In sporting terms, the main indices would have been swept in a best-of-seven series and Monday's trading just an exhibition.
To illustrate how benign Monday's rally was, a look back from the prior highs proves instructive.
Beginning with the close of business on September 2, here are the losses for the major indices (including Monday's gains):
Dow: -1,516.44
NASDAQ: -938.91
S&P 500: -229.24
NYSE: -599.20
While those losses are not extreme, they are nonetheless significant. On a purely technical basis, stocks were severely oversold entering Monday's session and stock traders responded as they always do - especially on Mondays - by buying what are perceived to be undervalued stocks. Sadly, there are no undervalued stocks available, only stocks that appear to be undervalued relative to the rest of the market, which is absolute garbage.
A handful of stocks - particularly the FAANMGs on the NASDAQ - account for most of the trading and movement in the indices. The vast bulk of stocks go nowhere or vacillate between uncertain highs and lows, gaining with the high tides, falling on the ebbing.
Thus, it would not be surprising if Monday's rally was a one-day wonder, lacking directional follow-through on subsequent trading days. Anybody believing that stocks are poised to break through recent all-time highs (S&P and NASDAQ) is failing to read the economic tea leaves properly. The global economy has been severely damaged by the effects of government response to the coronavirus over the past six months and it appears that "officials" are looking for a second round of knockdown lockouts and assorted stupidity that accompanies a virus that has an infection mortality rate of less than 0.01. In other words, the chances of dying from COVID-19, once contracted, are less than 1 in 1000 for anybody under the age of 70, and many times greater than that the younger a person is. That is according to the CDC, which published the data a few days ago.
However, increased testing is leading once again to an increase of infection. The mainstream media is currently blaring about the Midwest, including the states of Minnesota, Montana, Oregon, South Dakota, Utah, Wisconsin and Wyoming. Minnesota and Utah having seen cases increase over the past week.
Bearing in mind that the tests return massive amounts of false positives, most "cases" result in either no or mild cold-like symptoms, the 58,461 new cases recorded on Friday across the US - even if believable - will eventually result in the death of less than 58 people, or less than the number of people murdered in Chicago over the course of an ordinary two weeks.
The message the media should be offering is not for people to wear masks, but to avoid bad neighborhoods in Chicago or refrain from traveling there altogether. Ditto for New York, Seattle, Detroit, Baltimore, etc.
In any case, the word is out that the feared "second wave" of the virus is coming. Already, California's Governor Newsom is warning and restrictions on travel, gatherings and businesses are already being re-introduced across parts of Europe.
The government/media/medical cartel of lunatics will have their way. A second wave is guaranteed, whether it is real or imagined, true or fake, and it will wreak further havoc on the global economy.
Count on it. Act (and trade) accordingly.
At the Close, Monday, September 28, 2020:
Dow: 27,584.06, +410.10 (+1.51%)
NASDAQ: 11,117.53, +203.96 (+1.87%)
S&P 500: 3,351.60, +53.14 (+1.61%)
NYSE: 12,677.54, +192.16 (+1.54%)
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