
Big sell-off, rising inflation concerns and some market stabilization (0:35). Bitcoin down, gold up - on brand for this market (2:35).Episode transcripts: seekingalpha.com/wsbShow links: S&P on track to end in correction territory, Nasdaq slumps more than 2%February sees surge in short interest for crypto stocks led by MSTR, COINSign up for our daily newsletter here and for full access to analyst ratings, stock quant scores, dividend grades, subscribe to Seeking Alpha Premium at seekingalpha.com/subscriptions.
Full Episode
Brian Stewart, welcome to a special Thursday edition of Wall Street Lunch in place of Kim's temporary absence. Great to have you on during the work week. Welcome back.
Great to be here. Glad for the extra chance to talk to everybody.
Yes, yes, as are we. So talk to us. Here we are, March 13th. What would you say you're most focused on the markets today?
So obviously we started this week with a big sell-off. There were rising inflation concerns. This was stoked over the weekend by some comments Trump made about moving into a transitionary period with the changes that he's making.
In his administration, there's rising worry that he's going to kind of shove the market off a cliff by doing severe job cuts in the public space and by putting tariffs into place. So the general idea that Trump is OK with a recession kind of sent people in. into a panic. The market has stabilized since then.
I mean, one of the good points about going down quickly is the faster you go down, the sooner you hit bottom. So there's the debate going on about whether we've hit the bottom or whether we've kind of just settled on a ledge somewhere, just sort of waiting for the next step lower.
And what are you seeing out of the markets today? Can you contextualize some of the movements that you're seeing today for investors?
So if we just look at the markets for today, we're not seeing anything dramatic. It's down again, down about 1% on the S&P 500. So there hasn't been a major snapback yet. So there's not a wave of buyers coming back to the market. So there's generally feeling
waiting for either the next shoe to drop or the next piece of data to send the market higher, something that's going to give some sort of idea that we've gotten all the selling out of our system. So I would look for the Fed next week as a major catalyst. Unfortunately, there's not a lot of earnings coming out, so there's probably not going to be a good corporate catalyst for the market in general.
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