The Dow and the S&P 500 Are on the Brink of a Bear Market

Discussion in 'Wall St. News' started by dealmaker, Mar 11, 2020.

  1. dealmaker

    dealmaker

    The Dow and the S&P 500 Are on the Brink of a Bear Market
    By Nicholas Jasinski
    Updated March 9, 2020 7:59 pm ET / Original March 9, 2020 3:52 pm ET

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    4 p.m.:Monday’s market selloff deepened in the afternoon, pushing U.S. indexes to the edge of a bear market, signifying a 20% decline from their recent high-water mark. The Dow Jones Industrial Average closed down 2014 points, or 7.8%, the S&P 500 lost 7.6%, and the Nasdaq Composite fell 7.3%.

    Each index was slightly off its lowest levels of the day, but still registered its largest one-day loss since the financial crisis in 2008. The market had lost much of the ground regained in a modest upswing that followed a 15-minute trading halt in the morning.

    MORE COVERAGE
    It has been a lightning-fast fall from the latest record highs for the S&P 500 and the Nasdaq Composite, reached Feb. 19, as the novel form of coronavirus—referred to as Covid-19—has begun to spread faster and wider in countries outside of China.

    These are the levels that would signify a move into bear territory for each index:

    • Dow Jones Industrial Average record high (Feb. 12): 29,551.42
    • Monday’s close: 23,851.02
    • Bear market: Below 23,641.14

    • S&P 500 record high (Feb. 19): 3386.15
    • Monday’s close: 2746.56
    • Bear market: Below 2708.92

    • Nasdaq Composite record high (Feb. 19): 9817.18
    • Monday’s close: 7950.68
    • Bear market: Below 7853.74

    Down, Down, DownPerformance since Feb. 19 highsSource: FactSet
    %Dow Jones IndustrialAverageNASDAQ CompositeIndexS&P 500 IndexFeb. 22Feb. 26March 3March 9-20-15-10-50NASDAQ Composite IndexxFeb 27, 2020x-12.7%
    Investors abandoned stocks and any other risky assets for havens like U.S. government debt, gold, the Japanese yen, and the Swiss franc.

    All 11 S&P 500 sectors were down on Monday, led by energy’s 20% tumble. Any stocks considered cyclical were sharply lower: Financials ended down 11%, and industrials and materials were both off over 9%. Defensive stocks—those seen as better able to weather harder times in the economy—were relatively better. Consumer staples closed down 4.4% and health care and utilities both lost slightly over 5%.

    Read Next:The Dow Had Its Worst Week Since 2008. Where to Find Cash-Rich Stocks in the Coronavirus Selloff.

    The price of Brent crude oil, the main international price benchmark, tumbled 24.1%, to $34.36 a barrel—its lowest level since 2016—after Saudi Arabia deeply cut prices for oil it sells abroad in a bid to win market share from Russia and other producers. West Texas Intermediate, the U.S. benchmark, dropped 24.6%, to $31.13.

    A flurry of buying in government bonds sent the yield on the 10-year Treasury below 0.4% on Monday morning. It recovered slightly to 0.499% by the close, still an all-time low close and marking the13th straight day of declining yields. That is the longest streak on record.

    Gold prices gained about 0.2%, and the U.S. dollar declined almost 3% versus the yen. The Cboe Volatility Index, or VIX—a measure of market volatility—jumped to its highest level since 2008, to close up 30%, at about 55.

    The STOXX Europe 600 Index closed in a bear market Monday, after falling 7.4%. The index is off 21.8% from its Feb. 19 record high. Back in the U.S., the small-cap Russell 2000 index also close in a bear market on Monday, down 9.4%.

    That there will be a meaningful negative economic impact from the spreading outbreak is now undeniable. A quarter of Italy’s population is quarantined. Travel, hospitality, and tourism industries are seeing business evaporate. New York has declared a state of emergency and Covid-19 is appearing in more areas across the U.S.—although the pace of testing remains well behind those in other nations. Globally, there are more than 105,000 confirmed cases and nearly 3,600 deaths in over 100 countries.

    Closings of factories mean lost manufacturing output and supply-chain disruptions. Demand for products and services suffers when public places such as shopping areas are closed, and when governments limit or discourage travel.

    No one can predict how far the virus will spread or how long until it’s under control. Add to that a price war in global oil markets, and the uncertainty is translating into a “sell first, ask questions later” attitude on Wall Street.

    Write to Nicholas Jasinski at nicholas.jasinski@barrons.com
     
  2. S2007S

    S2007S

  3. murray t turtle likes this.
  4. S2007S

    S2007S


    Small caps are just way down. Could easily see the Russell 2000 below 1000
     
    murray t turtle likes this.
  5. Modern conventional jargon describes a bear market as -20% from high... but that's not a good yard stick.

    Bear markets are about long lasting-ish (10-18 months?), relentless downside pressure on prices and the negative psychology which accompanies.

    Technically a bear market will be here when the prior most significant low is not only broken, but holds and perhaps acts as resistance in bounce back attempts. That significant low at this time is the December, 2018 low according to my Magic 8-Ball.
     
  6. Small caps often lead big moves... both directions.
     
  7. trdes

    trdes

    Should I go short once we "confirm" were in a bear market?
     
    murray t turtle likes this.
  8. Based on many decades of living this scenario, the market is at the point of demarcation determining Bull versus Bear market.
    If we have a monthly closing candle on March 31st, -1.5% below (or greater) the 40 month moving average (brown line), this technical measurement has lead to a Bear Market every time in the last several decades (Notice the battle going on at that technical point currently).
    If March doesn't close as mentioned above, the Bull Market is still intact until the technical condition above has been meet at the conclusion of any month.

    [S&P500 for March 10, 2020, 5 years, monthly candles, 40ma]
    [​IMG]
     
    ironchef and murray t turtle like this.
  9. trdes

    trdes

    Right, but we've had weeks of pretty obvious selling to take advantage of. I see everyone talking about entering a bear market, but that is for the most part a general main stream consensus with generally everyone agreeing on a relatively close percentage decline.

    If this is for entertainment purpose only, than no need to answer. Otherwise I am genuinely curious how is this information helping you to make money? Are you going to start shorting once we "officially" enter a bear market? or now do you sell your longs and look to re-enter lower?

    Or in other words what would you or are you advising yourself to do once this "officially" occurs?
     
    murray t turtle likes this.
  10. %%
    Mostly agree;
    except DOW/DIA, [which is weaker than SPY/S&P 500+ QQQ] closed+ kept closing below 200day moving average.
    And has been closing below 200dma all FEB.....
    So [-20%] and a 200dma are useful for bear measures also .
    YOUR monthly charts are very useful+ I use them myself.BUT with low or no commissions, weeklys, help me more...............................Most likely Jim Rogers is right this week on buying + media hype on virus;[ except for DAL+ LUV sector]
     
    #10     Mar 11, 2020