The FANGs led the Nasdaq on the way up and lead again on the way down. Technology shares were hammered close to 5%.
The Wall Street Journal reports Quickening Retreat From Tech Sinks Market.
U.S. stocks suffered their biggest decline in more than seven months Wednesday, as investors accelerated their retreat from fast-growing technology stocks in favor of shares that have been overlooked.
Major indexes have started the fourth quarter on their weakest footing since the beginning of 2016, and the swift fall has some investors wondering if this is a brief stumble or an overdue reckoning for U.S. stocks after months of outperforming global markets.
The rotation out of tech and other growth stocks—among the most popular trades of the year—to so-called safety stocks, such as utilities companies, was sparked in part by the recent jump in government bond yields and the Federal Reserve’s bid to tighten monetary policy.
But there have been other warnings signals that made investors nervous. Recent data has showed a slowdown in both housing and auto sales, both of which are closely watched indicators of U.S. economic health. Even more concerning: trade tensions between the U.S. and China appear to be worsening.
The result: A simultaneous selling of 2018’s biggest stock-market winners.
Moving Averages
Dow < 50DMA
S&P < 100DMA
Nasdaq < 200DMA
Small Caps < 200DMA
Transports < 200DMA
— zerohedge (@zerohedge) October 10, 2018
Leaders Up, Leaders Down
Leaders Up – Leaders Down https://t.co/qEELx3nGyJ
— Mike Mish Shedlock (@MishGEA) October 10, 2018
Feed Me
Feed me Seymour! The S&P 500 is down just 3% from the most obscenely overvalued Fed-engineered yield-seeking speculative peak in the history of the United States, and they’re already blaming Fed the Fed for being too tight. pic.twitter.com/MdCE0nkuNI
— John P. Hussman (@hussmanjp) October 10, 2018