Week Ahead: Virus-Driven Selloff Likely Overdone, But Deeper Correction Eyed

 | Jan 26, 2020 08:38AM ET

  • S&P 500, Russell 2000 suffer worst selloff since October
  • Treasurys rise as yields fall to a three-month low
  • Past virus outbreaks had no lasting impact, but after strong equity performance a correction is timely

Risk assets were hit hard at the close of last week's trade, as investors sold off equities on worries that the cornonavirus could spread and outbreaks of the illness might increase globally. Concurrently, safe havens rose.

Oil fell for a fourth straight day, along with yields, as Treasurys and the yen advanced for the same number of sessions. Gold’s move higher was checked by a strengthening dollar.

It’s important, however, to consider that at least some of the virus-motivated selloff—after such a strong stock market performance since the beginning of the year and with new headlines fanning the risk-off flames—is incentivizing greedy investors to hang on to as much of their “hard-earned” profit as possible. While previous viral outbreaks around the world have ultimately not made a significant dent in economic and market performance, considering the forcefulness of the recent rally, investors may be more concerned with keeping their winnings than garnering additional windfalls.

In other words, we can expect a deeper correction in what is still very much an uptrend.

h2 Russell 2000 Underperforms On Domestic Health Worries /h2

All four main U.S. indices—the Dow, S&P 500, NASDAQ and Russell 2000—plummeted on Friday. For the S&P and Russell 2000 it was the worst slump since October.

The tech-heavy NASDAQ lost the most since December. Among the major indices, the Russell 2000 underperformed, plunging 1.49%, the worst drop for the small cap index since Oct. 1, when the domestically benchmark shed 1.97% of its value.

Normally, geopolitical risks benefit domestic firms. However, after U.S. health officials confirmed two cases of coronavirus in the U.S. late last week, (three as of Sunday). Rising anxiety of a negative impact to the economy offset all other market considerations.