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Making Sense Of Today's Market Rout

Erik Conley profile picture
Erik Conley
10.14K Followers

Summary

  • Today's 6% drop was the 20th worst out of 17,725 trading days since 1950. How do we make sense of it?
  • We haven't seen a drubbing like this since March 16th, when the market sank 12% on its way to a 34% decline from the peak on February 19th to the trough on March 23rd.
  • There are just too many risks and too many unknowns for the market to continue on its recent upward path.

market instability

Ouch. We haven't seen a drubbing like this since March 16th, when the market sank 12% on its way to a 34% decline from the peak on February 19th to the trough on March 23rd. That 12% drop on March 16th was the second-worst day in 70 years, surpassed only by the 20% free fall on October 19, 1987.

Today's 6% drop was the 20th worst out of 17,725 trading days since 1950. How do we make sense of it?

Popular explanations from the financial media

  • There was an uptick in COVID-19 cases in some states.
  • Fed Chair Powell warned about a slower economic recovery.
  • The market was priced for perfection.
  • Investor sentiment had become too bullish.
  • Volatility had become too quiet.
  • Investors had become complacent.
  • Valuations are too high.
  • The market was overdue for a correction.
  • Some of the big tech leaders were starting to sputter.
  • The rate on the 10-year Treasury Bond was starting to tick higher.
  • The fantastic employment report had some warts on it.

All of the above are true, or at least have a ring of truth to them. Taken together, they make a lot of sense, but they leave me unsatisfied. Most of them were already known, to some extent, by investors as they drove the market higher and higher until Tuesday. That's when the tide turned.

So, what is the explanation for today's historic decline that will satisfy me? That's next.

Over-reliance on the market's ability to see the future

The market has a decent record of looking past bad news and moving higher in anticipation of good news. But in this case, I think the market jumped the gun. The chasm we are facing with the economy, the course of the pandemic, and the recovery of corporate revenue and earnings is far deeper and wider than

This article was written by

Erik Conley profile picture
10.14K Followers
Trader, analyst & portfolio manager, from 1975 - 2001. Former head of equity trading at Northern Trust Co. in Chicago. Now a private investor, founder of a nonprofit investor advocacy firm, and private investing coach. It gives me great satisfaction to teach retail investors the same skills and strategies that I used with my high net worth clients as a private wealth manager. It may be a cliche, but giving something back to the community is more rewarding to me than helping very rich people get even richer.

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