Eq: Total Market

(New York)

Stocks are in a very dark place right now. At the bottom last week, indexes had seen a 15% fall. What comes next is the big question. Have we seen bottom, or are we settling in for a long period of weakness? Analysts from BNY Mellon say you should not buy stocks until you see a certain signal. That signal is clarity on when the virus threat might be abating. “If you think it is essentially a short-term problem, a hit to growth, but then it is over by the summer, then you’re fine going into the market. But if you think it is worse than that, then you have to play that out”.


FINSUM: Here is our view—coronavirus is unlike the other threats indexes have seen since the Crisis. This is not something that can go away instantly (like rate fears), and not something in the Fed’s control. It is an ongoing threat that creates uncertainty. Because of this, worries could linger and stock prices could stay lower for some time.

(New York)

Global and US stocks are teetering on the brink of a major correction right now. US indexes fell around 3.5% and fears over the spread of coronavirus and its impact on the economy continue to rattle the psyche of markets. One analyst summarized the deepening fears of the virus’ potential impact this way, saying “When countries are closing borders, the threat of an outbreak is becoming more pronounced in Europe and the Middle East and supply chains are just going to be more disrupted, how do we model risk when we can’t even model economics with any confidence?”.


FINSUM: There was an early morning bounce in Asian markets that fizzled. The news today is not any better than yesterday. It is easy to imagine the bottom temporary falling out of markets.

(New York)

Stock across the developed world went into freefall today as news spread of the explosion of the coronavirus in Europe and the subsequent quarantine that has been put in place in Northern Italy. Additionally, US data shows business activity contracted for the first time in four years in February. The S&P 500 and Dow are both down about 3.4% at the time of writing.


FINSUM: The virus is now no longer contained to China, with Italy sporting 150 cases and three deaths. Chip companies, travel and tech are getting hit the hardest.

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