Wall Street braces for market response to 800-point freefall

Wall Street braces for market response to 800-point freefall
UPI

Oct. 11 (UPI) — Wall Street could be in for another rough day after it fell more than 800 points Wednesday.

Dow Jones Industrial Average futures fell 300 points in pre-market trading Thursday while S&P 500 futures and NASDAQ 100 were down 1 percent.

Another ominous sign came from the Chicago CBOE Volatility Index — considered a fear gauge for the market — when it climbed to 24.1 points Thursday, its highest level in six months.

The Dow plummeted 831 points to close at 25,598.74 Wednesday — the greatest drop since February and the third worst point decline in history.

Shares of blue chip tech companies like Facebook, Amazon, Apple, Netflix and Google were hardest hit.

“Equity markets were pulverized today as investors remain in full out retreat and even the most pessimistic of equity bears are still in shock by the sheer magnitude of the move,” analyst Stephen Innes said. “This meltdown isn’t just a mild case of the sniffles suggesting the latest sneeze from the U.S. equity markets could morph into a global markets pandemic.”

Innes attributes the selloff to interest rate hikes and the escalating trade war between the United States and China. The tech sector is particularly vulnerable to higher interest rates.

Benchmark indexes in Japan, China, Hong Kong, South Korea and Australia had fallen by early Thursday.

Some investors wonder if this could be the beginning of the end for the bull market, which has run for nearly a decade after the financial crisis.

Cirrus Wealth Management President Joe Heider said the selloff may be a good thing.

“The selloff is healthy,” he said. “Since the market bottomed in March 2009, it’s been nearly 10 years of growth stocks leading the way non-stop.”

R.M. Davis President Geoff Alexander agreed the falling indices could be a good thing — just as long as the U.S. economy keeps growing.

“We’ve scratched our heads about the rise in stocks for the past 18 months,” he said. “But this is nothing to be overly concerned about.”

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