Treat with caution: rocketing stocks aren't cause for
comfort
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[March 25, 2020] By
Saqib Iqbal Ahmed and April Joyner
NEW YORK (Reuters) - Those pining for a
bottom to the gut-wrenching stock market selloff may be disappointed to
learn that mega one-day rallies like the historic one witnessed on
Tuesday are typically not the start of a durable recovery.
U.S. stocks, that recently entered a bear market - a fall of 20% or more
from recent highs - rebounded strongly on Tuesday after U.S. lawmakers
said they were close to a deal for an economic rescue package in
response to the coronavirus outbreak, injecting optimism to a market
grappling with its biggest selloff since the financial crisis.
The Dow Jones Industrial Average <.DJI> soared 11.37%, its largest
one-day percentage gain since 1933, while the S&P 500 <.SPX> jumped
9.38% to 2,447.33, its biggest one-day percentage rise since 2008.
All the same, data suggest investors should treat the rally in stocks
with caution.
Of the twenty past instances when the S&P rallied 8% or more on a single
day, thirteen of them took place when stocks were in the embrace of a
bear market.
"These 8% rallies are not necessarily signs of health," said Christopher
Murphy, co-head of derivatives at Susquehanna Financial Group.
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In a note on Tuesday, Murphy wrote, "It is important to remember that some of
the largest one‐day rallies in SPX's history took place during bear markets,
implying that one day pops are not uncommon in a down market."
Nor are such sharp rallies a herald of better days.
In 2008, for instance, the two biggest gains during the market crash that fall,
both in October 2008, were actually followed by five more months of double-digit
declines, data showed.
"You can't take this bounce and say that (the market) will turn around next week
or the week after," said Quincy Krosby, chief market strategist at Prudential
Financial in Newark, New Jersey.
A lot will depend on whether monetary and fiscal response can stave off a
prolonged downturn, Krosby said.
Going by history, those looking to time the end of the bear market should be
more encouraged by days when investors take modest bites at risky assets rather
than great big mouthfuls.
In 2009, the bull market was born with a 6.4% up day for the S&P 500. In
2002/2003 the recovery began with 3% up days.
(Reporting by Saqib Iqbal Ahmed and April Joyner; Additional reporting by Dan
Burns; editing by Megan Davies & Shri Navaratnam)
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