Something snapped in the minds of investors this week. Maybe it was the high valuations on some of the more speculative stocks sporting the NASDAQ. Perhaps, in the search for yield, investors sought the safety of dividend producers on the Dow. Whatever the case, the Dow, this past week, was up 1.41%, while the NASDAQ shed 0.29%. It was a radical shift that appeared, magically, Wednesday morning, when the Dow was trading below 24,000.
In a matter of less than three trading session, the Dow tacked on a whopping 687 points, much of it at the open on Thursday, when the Dow popped higher and stayed well into the green the rest of the day.
Skeptics of the market will point to the radical rise on Wednesday and Thursday as proof of manipulation, or even - everybody's favorite word this season - collusion, by central banks and their ancillary brokers, to boost the share prices of the staid and steady heavy industrials. Such speculation cannot be bought off easily in this environment. It's apparent to just about everybody that the Federal Reserve and their counterparts in Japan, China, and the European Union will not stomach a severe downturn, at least not at this time. The bull market is just a few trading days from becoming the longest in American history, something the head honchos at the Fed wish to pin on their beanies before they ride triumphantly into some economic sunset.
The shifting sentiment was stunning, however. As the Dow soared, the NASDAQ soured. Many of the grand tech bonanza stocks like Netflix (NFLX) and Telsa (TSLA) were down hard for the week. Netflix dropped nearly 10%, from 345 per share to 316 at the close of business Friday. From its peak just a month ago (July 11), Netflix is down more than 100 points.
Tesla is another story altogether. The darling little electric engine that could is rapidly approaching bear territory, down to 305 at the close Friday from 379 on August 7, a span of just nine trading sessions.
Facebook, everybody's favorite ranting and raving lunatic asylum, is already in bear territory, dropping from a high of 217.50 on July 25, to a close of 173.80 Friday afternoon. That's precisely a 20.1% decline. Be sure to post to your friends, family, and anybody who gives a hoot, rat's behind, or beaver dam.
None dare call is collusion, so maybe collision is the correct word for what happened on Wall Street this week. It was nothing short of a collision of rational thinking and emotional yield-chasing.
Next week may be more or less intriguing, but after Labor Day, this market is going to become very interesting indeed.
Dow Jones Industrial Average August Scorecard:
Date | Close | Gain/Loss | Cum. G/L |
8/1/18 | 25,333.82 | -81.37 | -81.37 |
8/2/18 | 25,326.16 | -7.66 | -89.03 |
8/3/18 | 25,462.58 | +136.42 | +55.05 |
8/6/18 | 25,502.18 | +39.60 | +94.65 |
8/7/18 | 25,628.91 | +126.73 | +221.38 |
8/8/18 | 25,583.75 | -45.16 | +176.22 |
8/9/18 | 25,509.23 | -74.52 | +101.70 |
8/10/18 | 25,313.14 | -196.09 | -94.39 |
8/13/18 | 25,187.70 | -125.44 | -219.83 |
8/14/18 | 25,299.92 | +112.22 | -107.61 |
8/15/18 | 25,162.41 | -137.51 | -245.12 |
8/16/18 | 25,558.73 | +396.32 | +151.20 |
8/17/18 | 25,669.32 | +110.59 | +261.79 |
At the Close, Friday, August 17, 2018:
Dow Jones Industrial Average: 25,669.32, +110.59 (+0.43%)
NASDAQ: 7,816.33, +9.81 (+0.13%)
S&P 500: 2,850.13, +9.44 (+0.33%)
NYSE Composite: 12,908.26, +66.98 (+0.52%)
For the Week:
Dow: +356.18 (+1.41%)
NASDAQ: -22.78 (-0.29%)
S&P 500: +16.85 (+0.59%)
NYSE Composite: +64.77 (+0.50%)
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