Wall Street plunges, S&P 500 erases
2018's gains
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[February 06, 2018]
By Lewis Krauskopf
(Reuters) - U.S. stocks plunged in highly
volatile trading on Monday, with both the S&P 500 and Dow Industrials
indices slumping more than 4.0 percent, as the Dow notched its biggest
intraday decline in history with a nearly 1,600-point drop and Wall
Street erased its gains for the year.
The declines for the benchmark S&P 500 index and the Dow Jones
Industrial Average were the biggest single-day percentage drops since
August 2011, a period of stock-market volatility marked by the downgrade
of the United States' credit rating and the euro zone debt crisis.
The question now for investors, who have ridden a nearly nine-year bull
run, is whether this is the long-awaited pullback that paves the way for
stocks to again keep rising after finding some value, or the start of a
decline that leads to a bear market.
"A lot of people who have been in this market for the past three or four
years have never seen this before,” said Dennis Dick, a proprietary
trader at Bright Trading LLC in Las Vegas. “The psychology of the market
changed today. It’ll take a while to get that psychology back.”

After regular trading hours on Monday, S&P 500 E-mini stock futures rose
0.73 percent, suggesting some traders expect Wall Street to open with a
gain on Tuesday.
Bulls argue that strong U.S. corporate earnings, including a boost from
the Trump administration's tax cuts, will ultimately support market
valuations. Bears, including short sellers that bet on the market
decline, say that the market is over-stretched in the context of rising
bond yields as central banks withdraw their easy money policies of
recent years.
The U.S. stock market has climbed to record peaks since President Donald
Trump's election, on the prospect of tax cuts, corporate deregulation
and infrastructure spending, and it remains up 23.8 percent since his
victory. Trump has frequently taken credit for the rise of the stock
market during his presidency, though the rally and economic recovery was
well underway during the Obama administration.
As the stock market fell on Monday, the White House said the
fundamentals of the U.S. economy are strong. U.S. economic growth was
running at a 2.6 annualized rate in the fourth quarter last year and the
unemployment rate is at a 17-year low of 4.1 percent.
On Monday, the financial, healthcare and industrial sectors fell the
most, but declines were spread broadly as all major 11 S&P sectors
dropped at least 1.7 percent. All 30 of the blue-chip Dow industrial
components finished negative.
With Monday's declines, the S&P 500 erased its gains for 2018 and is now
down 0.9 percent in 2018. The Dow is down 1.5 percent for the year.
The market's pullback comes amid concerns about rising bond yields and
higher inflation which were reinforced by Friday's January U.S. jobs
report that prompted worries the Federal Reserve will raise rates at a
faster pace than expected this year.

"The market has had an incredible run," said Michael O’Rourke, chief
market strategist At JonesTrading In Greenwich, Connecticut.
"We have an environment where interest rates are rising. We have a
stronger economy so the Fed should continue to tighten ... You're seeing
real changes occur and different investments are adjusting to that,"
O'Rourke said.
The Dow Jones Industrial Average fell 1,175.21 points, or 4.6 percent,
to 24,345.75, the S&P 500 lost 113.19 points, or 4.10 percent, to
2,648.94 and the Nasdaq Composite dropped 273.42 points, or 3.78
percent, to 6,967.53.
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Traders work on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange, (NYSE) in
New York, U.S., February 5, 2018. REUTERS/Brendan McDermid

On Monday, the S&P 500 ended 7.8 percent down from its record high
on Jan. 26, with the Dow down 8.5 percent over that time. The
declines come after the Dow and S&P posted their biggest weekly
percentage drops since January 2016 last week, and the Nasdaq posted
its biggest weekly drop since February 2016.
At one point, the Dow fell 6.3 percent or 1,597 points, the biggest
one-day points loss ever. Even with the sharp declines, stocks
finished above their lows touched during the session.
"It doesn’t look like people are working their orders – the programs
are trading this," Dan Ryan, who works on the New York Stock
Exchange floor for E&J Securities, said as he was leaving work for
the day.
Investors also unloaded riskier corporate bonds during the Wall
Street stock market rout. Exchange-traded funds that focus on junk
bonds suffered a third day of losses. BlackRock’s iShares iBoxx High
Yield Corporate Bond ETF, which has about $16 billion in assets,
fell 0.6 percent to its lowest share price since December 2016.
The CBOE Volatility index, the closely followed measure of expected
near-term stock market volatility, jumped 20 points to 30.71, its
highest level since August 2015.
“One thing is that going into the last week or so, investor
bullishness was in the top decile of its historical range, which
suggests that investors were pretty optimistic, with high
expectations and largely complacent," said Jack Ablin, chief
investment officer with Cresset Wealth Advisors in Chicago. "There’s
kind of an emotional reversal that’s going on.”

About 11.5 billion shares changed hands in U.S. exchanges on Monday,
well above the 7.6 billion daily average over the last 20 sessions.
Declining issues outnumbered advancing ones on the NYSE by a
8.64-to-1 ratio; on Nasdaq, a 6.92-to-1 ratio favored decliners.
The S&P 500 posted 1 new 52-week highs and 38 new lows; the Nasdaq
Composite recorded 17 new highs and 164 new lows.
(Additional reporting by Michael Erman, Richard Leong, Kate Duguid,
Megan Davies, Sinead Carew, Caroline Valetkevitch, and Chuck
Mikolajczak in New York, Noel Randewich in San Francisco and Tanya
Agrawal in Bengaluru; Editing by Arun Koyyur, Nick Zieminski and
Clive McKeef)
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