Last goal for 2022? Ending it.
Stock markets would like to just get there without any more meaningful losses, says Navellier and Associate’s chairman and founder Louis Navellier, who adds that “anyone who made bets for a big rally this week is probably folding their tent.”
But after Wednesday’s losses — amid a really poor December — stocks are so far in the green for Thursday, led by none other than tech stocks, as Tesla TSLA,
Tech is at the heart of the current downturn, and how the big names perform going forward will be crucial, say some market watchers out there. And others clearly see another domino left to fall.
That brings us to our call of the day, which says Apple AAPL,
Here’s @TheChartReport‘s Patrick Dunuwila summing up a note by John Roque of 22V Research (thanks to @HarksterHQ for flagging this one).
“Apple has held up better than most FAANG stocks this year, however, John points out that it could be the bear’s next victim. The stock closed at a fresh 52-week low today [Wednesday] as it sliced through key support around $130. It’s below a declining 40-week moving average, and it’s already broken down on a relative basis,” says Dunuwila.
“These are the exact same conditions that existed in stocks like $ARKK ARKK,
This chart from Roque (@daChartLife) lays out the dangers for Apple, and the “serious” possibility that shares will hit $100.
Roque says the overall market won’t stop falling until the “Big 5 index” — made up of Apple, Amazon, Alphabet, Microsoft and Tesla — bottom.
Others are also pointing out some crucial technical levels for Apple right now.
“125 is the must hold level for mighty Apple, but the urge to place that longer term buy order fades some when you zoom out and compare to old hotties such as NYFANG or AMZN. Apple is key for the overall market going forward,” notes the blogger behind The Market Ear.
Also read on for our chart of the day, that’s got a hopeful message about this stock market.
Read: ‘Five days that killed the year’: These trading sessions accounted for 95% of the S&P 500’s losses in 2022
Stocks DJIA,
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Tesla TSLA,
Read: Tesla’s stock breaks record-tying losing streak with best daily gain in nearly a month
Shares of Hyzon Motors HYZN,
Goldman Sachs GS,
Disney stock DIS,
Exxon Mobil XOM,
Weekly jobless claims rose to 225,000, versus expectations for 223,000.
“The S&P 500 entered a bear market in June and has been stuck since, notes Jeffrey Buchbinder, chief equity strategist for LPL Financial, who says at one year old, the current bear phase is longer than the average post-WWII bear of 11 months.
The good news? “Looking at just the last seven bear markets since the 1987 crash, we have seen the market bounce back an average of 43.6% after dropping 33.1%,” said Buchbinder who says they expect double-digit gains for the S&P in 2023.
Did you take MarketWatch’s 2022 Financial Quiz? If not, you can do so here. If you have taken the quiz, read on and find out the answers below.
1. Through Tuesday’s close, the best-performing stock was Occidental Petroleum OXY,
2. The Fed made seven interest-rate hikes in 2022, including four consecutive 75 basis point increases. Some economists say the hikes have already succeeded in one way.
3. Inflation reached a four-decade high in 2022. It peaked at 9.1% in June 2022. It’s slowing, but the fight is far from over.
4. President Joe Biden announced in August that his administration planned to cancel up to $10,000 for borrowers earning $125,000 or less and up to $20,000 for borrowers who used a Pell grant in college, but opponents have looked for strategies to mount a legal challenge.
5. The U.S. Justice Department has launched a criminal probe into how $372 million vanished out of FTX-controlled wallets the day that the exchange filed for bankruptcy in November. Former FTX CEO Sam Bankman Fried, who is charged with fraud and currently in jail in the Bahamas, will be transferred to the U.S.
6. Musk bought Twitter in October in a deal valued at $44 billion. He subsequently cut the workforce by 50%, equivalent to approximately 3,700 workers. However, one analyst said, “He sold caviar, to buy a $2 slice of pizza.“
7. The Fed’s ultimate goal is to get long-term inflation back down to 2%. The Fed formally adopted this policy in 2012.
8. The 30-year fixed rate mortgage rate was 6.27% for the week of Dec. 22. It fell below 3% in the summer of 2021
9. Congress passed five major pieces of legislation during the year. 1. The Inflation Reduction Act, a $369 billion bill, was passed in August to combat climate change, and lower prescription-drug costs. 2. Earlier this month, Congress passed legislation requiring states to recognize legal marriages regardless of “sex, race, ethnicity, or national origin.” 3. In June, Congress signed sweeping gun-reform legislation, tightening access to guns. It improves background checks for younger firearm buyers, restricts access for domestic violence offenders, and helps states institute “red flag” laws to keep guns out of the hands of high-risk individuals. 4. In August, Biden signed the Chips and Science Act, including $52.7 billion for domestic manufacturing of chips SMH SOXX. 5. A bipartisan group of senators agreed on changes to the Electoral Count Act, the post-Civil War-era law for certifying presidential elections that lawmakers decided requires revision after the Jan. 6 attack on the Capitol and then-President Donald Trump’s attempts to overturn the 2020 election.
10. Liz Truss became U.K. prime minister in September, succeeding Boris Johnson.
Bonus question: U.K. markets tanked after Truss released her aggressive economic growth and tax plan. She rescinded large parts of the plan, but ultimately resigned after just 44 days, breaking the record for the shortest tenure as prime minister in U.K history. Rishi Sunak, her rival in the initial race for Prime Minister, succeeded Truss.
Related: Take MarketWatch’s 2022 Financial Literacy Quiz. Will you get 10/10?
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Just five trading sessions accounted for more than 95% of the S&P 500 index losses in 2022 as the U.S. stock market headed for its worst year since 2008.
Barbara Kollmeyer is based in Madrid, where she leads MarketWatch’s pre-markets coverage of financial markets and writes the Need to Know column. She has worked in London and Los Angeles for MarketWatch previously. Follow her on Twitter @bkollmeyer.
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