US Markets
U.S. stocks closed down on Wednesday but recovered
significantly from historic intraday losses amid concerns about Europe,
Ebola and the economy.
The Russell 2000 and transports turned positive as stocks came off lows in the last half hour before the close. S&P 400 midcaps also traded higher, and the Nasdaq traded briefly in the green.
"The Russell 2000 led the selloff and is actually the first to find the bottom here," Art Hogan, chief market strategist at Wunderlich Securities, said.
He also attributed the late-session gains to stabilization in oil prices and high trade volume during the middle of the day.
Financials led declines on the S&P and traded more than 2 percent lower, while JPMorgan Chase and Goldman Sachs were among the greatest blue-chip decliners. Prior to the start of trading Bank of America posted a smaller-than-expected loss, while BlackRock reported better-than-expected earnings.
Stocks held to a downward trend after the Fed released its "Beige Book" that said the economy is growing at a "modest to moderate" pace.
In the hour before the close, Wal-Mart fell more than 3 percent on news that the retailer cut its growth guidance.
Just before 2 p.m. ET, volume on the New York Stock Exchange matched "normal" volume for the entire session—3.5 billion shares.
"It's significant because people are truly unloading their positions," JJ Kinahan, chief strategist at TD Ameritrade, said. "Once we broke that 200-day moving average [people said] let's get out and start over."
Read More Going to be extremely choppy for a while: El-Erian
The CBOE Volatility Index (VIX), widely considered the best gauge of fear in the market, cut half its gains after rising as much as 35 percent to trade above 30, its highest level since November 2011.
The Dow and S&P had their worst day in nearly three years as the Dow fell more than 460 points to below 16,000, a level it has not breached since February 14. The drop was the index's largest intraday loss since a 552-point decline on Sept. 22, 2011.
Stocks fell nearly 3 percent as the Nasdaq fell more than 100 points and dipped into correction territory.
"We're probably going to follow the Europe" markets," Peter Cardillo, chief market economist at Rockwell Global Capital, said. Although he expected U.S. stocks to close down, he saw some signs of stability. "I think investors should take advantage of this selloff," he said.
Kim Forrest, senior equity analyst at Fort Pitt Capital, agreed."The correction from the top is giving us room to buy companies that we like," she said. "If you are long-term investor, three to five years, this should not be a concern."
European stocks closed more than 2 percent lower on Wednesday as investors shunned risky assets on fears of crumbling global growth, weak economic data, and concerns about the political situation in Greece.
The Russell 2000 and transports turned positive as stocks came off lows in the last half hour before the close. S&P 400 midcaps also traded higher, and the Nasdaq traded briefly in the green.
"The Russell 2000 led the selloff and is actually the first to find the bottom here," Art Hogan, chief market strategist at Wunderlich Securities, said.
He also attributed the late-session gains to stabilization in oil prices and high trade volume during the middle of the day.
Financials led declines on the S&P and traded more than 2 percent lower, while JPMorgan Chase and Goldman Sachs were among the greatest blue-chip decliners. Prior to the start of trading Bank of America posted a smaller-than-expected loss, while BlackRock reported better-than-expected earnings.
Stocks held to a downward trend after the Fed released its "Beige Book" that said the economy is growing at a "modest to moderate" pace.
In the hour before the close, Wal-Mart fell more than 3 percent on news that the retailer cut its growth guidance.
Just before 2 p.m. ET, volume on the New York Stock Exchange matched "normal" volume for the entire session—3.5 billion shares.
"It's significant because people are truly unloading their positions," JJ Kinahan, chief strategist at TD Ameritrade, said. "Once we broke that 200-day moving average [people said] let's get out and start over."
Read More Going to be extremely choppy for a while: El-Erian
The CBOE Volatility Index (VIX), widely considered the best gauge of fear in the market, cut half its gains after rising as much as 35 percent to trade above 30, its highest level since November 2011.
The Dow and S&P had their worst day in nearly three years as the Dow fell more than 460 points to below 16,000, a level it has not breached since February 14. The drop was the index's largest intraday loss since a 552-point decline on Sept. 22, 2011.
Stocks fell nearly 3 percent as the Nasdaq fell more than 100 points and dipped into correction territory.
"We're probably going to follow the Europe" markets," Peter Cardillo, chief market economist at Rockwell Global Capital, said. Although he expected U.S. stocks to close down, he saw some signs of stability. "I think investors should take advantage of this selloff," he said.
Kim Forrest, senior equity analyst at Fort Pitt Capital, agreed."The correction from the top is giving us room to buy companies that we like," she said. "If you are long-term investor, three to five years, this should not be a concern."
European stocks closed more than 2 percent lower on Wednesday as investors shunned risky assets on fears of crumbling global growth, weak economic data, and concerns about the political situation in Greece.
In the United States, transports recovered completely from
a fall of about 2 percent in late morning trade led by a decline in
airlines on reports that the new Ebola patient flew the day before falling ill.
However, analysts said there were no reports of flight cancellations
due to the disease and added that the news had more of a psychological
effect.
"Ebola is in the background," said Peter Boockvar, chief market analyst at The Lindsey Group. "It feeds generally into global growth concerns."
Read MoreTraders try to pick a bottom in the stock market
In a cumulative move of about 1200 points in losses and gains, the Dow Jones Industrial Average came off session lows of 458 points to trade about 300 points lower.
Earlier, the index fell as much as 369.59 points in the open, or about 2 percent, to below 16,000, with the initial decline led by Intel and Disney.
Check out the live Twitter blog on markets.
"Ebola is in the background," said Peter Boockvar, chief market analyst at The Lindsey Group. "It feeds generally into global growth concerns."
Read MoreTraders try to pick a bottom in the stock market
In a cumulative move of about 1200 points in losses and gains, the Dow Jones Industrial Average came off session lows of 458 points to trade about 300 points lower.
Earlier, the index fell as much as 369.59 points in the open, or about 2 percent, to below 16,000, with the initial decline led by Intel and Disney.
Check out the live Twitter blog on markets.
"It's all about the global economic growth picture," Hogan said.
He noted that the fallout in inversion deals was the most recent factor, while the declining oil prices, decline of the German 10-year bond yield and tensions between Russia and Ukraine were all continuing concerns.
Markets in Greece, Portugal, Italy, France, Germany and Spain were all down more than 10 percent from their most recent highs.
Read MoreEuro zone crisis 2.0? Greek stocks tank
The U.S. 10-year Treasury note yield dipped below 2 percent for the first time since May 2013, while U.S. economic data was weaker than expected.
The reports "helped exaggerate anxieties investors had recently on full valuations," Mark Luschini, chief investment strategist at Janney Montgomery Scott, said. "I think markets are working off technical levels."
Business inventories rose less than expected in August, and U.S. retail sales fell 0.3 percent in September, slightly more than the expected 0.2 percent decline. The producer price index for September fell 0.1 percent as opposed to expectations of a 0.1 percent gain.
"In general the only news the market reacts to now is negative news," Hogan said. Even "economic data is just background noise."
Overall, analysts focused on technicals and didn't think markets were seeing capitulation.
"I think this is just a correction," said Randy Frederick, managing director of trading and derivatives at Charles Schwab. "I'm a long ways from saying we're heading into a bear market."
"The only good stuff is the earnings, but that's backward looking," he said. "We're going to have a pretty solid earnings season."
He added that the pullback would likely cause the Fed to postpone an interest rate hike and that low rates were pressuring financial institutions' profit margins.
U.S. stock index futures
lost about 1 percent, with the Dow futures losing more than 150 points,
as investors were unnerved by word of another Ebola case diagnosed in
the U.S. Also driving futures lower was a major drop in the Greek
markets that drove a flight to safety in German bunds, with the 10-year
bond trading below 0.8 percent. Other concerns included a deteriorating
euro zone economic outlook, fed by another credit rating blow for
France, and "free falling" inflation expectations dominated the market.
Read MoreGreek bond yields pass 7% as worries return
U.S. stocks mostly advanced on Tuesday with the S&P 500 and Nasdaq Composite halting their worst three-day rout since 2011 as investors considered a mixed set of earnings from JPMorgan Chase, Citigroup and Wells Fargo. Intel released positive after-the-bell results and shares of the company gained more than 2 percent in late trading. Earnings are expected from American Express, eBay and Netflix after the bell.
Read MoreGreek bond yields pass 7% as worries return
U.S. stocks mostly advanced on Tuesday with the S&P 500 and Nasdaq Composite halting their worst three-day rout since 2011 as investors considered a mixed set of earnings from JPMorgan Chase, Citigroup and Wells Fargo. Intel released positive after-the-bell results and shares of the company gained more than 2 percent in late trading. Earnings are expected from American Express, eBay and Netflix after the bell.
The Dow Jones Industrial Average closed down 173 points, or 1.06 percent, at 16,141.61, with JPMorgan Chase the greatest decliner as six blue-chips gained, led by Johnson & Johnson.
The S&P 500 recovered losses to close down just 15.2 points, or 0.81 percent, at 1,862.50, with financials knocked the hardest and materials and energy the only sectors of 10 gaining.
The Nasdaq dipped into correction territory and even turned positive before closing down 11.8 percent, at 0.28 percent, at 4,215.32.
Decliners were one step ahead of advancers on the New York Stock Exchange, with an exchange volume of 1.2 billion and a composite volume of 6 billion.
The U.S. dollar edged lower against major world currencies.
Crude oil futures shaved gains to settle down 6 cents at $81.78 a barrel on the New York Mercantile Exchange, with gold shaving gains to settle $10.50 higher at $1,242 an ounce.
On tap this week:
Wednesday
Earnings: eBay, Netflix
Thursday
Earnings: Goldman Sachs Group, Google
8:30 a.m.: Weekly jobless claims for week ending Oct. 11
9:15 a.m.: Industrial production for September
10 a.m.: Home Builders Index for October
10 a.m.: Philly Fed
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