https://wallstreetonparade.com/2024/08/nikkei-has-biggest-drop-in-history-heres-whats-causing-the-global-market-selloff/


By Pam Martens and Russ Martens: August 5, 2024 ~

Japan’s Nikkei stock market index fell a stunning 4,451.28 points in
overnight trading, marking the worst tumble in point terms in the entire
history of the Nikkei. In percentage terms, that was a one-day trading loss
of 12.4 percent.

Dow futures took their cue from the selloff in overnight foreign markets
and tumbled a breathtaking 1200 points by 8:26 a.m. in New York. When the
market actually opened at 9:30 a.m. the Dow had shaved off 1,167 points in
the opening five minutes. As of 9:40 a.m., the Nasdaq had lost 819.8 points
or 4.89 percent.

Japanese traders were spooked by the sharp selloffs in U.S. markets on
Thursday and Friday of last week, which were ushered in by bad economic
data as well as the potential for a broader war in the Middle East.

On Thursday the Dow Jones Industrial Average fell 494.82 points or 1.2
percent while Nasdaq almost doubled that decline with a loss of 2.3
percent. The S&P 500 index closed with a loss of 1.4 percent.

Thursday’s selloff was fueled by the Institute for Supply Management (ISM)
report that its measure of manufacturing activity had slumped to an
eight-month low for the month of July, falling to 46.8 from a 48.5 level in
June. A reading below 50 indicates a contracting manufacturing sector.

The reading cast more doubt on the Fed’s decision on Wednesday to hold
steady on its high interest rates – pushing off the possibility of a Fed
rate cut until September and raising the stakes for a full-blown recession
in the U.S.

The markets were further unnerved on Friday morning at 8:30 a.m. when the
monthly non-farm payroll report from the Labor Department’s Bureau of Labor
Statistics (BLS) brought further hints of a recession. Non-farm payrolls
had increased in July by a meager 114,000 – far below the average of
215,000 per month over the prior 12 months.

Friday’s economic data sent stock markets into another tailspin with the
Dow losing 610.7 points or 1.51 percent; Nasdaq tumbling 417.9 points or
2.43 percent; and the S&P 500 (SPX) down 100.12 points or 1.84 percent by
the closing bell.

The sharp two-day selloff in stocks sent traders into the safe-havens of
gold and the 10-year U.S. Treasury note. As money moved into the 10-year
U.S. Treasury note, its price moved higher with a concurrent drop in yield.
>From a 4 percent handle on Tuesday, the Treasury’s benchmark note is
trading this morning to yield 3.70 percent. Gold’s December contract traded
intraday on Comex on Friday at $2,522.50 an ounce – a new historic intraday
high, before closing lower at $2,469.80.

Bitcoin, on the other hand, showed itself to be anything but a safe-haven
trade or the much-touted substitute for gold. Bitcoin has fallen from a
price level of more than $60,000 at the beginning of last week to around
$50,000 this morning. To put that another way, Bitcoin is viewed just as
risky – if not more risky – than stocks.

The CBOE’s Volatility Index known as the Vix is reflecting the wild
gyrations in the stock market, moving from a range of 30 to 25 on Friday to
spike as high as 65.73 this morning – the highest since the COVID-19 panic
in 2020. As of 9:42 a.m. EDT, the Vix was trading at 54.16.

Not helping matters this morning is the fact that the megabanks on Wall
Street are continuing their sharp losses from last week. (See chart below.)
As of 9:37 a.m. this morning in New York trading, Citigroup is off by
another 7.37 percent while Goldman Sachs has lost 6.96 percent. Citigroup,
parent of the giant federally-insured Citibank, has now moved from a
closing price of $64.30 last Monday to trading intraday this morning at
$54.20 or a loss of 16 percent in a week.



Veteran traders on Wall Street remember that Citigroup was the megabank
that destabilized the market in 2008, requiring secret infusions of $2.5
trillion in revolving loans from the Fed between December 2007 to July 2010
according to the eventual audit by the Government Accountability Office
that was released to the public in July 2011. The bank’s stock traded as
low as 99 cents in early 2009. (See our reporting on Citigroup’s woes as it
happened in the fall of 2008.)

Also not helping the stock market was the headline at CNN on Saturday that
suggested the U.S. could be drawn into a wider war in the Middle East. The
news outlet wrote that “The US is sending a carrier strike group, a fighter
squadron and additional warships to the Middle East as the region braces
for an Iranian retaliation to the killing of a senior Hamas leader in
Tehran earlier this week.”

Adding to market jitters was a report at CNBC on Saturday that Warren
Buffett had raised his cash levels to an historic $277 billion after
slashing his stock holdings.

All in all, not the stuff that bull markets are made of.

Reply via email to