for the Forbes news team since 2021. Following Aug 9, 2024, 04:42pm EDT Share to Facebook Share to Twitter Share to Linkedin Topline The leading U.S. stock market index
What Market Crash? S&P 500 Closes Almost Exactly Where It Was A Week Ago

What Market Crash? S&P 500 Closes Almost Exactly Where It Was A Week Ago

Following

Topline

The leading U.S. stock market index ended the week almost exactly flat, covering up a rollercoaster week for the S&P 500 which included its best and worst days of the last 18 months and offering an anxiety-inducing reminder of the stock market’s fickle nature.

Key Facts

After gaining 0.5% on Friday, the S&P closed the first week of August down 0.05%, dipping ever so slightly from 5,346.56 to 5,344.16.

The S&P actually just registered its fourth week with less than a 0.1% weekly movement of the last two years, but behind that ordinariness was major turbulence.

The S&P tanked 3% Monday amidst global dread over an impending stock market crash partially tied to worse-than-expected U.S. monthly unemployment, with Wall Street’s “fear gauge” spiking briefly to a level unseen since March 2020, before quickly rebounding as secondary employment data calmed nerves about an imminent recession.

“Investors have become quite reactive following a strong and steady period for the market,” remarked Mark Hackett, Nationwide’s head of investment research, in emailed comments.

The other two leading American equity indexes, the Dow Jones Industrial Average and Nasdaq Composite, also recovered most of this week’s losses, with the top heavy Dow ending the week down 0.2% and the tech-concentrated Nasdaq booking a 0.6% weekly loss.

Crucial Quote

Market narratives can change quickly, but they are not always right,” Raymond James’ Chief Investment Officer Larry Adam wrote to clients about this topsy-turvy stretch for stocks.

Key Background

Last Friday’s jobs report triggered fears of a recession via the oft-cited Sahm indicator, which tracks changes in unemployment rate. Simultaneous concerns about the historically austere Bank of Japan’s indication it will hike interest rates to stabilize the yen caused the the flash crash, with many fearing long-term effects. Stock indexes globally remain depressed from their all-time highs set earlier this year even after the bounceback, with Europe’s Stoxx down 5% from its May peak, the S&P down 6% from its July apex and Japan’s Nikkei down 17% from its July high. It’s hardly time to declare victory against the prospects of a recession—Goldman Sachs and JPMorgan Chase set the odds of one coming to the U.S. at 25% or more over the next year—and further stock losses could very well be on the horizon, but it is very normal for stocks to decline on the way to long-term gains. Between 1928 and 2019, the S&P suffered an average annual drawdown of 16%, according to Bespoke Investment Group. This year’s drawdown, defined as an asset’s steepest decline from its all-time high, is just 8.5%, hardly firing off historic alarms. “While sell-offs are never comfortable this year has been fairly calm from a historical perspective,” Adam noted.

Follow me on  Twitter or  LinkedInSend me a secure  tip

Trump Media to the Saudi Arabian influence on golf and what real-life billionaires think of ” Succession.” Send tips to dsaul@forbes.com. Follow Saul for analysis on the biggest daily economic and stock market happenings, ranging from inflation data to tech earnings to deep-dives on hot button assets. 

“>

Total
0
Shares
Leave a Reply
Related Posts
Boxing’s most controversial battle: Eyes of the world will be on Algerian gender row fighter Imane Khelif today as she takes on Anna Luca Hamori at the Paris Olympics, the Hungarian who has shared online a cartoon of a small woman fighting a huge monster
Read More

Boxing’s most controversial battle: Eyes of the world will be on Algerian gender row fighter Imane Khelif today as she takes on Anna Luca Hamori at the Paris Olympics, the Hungarian who has shared online a cartoon of a small woman fighting a huge monster

All eyes will be on gender row fighter Imane Khelif today as she takes on Hungary's Anna Luca Hamori at the Paris Olympics in boxing's most controversial battle. On Thursday, Italy's distraught Angela Carini quit her contest with Algeria's Imane Khelif in tears after just 46 seconds. The fight has sparked a furious debate as
JD Vance touts Georgia’s election security after Trump attacks state officials
Read More

JD Vance touts Georgia’s election security after Trump attacks state officials

Former President Donald Trump’s running mate, Sen. JD Vance, on Sunday expressed confidence in Georgia’s election security, a contrast with Trump’s recent attacks against Republican state officials Gov. Brian Kemp and Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger. During an interview on Fox News’ “Sunday Morning Futures,” Vance was pressed on how comfortable he is with the progress
Calls for men who ‘attacked’ police at Manchester Airport to be charged after dramatic new footage emerges – as inflammatory TikTok lawyer claims he is ‘the good guy’ appealing for calm
Read More

Calls for men who ‘attacked’ police at Manchester Airport to be charged after dramatic new footage emerges – as inflammatory TikTok lawyer claims he is ‘the good guy’ appealing for calm

Andy Burnham reissued calls for calm this morning amid growing fears that 'tensions could boil over' after shocking new footage from Manchester Airport emerged last night. Dramatic CCTV footage revealed that three police officers were 'viciously' attacked - leaving one with a broken nose and one slumped on the floor - moments before one of
Small town descends into civil war over stunning country club and golf course built on 2,000-year-old Native American sacred site – as its future is finally revealed
Read More

Small town descends into civil war over stunning country club and golf course built on 2,000-year-old Native American sacred site – as its future is finally revealed

An Ohio golf course built on a sacred Native American site is to be relocated following a decades-long turf war. The Moundbuilders Country Club in Newark is set to move its course following decades of bitter back-and-forth with the state's historical society. The course currently sits atop the Octagon Earthworks, a 2,000-year-old UNESCO World Heritage