The S&P 500 and Nasdaq Composite Index Wednesday afternoon fell below a threshold that would put those benchmarks in bear-market territory if they closes there, threatening to end the longest bull-market in history. The S&P 500 SPX, -4.88% hit a low at 2,707.32 in in the final hour of trade on Wednesday, a close at or below that level would mark a 20% drop, meeting the widely accepted criteria for a bear market. Meanwhile, the The Nasdaq Composite Index COMP, -4.70% briefly traded in a bear market below 7,853.74 and traded at a Wednesday nadir at 7,850.95. The declines for those benchmarks came after the Dow Jones Industrial Average hit a low at 23,328.32, also meeting the criteria for a bear market. On March 9, stock market notched its 11th year in a bull-market uptrend, the longest such streak in history. MarketWatch considers an asset to be in a bear-market only when it closes at least 20% below its recent peak. A decline all for stocks on Wednesday deepened after the World Health Organization declared the outbreak of COVID-19, which was first identified in Wuhan, China in December, a pandemic. The disease has infected more than 121,000 people and claimed more than 4,300 lives world-wide.
Peringatan: Pendapat yang disampaikan sepenuhnya merupakan milik penulis dan tidak mencerminkan posisi resmi Followme. Followme tidak bertanggung jawab atas keakuratan, kelengkapan, atau keandalan informasi yang disediakan, serta tidak bertanggung jawab atas tindakan apa pun yang diambil berdasarkan konten ini, kecuali dinyatakan secara tertulis.

Tinggalkan pesan Anda sekarang