Finally, The Stock Market Tanks

 | Feb 26, 2021 12:24PM ET

Surging bond yields continues to weigh on tech stocks. When the 10-year yield pops by 20 basis points to reach a one-year high, that will happen.

Tuesday (Feb. 23) saw the Dow down 360 points at one point, and the Nasdaq down 3% before a sharp reversal that carried to Wednesday (Feb. 24).

Thursday (Feb. 25) was a different story and long overdue.

Overall, the market saw a broad sell-off, with the Dow down over 550 points, the S&P 500 falling 2.45%, the Nasdaq tanking over 3.50%, and seeing its worst day since October, and the small-cap Russell 2000 shedding 3.70%.

Rising bond yields are a blessing and a curse. On the one hand, bond investors see the economy reopening and heating up. On the other hand, with the Fed expected to let the GDP heat up without hiking rates, say welcome back to inflation.

I don’t care what Chairman Jerome Powell says about inflation targets this and that. He can’t expect to keep rates this low, buy bonds, permit money to be printed without a care, and have the economy not overheat.

He may not have a choice but to hike rates sooner than expected. If not this year, then in 2022. I no longer buy all that talk about keeping rates at 0% through 2023. It just can’t happen if bond yields keep popping like this.

This slowdown, namely with the Nasdaq, poses some desirable buying opportunities. The Invesco QQQ Trust (NASDAQ:QQQ) ETF, which tracks the Nasdaq, is down a reasonably attractive 7% since Feb. 12. But there still could be some short-term pressure on stocks.

That correction I’ve been calling for weeks? It may have potentially started, especially for tech. While I don’t foresee a crash like we saw last March and feel that the wheels are in motion for a healthy 2021, I still maintain that some correction before the end of March could happen.

I mean, we’re already about 3% away from an actual correction in the Nasdaq.

also echoed this statement and said: “We expect a buyable 5-10% Q1 correction as the big ‘unknowns’ coincide with exuberant positioning, record equity supply, and as good as it gets’ earnings revisions.”

Look. This has been a rough week. But don’t panic, and look for opportunities. We have a very market-friendly monetary policy, and corrections are more common than most realize.

Corrections are also healthy and normal market behavior, and we are long overdue for one. Only twice in the last 38 years have we had years without a correction (1995 and 2017), and we haven’t seen one in a year.

A correction could also be an excellent buying opportunity for what could be a great second half of the year.

With that said, to sum it up:

While there is long-term optimism, there are short-term concerns. A short-term correction between now and the end of Q1 2021 is possible. I don’t think that a decline above ~20%, leading to a bear market, will happen.

h2 Nasdaq: To Buy Or Not To Buy?/h2
Get The News You Want
Read market moving news with a personalized feed of stocks you care about.
Get The App