The U.S. stock market has been threatening a corrective decline for months, and it came to fruition last week with massive selling on Thursday and Friday. The Nasdaq 100 led the decline, falling 7.4%, but all major indices closed sharply lower for the week and slid into negative territory for 2015. Every sector of the S&P 500 ended in the red, led by energy, down 8.5%, and technology, off 6.7%. #-ad_banner-#In fact, the only sector to do well recently has been utilities, which lost only 1.1% last week. I first mentioned this group as a potential… Read More
The U.S. stock market has been threatening a corrective decline for months, and it came to fruition last week with massive selling on Thursday and Friday. The Nasdaq 100 led the decline, falling 7.4%, but all major indices closed sharply lower for the week and slid into negative territory for 2015. Every sector of the S&P 500 ended in the red, led by energy, down 8.5%, and technology, off 6.7%. #-ad_banner-#In fact, the only sector to do well recently has been utilities, which lost only 1.1% last week. I first mentioned this group as a potential sector to overweight this quarter in the Aug. 3 Market Outlook. Through Friday’s close, utilities had risen by 5.4% over the past month. It was the only sector to post a gain during this period, while outperforming the S&P 500 by a whopping 12.4 percentage points. Multiple Price Targets Met Last Week Two of my recent downside targets were hit during last week’s collapse. The London FTSE 100 fell through the 6,550 level first mentioned in the June 8 Market Outlook. And the sell-off in the small-cap Russell 2000 took it through the 1,175 level, which I pointed to in… Read More