Commentaries:

Bartlett Market Week

Market Week: May 10, 2010

The Markets

Investors who were waiting for a correction finally got it--in spades. The equities markets' wild rides on Thursday and Friday left the Nasdaq down 10.5% from its April 23 high--official correction territory. Thursday's nearly 1,000-point intraday plunge in the Dow and Friday's whiplash volatility wiped out all 2010 gains for the three major domestic indexes. Only the small-cap Russell 2000 was left in positive territory year-to-date despite taking the week's biggest hit and being down almost 12% from its late-April high. The Dow industrials have suffered the least from the carnage of the last two weeks (down 7.4%), while the S&P has dropped 8.7% in the same time.

Strong profit reports and an unexpectedly high nonfarm payrolls number (see below) were virtually ignored in the face of heavy selling triggered by concerns about another potential global credit crisis. And that doesn't even count Thursday's psychotic break, when something--human error? high-frequency automated selling? computer glitch? some combination?--sent even the most stable stocks plummeting during minutes that brought back queasy memories of the fall of 2008. Trades placed between 2:40 p.m. and 3 p.m. Thursday that were more than 60% up or down from the last price at or before 2:40 were cancelled by the Nasdaq and New York Stock Exchange, and the Securities and Exchange Commission and stock exchanges are investigating the cause of the chaos.

The waves of global fear sent investors to seek the comfort of Treasuries; prices rose as the yield on the 10-year note dropped sharply, and the euro hit its lowest level against the dollar in 14 months. Oil also fell below $75 on concerns that European banks might stop lending, thus slowing global economic recovery. However, eurozone finance ministers agreed in an emergency weekend session to a massive $955 billion bailout package of loans and loan guarantees designed to be a firewall against the need to restructure sovereign debt across the European Union (EU).

Bartlett & Co. Investing

Note: Market indexes listed are unmanaged and are not available for direct investment.

Last Week's Headlines

Eye on the Week Ahead

Investors will be digesting the global ramifications of the EU bailout program, and anything definitive on the exact cause of last week's dysfunctional trading could move markets.

Key data releases: International trade (5/12); retail sales, industrial production (5/14).

Data source: Includes data provided by Brounes & Associates. All information is based on sources deemed reliable, but no warranty or guarantee is made as to its accuracy or completeness. Neither the information nor any opinion expressed herein constitutes a solicitation for the purchase or sale of any securities, and should not be relied on as financial advice. Past performance is no guarantee of future results.

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