City
Epaper

Bull market for US stocks on the brink of expiring

By IANS | Published: May 13, 2022 4:39 PM

New York, May 13 The latest bull market for US stocks remains on the brink of expiring, with ...

Open in App

New York, May 13 The latest bull market for US stocks remains on the brink of expiring, with the benchmark S&P 500 just shy of the threshold that marks bear territory, MarketWatch reported.

The S&P 500 finished 0.1 per cent lower at 3,930.08 on Wednesday, after falling as far as 3,858.87 at its session low.

That was the index's lowest close since March 25, 2021, and left it 18.1 per cent below its record finish from early January. A close below 3,837.25 would mark a 20 per cent fall, according to Dow Jones Market Data, meeting the widely-used technical definition of a bear market, the report said.

The S&P 500 entered the correction territory a fall of 10 per cent from a recent peak last month, its second such foray this year.

A tough April for stocks has been followed by an ugly May, with equities suffering as investors continue to dump megacap tech stocks and other highflying pandemic darlings amid investor jitters over inflation that continues to run historically hot and a Federal Reserve that is moving to quickly raise interest rates and otherwise tighten monetary policy in an effort to get those price pressures under control.

Hopes that an eagerly-awaited reading on April consumer price inflation on Wednesday would show inflation had peaked and help steady the ship offered little solace to the jittery investors.

The S&P 500 ended its last bull market on March 12, 2020, as the outbreak of the Covid-19 pandemic sent the stocks tumbling. The bottom of the pandemic-inspired bear market came on March 23, 2020, with the S&P 500 marking a 33.9 per cent fall from its bull market peak on February 19, 2020, MarketWatch reported.

Based on figures going back to 1929, the average bear market sees a peak to bear-market low decline of 33.5 per cent, and a median fall of 33.2 per cent, according to Dow Jones market data.

On an average, it has taken 80 trading days for the S&P 500 to hit its low after entering a bear market and a median 52 trading days, the data showed, the report added.

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Tags: Standard & Poor'sMarketwatch
Open in App

Related Stories

NationalAzam Khan, Senior Samajwadi Party Leader, Sentenced to 10 Years in Jail and Fined Rs 14 Lakh in 2016 Case

NationalLok Sabha Elections 2024: Turncoats Strike Rich in Uttar Pradesh

PoliticsSP-Congress Alliance in UP: Congress In-Charge Says 'One-Sided Alliance Policy Unacceptable'

BusinessIndian stock indices start fresh week marginally higher

BusinessModeration in inflation, firm US markets buoy Indian stock markets

International Realted Stories

InternationalChinese Student Sentenced to 20 Years in Australia for Stabbing Girlfriend 75 Times to Death

International"Will pursue robust collaboration with India" says Philippines President Marcos jr, makes case for peace in region

InternationalSunita Williams flies to ISS on NASA's Boeing Starliner tonight; 3rd time in space for Indian-origin astronaut

InternationalSouth Korea, US, Japan condemn North Korea launches, reaffirm peninsula denuclearisation goal

InternationalAt UNSC: US, allies condemn N Korea's failed satellite launch, nuke bid; China, Russia defend