Chicago Sun-Times

ANOTHER 1,000- POINT PLUNGE FOR DOW

Plunge puts stock index in correction territory

- Adam Shell USA TODAY

The Dow Jones industrial average plunged 1,033 points Thursday, its second- worst one- day drop in history, extending its losses this week to more than 10% and putting it officially into correction territory for the first time in since early 2016. The Dow plunged Monday to close at 1,175 points the biggest point drop in a trading day.

The blue- chip stock average’s drubbing has been fueled by fears that a long period of low interest rates and tame inflation that have boosted the economy and fueled the rapid rise in stock prices for years may be coming to an end as economic conditions improve.

“The Dow has been hit by a tsunami of volatility,” says Paul Schatz, president of Woodbridge, Conn.- based investment management

firm Heritage Capital. “The market is repricing in a lot of factors at once. And rates have run up fast. The market always has a tough time when things happen in a linear fashion.”

On Thursday, the yield on the 10year Treasury note ticked up to a four- year high of 2.88%, sparking fears that rates could quickly run up to the key 3% level.

The stock market also has been upended by an unwinding of a popular trade that relied on market volatility to remain calm. But that trade has turned bad amid wild price swings that have turned suddenly violent since the market peaked Jan. 26.

Sparking the turbulence was a report last week showing that hourly wage growth rose at its fastest pace since 2009. That strong wage data sparked fears of coming wage inflation, which intensifie­d worries that the Federal Reserve could increase rates more this year than the three times it has signaled.

The big loss Thursday followed an 1,175- point drop on Monday, the largest in history.

“The market has undergone a psychologi­cal change,” says Doug Ramsey, chief investment officer at The Leuthold Group in Minneapoli­s. “The mystery now is what level on the 10- year Treasury will, if not break the bull market’s back, at least knock it back a few steps.”

While Wall Street has been calling for a correction, given the market’s euphoric rise, the fall has been more violent and quicker than expected.

“The market is repricing in a lot of factors at once. ... The market always has a tough time when things happen in a linear fashion.” Paul Schatz President, investment management firm Heritage Capital

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