US stock markets fall for the second day amid
tech selloff
Selloff appears to be driven by profit-taking as
investors cashed in some gains they made on tech stocks during pandemic
Dominic
Rushe in New York
@dominicru
Fri 4 Sep
2020 17.56 BSTLast modified on Fri 4 Sep 2020 21.17 BST
https://www.theguardian.com/business/2020/sep/04/us-stock-markets-technology-company-shares
US stock
markets fell sharply again on Friday then rebounded in a volatile day of
trading as investors soured on the high-flying tech companies that had driven
markets to record highs.
The S&P
500 fell 3% at the low point on Friday but ended down 0.8% and the Dow Jones
Industrial Average, which had fallen 850 points, ended down 0.56%. The
tech-heavy Nasdaq Composite retreated 1.27% after regaining morning losses of
5%. All three indexes had dropped significantly on Thursday, their biggest
one-day declines since June.
In Europe
stock markets also closed down. In London the FTSE dropped 0.88%, Germany’s DAX
dropped 1.65% and in France the CAC dropped 0.89%. Asian markets had also
closed down after Wall Street’s fall.
The falls
in the US were led by the technology sector, whose share prices have soared
during the coronavirus pandemic as investors have bet more business will move
permanently online.
Tech’s
soaring share price has reportedly been fueled by a $50bn bet on the sector by
Japan’s SoftBank. The huge buying spree helped drive tech stocks and stock
markets to new highs, The Wall Street Journal reported. And the unwinding of
those trades may have contributed to the dramatic sell off.
Shares of
Apple fell 7%, while Facebook and Amazon slid more than 6%. Google parent
Alphabet and Microsoft both fell at least 4%. Zoom, the video conferencing
company whose shares were up 400% before the fall, lost another 4%. The share
prices of all the companies still remain sharply up for the year and before
Thursday the S&P 500 had been up in nine of the last 10 trading sessions.
Michael
Antonelli, the managing director of institutional sales trading at Robert W
Baird in Milwaukee, said the selloff so far appeared to be driven by
profit-taking as investors cashed in some of the huge gains they have made on
tech stocks.
“Apple was
going up 3-4% a day recently. I don’t know a world where people would not take
some profits in that situation,” he said. “The air started coming out of the
tires yesterday and that seems to be continuing today.”
Friday’s
selloff came as the US announced employers had added another 1.4m jobs in
August and the unemployment rate fell to 8.4%, the first time it has dipped
below 10% since the pandemic hit the US economy.
Antonelli
said the figures were slightly better than expected but that, for now, it was
the tech sector rather than the jobs figures that were driving the selloff. “I
would get concerned if this starts to bleed into other sectors,” he said. But
for now, he said, the selloff was about the tech companies going “too far, too
fast”.
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