Got stocks? Don't panic

In This Article:

It was startling this past week to see many of the hottest stocks stagger around and then fall down like drunken sailors in a dodgy street.

This is April, after all, and April has been one of the top months for investors since 1950.

But stagger stocks did. The Standard & Poor's 500 Index finished below 5,000 for the first time since Feb. 21. The Nasdaq Composite dropped 5.5%, its worst weekly loss since its 5.65% fall during the week of Oct. 31, 2022.

The Dow Jones Industrial Average ended flat.

Interest rates moved mostly higher, and so did mortgage rates.

And now investors face a big week with some of the first quarter's most important earnings reports due from Tesla  (TSLA) , Meta Platforms  (META) , Microsoft  (MSFT)  and Exxon Mobil  (XOM) .

Related: Wall Street faces make-or-break week with Tesla, GDP, inflation on deck

Plus two important economic reports: the first look at the U.S. Gross Domestic Product for the first quarter and the March report of the Federal Reserve's favorite inflation measure, the Personal Consumption Expenditures Index.

It sounds dangerous, but here are two bits of good news to consider:

  • A big shooting war in the Middle East has NOT erupted.

  • Early futures trading on Sunday suggests lower oil prices and hints that a short-term rally in stocks is forming.

The big market challenges, part 1

The shock that professionals and retail investors have been feeling of late starts with this challenge:

The market opened 2024 with most of Wall Street expecting inflation to fall and, with it, multiple interest-rate cuts from the Federal Reserve.

But inflation hasn't fallen enough to satisfy Fed officials, and this past week, Fed Chairman Jerome Powell conceded what market veterans had expected: There may be one rate cut, maybe two in 2024 — if only inflation will cooperate.

Traders work on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange earlier in April. <p>Michael M&period; Santiago&sol;Getty Images</p>
Traders work on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange earlier in April.

Michael M. Santiago/Getty Images

The 10-year Treasury yield ended the week at 4.63%, up from 4.53% a week before and up 19% from the 3.88% at the end of 2023.

Mortgage rates had fallen from about 8% in early October to the 6.5% range on a 30-year fixed-rate loan in January, giving hope to home buyers, sellers of existing homes,  and small homebuilders. Now, the rate is above 7%. The rising-rate trend hit the recent report on existing home sales.

The big market challenges, part 2

The big tech stocks that have led the big rally since the end of October have lost their mojo as the hype about artificial intelligence has faded.

It feels somewhat like the hype around the Internet in early 2000 and the resulting dot.com bust. Just not as crazy.