Week Ahead: U.S. Stocks Enter Correction Territory; Room For A Bounce Next?

 | Mar 01, 2020 07:09AM ET

  • Sharpest selloff since financial crisis
  • Rate cut likely, but to limited effect
  • Gold plunge signifies irrational market
  • Pessimism that a recovery in the global economy will not be able to withstand the global spread of coronavirus, provoked the worst weekly sell-off in U.S. equities since the 2008 crash. U.S. markets lost $3.6 trillion in value last week as investors fled to a small group of safer havens.

    Demand for the Japanese yen and Treasurys increased, while both the dollar and gold sold off.

    h2 Enduring Negativity Loop?/h2

    The S&P 500, Dow Jones and Russell 2000 all closed lower on Friday, though the NASDAQ managed to eke out a small gain; nevertheless, each of the major U.S. indices slumped into correction territory as the trading week came to a close.

    Stocks dropped for the seventh straight day on Friday, with the S&P plunging 12.6 percent. The Dow Jones Industrial Average plummeted 14%, to its lowest level since June. The NASDAQ dropped 12.5%, and the Russell 2000 was down 13%. By Thursday, American equities had already fallen more than 10%, the official figure for a slide to be considered a correction.

    We've written repeatedly about there being "room for a correction." With that prediction fulfilled, the technicals are now indicating there could be a bounce, at least in the short-term.