Wild Five Months Leaves Wall Street Split on When Selloff Ends

By Oscarjack 4 Min Read

With stocks rallying as May draws to a close, investors are wondering if the worst of this year’s collapse is over Selloff.

Awful start to 2022 by almost any measure

No doubt, it’s been awful start to 2022 by almost any measure. The S&P 500’s 13% drop so far this year is its biggest since 1970, fueled by recession fears as the Federal Reserve embarks on its most aggressive tightening of monetary policy since 2000 to fight inflation. Rising interest rates dented the allure of technology and growth shares, with the Nasdaq 100’s 22% plunge ranking as its largest ever.

The selloff interrupted a two-year bull run in stocks that began in the depths of the Covid-19 pandemic. But less-hawkish remarks from Fed officials, a resilient American consumer and upbeat corporate earnings have offered investors a ray of hope. That sent the S&P 500 climbing 2.5%, snapping its longest weekly losing streak since 2001.

Historic rout in tech shares

While the historic rout in tech shares is easing somewhat, the Nasdaq 100’s dive from its November peak briefly eclipsed its pandemic selloff in March 2020. Its nearly 30% drop was its worst since the gauge tumbled more than 50% at the height of the global financial crisis. After Friday’s rally, the index is 23% below its Nov. 19 closing record.

Investors have been whiplashed at a pace that hasn’t been seen since 2008. The S&P 500 has moved in a daily range of at least 1% in 89% of the trading sessions in 2022, according to Strategas Securities.

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One group bucking the trend has been the energy sector after oil prices, spurred by the war in Ukraine. That has made energy the stock market’s hottest cohort by far with a 58% gain this year.

Stock market trading

So, is capitulation near? Analysts say there may be more head fakes before stocks hit a final low. But cheaper valuations have started to lure buyers back. Historically, the five previous worst starts to a year for the S&P 500 saw the index higher for the remainder of the year each time, rising on average 19.1% over the ensuing seven months, according to LPL Financial. One caveat, though: Stock market trading and investing have changed drastically since the 1970s, let alone the 1930s.

TANGENT
With markets spooked by fears of slowing economic growth, investors sold off riskier assets including cryptocurrencies, with the price of Bitcoin falling roughly 9% in the last 24 hours to below $36,000, according to data from Coin Metrics.

CRUCIAL QUOTE

“Investors need confidence that the Fed won’t raise [rates] too aggressively and topple the economy into recession in their fight against inflation,” explains John Lynch, chief investment officer at Comerica Wealth Management. “Today’s report is balanced and may prove to dampen the extreme volatility of recent days,” he says, adding, “We’re still not out of the woods, yet a clearing is visible.”

WHAT TO WATCH FOR

Billionaire investor Leon Cooperman, meanwhile, told CNBC on Friday that stocks are “likely to head lower,” predicting that either the “Fed or oil put us in a recession.” Other experts similarly warn of more downside ahead, pointing to several technical indicators that show the market selloff is far from over, as rising rates continue to put pressure on equities.https://ide.geeksforgeeks.org/fd318ab5-bd30-4be7-9022-a98992548cd4
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