March 9 through March 13, 2020Euro Trader P. M4Emerging Markets P. M4Commodities P. M6Striking Price P. M7Inside Scoop P. M813D Filings P. M8Power Play P. M8Charting the Market P. M9Winners & Losers P. M10Research Reports P. M11Market View P. M12Statistics P. M1321,185.62
52-wk:-10.30%YTD:-18.76%Wkly:-10.36%Dow Jones Industrials2711.02
S&P 50052-wk:-3.95%YTD:-16.09%Wkly:-8.79%7874.88
Nasdaq Composite52-wk:+2.42%YTD:-12.23%Wkly:-8.17%241.29
S&P 500 Energy (Sector)52-wk:-50.23%YTD:-47.14%Wkly:-24.28%2/12/2020 19 Days8/25/1987 38 Days9/3/1929 43 Days1/14/2000 417 Days1/11/1973 220 Days1/19/1906 347 Days12/13/1961 114 Days2/9/1966 134 Days6/17/1901 144 Days10/9/2007 184 Days11/21/1916 59 Days7/16/1990 62 Days11/3/1919 77 Days9/5/1899 84 Days0 15 30 45 60 75 90 105 120 135 150 165 180 195 210 225 240 255 270 285 300 315 330 345 360 375 390 405 420 435ALL TIME HIGH TO ENTER BEAR MARKET IN DAYS Source: Dow Jones Market DataMARKET PERFORMANCE DASHBOARD
TheDowplungedfromitsall-timehightoabearmarket
in just 19 days, the fastest such decline on record.
The Fastest Fall
To Bear Territory
THE TRADER
What to Do
Now That
We’ve Had
AMarket
Panic
T
his is what a market
panic feels like. But
now that the storm
has made landfall,
it’s time for un-
nerved investors to
sort out a few
things: What just happened, why did it
happen, and, most important, what
should they do next. The pros have
some advice: Don’t be too cautious.
What just happened? The coronavi-
rus was declared a pandemic by the
World Health Organization. Saudi Ara-
bia announced a huge output increase,
sending oil prices plunging. Forrest
Gump contracted the coronavirus.
There are no basketball scores to
check. Baseball won’t start on time this
spring. And President Donald Trump
declared a national emergency on Fri-
day after announcing a European
travel ban on Wednesday.
Investors had a brutal week. All
three major U.S. indexes fell into bear-
market territory, ending an 11-year
bull market in U.S. stocks.
The Dow Jones Industrial Average
fell 2,679 points, or 10.4%, to
23,185.62. The S&P 500 dropped
8.8%, to 2711.02, and the Nasdaq
Composite dropped 8.2%, to 7874.88.
It was one of the 20 worst weeks of all
time for the Dow. The weekly Dow
drop came despite an epic 1,985-point
rally on Friday.
The numbers are breathtaking.
They will be talked about by our chil-
dren’s children.
“This stinks, it’s horrible, we hate
it,” Bill Smead of Smead Capital tells
Barron’s, reflecting on the recent trad-
ing action. Unmitigated selling pres-
sure causes a panic. No one likes a
panic, but stock-market history is
dotted with them.
“Most of the clients we speak to
don’t feel like they are panicking,”
says RBC head of U.S. equity strategy
Lori Calvasina. That might be true,
but that is the nature of a market
panic. No one suggests people act
against their own economic self-inter-
est. But in a panic, the buy orders dry
up. Traders step back because of ex-
treme volatility. That leaves, essen-
tially, an imbalance of sell orders.
There are, of course, new risks for
investors to discount. Some, like a pan-
demic, are hard to understand. If inves-
By Al Root