Wednesday, February 26, 2020
US Stocks Crashing -- Coronavirus wipes out 17 Trillion in 2 Days
US Stocks Crashing -- Coronavirus wipes out 17 Trillion in 2 Days
Coronavirus wipes out $1.7 trillion in US stock market value in two days. The S&P 500 lost an estimated $1.737 trillion in value in two days, according to S&P Dow Jones Indices’ Senior Index Analyst Howard Silverblatt. Stocks cratered again on Tuesday as investors fled riskier assets amid intense fears about a slowdown in global growth caused by the deadly coronavirus. The Nasdaq Composite fell 2.8% on Tuesday and joined the S&P 500 and Dow Jones Industrial Average in turning negative for the year. The S&P 500 just wiped out about $1.737 trillion of its value during its two-day market sell-off, according to S&P Dow Jones Indices. The equity benchmark lost $810 billion in value on Tuesday, adding to its $927 billion loss on Monday, according to the firm’s Senior Index Analyst Howard Silverblatt. It’s down $2.138 trillion since last Wednesday’s high, according to S&P Dow Jones. Stocks cratered again on Tuesday as investors fled riskier assets amid intense fears about a slowdown in global growth caused by the deadly coronavirus. The S&P 500′s two-day loss of 6.3% was the largest for the benchmark since August 2015, when the Chinese government devalued the yuan amid the U.S.-China trade war. Tuesday’s 900 point drop in the Dow Jones Industrial Average added to Monday’s stunning 1,000 point plunge. The Nasdaq Composite fell 2.8% on Tuesday and joined the S&P 500 and Dow in turning negative for the year. Bond yields also plunged as investor sought safer havens. The yield on the benchmark 10-year Treasury note fell to a record low of 1.32%. The Dow Jones Industrial Average (DJIA) looked set to rebound from yesterday’s devastating crash. But after rallying nearly 200 points, the index lurched back into decline. Here’s why the stock market suddenly plunged back into crash mode. After yesterday’s 1,000 point Dow Jones Industrial Average (DJIA) rout, stock market bulls salivated over what they thought was the perfect time to buy the dip. But a half-hearted recovery quickly collapsed. And by midday, greedy investors had gone from licking their chops to licking their wounds as the stock market spiraled toward even steeper losses. dow jones industrial average crash Investors are taking the threat of coronavirus far more seriously now that the CDC has begun to outline containment procedures. | Source: Johannes EISELE / AFP The Dow Jones Industrial Average (DJIA) looked set to rebound from yesterday’s devastating crash. But after rallying nearly 200 points, the index lurched back into decline. Here’s why the stock market suddenly plunged back into crash mode. After yesterday’s 1,000 point Dow Jones Industrial Average (DJIA) rout, stock market bulls salivated over what they thought was the perfect time to buy the dip. But a half-hearted recovery quickly collapsed. And by midday, greedy investors had gone from licking their chops to licking their wounds as the stock market spiraled toward even steeper losses. dow jones industrial average chart today Stock market bulls went from licking their chops to licking their wounds as the Dow Jones lurched toward further losses on Tuesday. | Source: Yahoo Finance Why The Dow Jones Crash Just Got Worse The unexpected pullback vindicated economist Mohamed El-Erian, who had warned investors to “resist” the urge to succumb to FOMO and “simply buy the dip.” He told CNBC: I would say continue to resist, as hard as that is, to simply buy the dip because it has worked in the past. Advertisement That was wise advice, especially in retrospect. But what sent the Dow and broader stock market back into decline? Just like on Monday, the answer lay in the coronavirus outbreak’s ongoing spread outside of China. More than 80,000 cases have been confirmed worldwide, including just under 1,000 in South Korea, more than 280 in Italy, and 53 in the United States. President Donald Trump may claim that the U.S. has the coronavirus under control, but health experts and stock market strategists are less confident in the administration’s assessment. The spreading deadly virus, that has infected more than 80,000 and killed more than 2,700, has sent shock waves through the markets. Companies like Apple, Nike, United Airlines and Mastercard have all raised flags about the coronavirus and its impact on their earnings. Chip stocks, which rely heavily on revenues from China, are being abandoned by Wall Street as it becomes more apparent supply chain disruption will persist until the epidemic is contained. Health officials at the Centers for Disease Control said Tuesday the coronavirus is “likely” to continue to spread throughout the United States and the American public should “prepare for the expectation that this is going to be bad.” This follows news on Monday about a spike in cases in other countries in Asia, the Middle East and Europe, outside the virus’s epicenter in China. Investors are closely watching reports in Italy, Iran and South Korea. Top White House economic advisor Larry Kudlow said that the U.S. economy is “holding up nicely” and that the coronavirus in this country is “pretty close to air-tight’ containment.
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MARC FABER NEWS
Moneycontrol.com | Dr. Doom? Marc Faber Sees Stock Buying Opportunity CNBC.com The dean of doom, Marc Faber, told CNBC on Tuesday that a variety of asset classes—including equities—may be worth buying for short-term gains. In the midst of market volatility on concerns over Federal Reserve tapering, he said, "Treasury bonds ... Marc Faber Marc Faber aka Dr. Doom: S&P 500 Index Could Fall 20% To 30% Easily Dr Doom warns stocks are oversold but S&P readies for another drop |
Marc Faber Forecasts 30% Stock Market Crash, Says Buy Gold The Market Oracle The Fed's 'tapering' comments have ramped up market volatilaty and Faber gives some advice for short and long-term strategies. For example: ""The best course of action is to actually not buy anything, but rather to reduce positions on a rebound," Faber ... |
Marc Faber: Bull in the short term, bear in the long term MarketWatch (blog) ... so perhaps it's best left to someone who has historically said “sell.” Marc Faber, author of the ”The Gloom, Boom & Doom Report,” and often called “Dr. Doom” because of his bearish sentiment, says there are buying opportunities — at least in the ... |
Business Insider | Marc Faber: Gold a possible canary in the deflation coalmine MarketWatch (blog) Here's what Marc Faber, editor of Gloom Boom Doom report told MarketWatch in an email. “Maybe gold is signaling a deflationary collapse of all asset prices. If this were indeed the case I suppose I would rather own gold than government bonds, high ... MARC FABER: The Way Things Are Going, Bernanke Will Have To Give Us 96 ... "Incredibly Bad Sentiment" Makes Gold & Bonds a Buy Says Marc Faber, as All ... “Sentiment on Gold and Bonds Incredibly Negative” – Marc Faber Predicts ... |
Marc Faber Sees Further Downside CNBC.com China's factory output weakened to a 9-month low today, and financials saw a huge sell-off today, with the FM traders; and The Gloom, Boom and Doom Report's Marc Faber, shares his economic outlook. There's plenty of room for the stock market to decline ... Marc Faber: More S&P downside, commodities 'horrible'…except gold |
Marc Faber says 'thanks' to Bernanke MarketWatch (blog) [An earlier version of this blog mistakenly attributed the comments to Marc Faber's blog. The original comments were made in an interview with Barron's on June 1. The comments were picked up Tuesday in a tracking blog that aggregates Faber's public ... |
Dr. Doom Marc Faber: Don't Bet on New Market Highs CNBC.com Faber said large cap stocks like McDonald's, Coca-Cola, Procter & Gamble and Wal-Mart "have most likely peaked." However, he thinks there are still stocks that show strength that could continue to appreciate "because all the money flows into fewer and ... |
Marc Faber Is Glad He Owned Stocks, Even As He Warned Everyone Of Stock ... Business Insider "People with assets are all doomed, because prices are grossly inflated globally for stocks, bonds, and collectibles," says the investment advisor in a new interview published in this week's Barron's. But Faber is the first to admit that at least the ... |
Marc Faber notes liquidity squeeze depressing stocks but still buying gold Gold Seek Famously contrarian in his approach, Dr. Faber is usually out of step with Wall Street but has an excellent reputation for calling the major market turns. He does not say he is shorting equities, though he notes emerging market equities and currencies ... |
Cheerful Thoughts from Marc Faber BullionVault SWISS-BORN Marc Faber, who at age 24 earned his PhD. in economics magna cum laude from the University of Zurich, has lived in Hong Kong nearly 40 years. He worked in New York, Zurich and Hong Kong for White Weld & Co., an investment bank ... |
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