Can markets move down as well as up?
Apparently, they can, and in dramatic fashion. As the clock struck noon, Eastern Time, on Wednesday, the Dow was up over one hundred and ten points, and we thought the winning streak was surely going to extend to ten days.
We were wrong!
My first thought, as I watched this sell-off in real time, was that something must be going on in the bond market. I was wrong! Bonds were up on the day and at all points along the yield curve.
So maybe it was Gold? Oil? Nope!
My twenty-third thought was that maybe I missed an economic report or a bad earnings miss, even though earnings come out after the close. No explanation there either. The economic news was pretty good.
We combed through the news after the closing bell, looking for an explanation for such a dramatic selloff, and none was to be found. I think that the market just got ahead of itself over the last couple of weeks and months, and when a little selling started, no buyers were waiting in the wings. We will check all the commentary as the morning wears on, and we will let our readers know in tomorrow's Buzz on Business.
The action in stocks constituted a bearish reversal, a higher high and a lower close is often a signal of more selling to come.
Later this morning, we get jobless claims, the Philly Fed Manufacturing Index, and the first piece of the PCE data. That’s the Fed’s preferred measure of inflation.
We will do what we do if you will do what you do and keep it right here on the Buzz!