A large number of investors are moving their long term savings
and IRA's into the protection and preservation of physical gold to prevent
further losses in the stock market and to capitalize on the depreciating
dollar.
A Dismal Tuesday Led Stocks to Their Worst First Five Days of a
Year Ever
By Matt Krantz, USA TODAY
January 8, 2008
9:22:27 AM PST
Wall Street's ongoing struggles reached historic proportions Tuesday when
another sell-off sent stocks to their worst first five trading days of a
year ever.
Following comments from AT&T's CEO indicating that consumer
businesses may be weak, traders sent stocks into a late-afternoon slide
that ended with the Standard & Poor's 500 down 26 points, or 1.8%, to
1390. The Dow Jones industrial average, which like the S&P 500 has
AT&T t as a member, sank 238 points, or 1.9%, to 12,589.
The markets' declines added to the losses that have been mounting since
last October. "It was nasty," says Chuck Stutenroth of ZAR Fund
Group. "We had November, December and now, this."
And "this," so far, means:
•Worst start to a year. The S&P 500 has lost 5.3% in just five
days. That's the benchmark's worst first five days, topping the 5.2% loss
at the start of 1932, says Howard Silverblatt of S&P.
The first five days hold import with investors, because a strong first
five days have been followed by a strong year 86% of the time, says the
Stock Trader's Almanac. A weak start, though, doesn't mean a lousy year: In
1991, the S&P jumped 26.3% for the year despite falling 4.6% in the
first five days.
•Return to correction territory. All three major stock indexes, the
S&P 500, Dow and Nasdaq, are now more than 10% below recent highs,
meaning the stock market is in an official "correction" for the
second time in little more than a month. The S&P 500 is off 11.2% from
its high last October, and below where it bottomed following the November
plunge. The correction has been a slap of reality for investors who thought
stocks were immune to problems from the weakening economy, says Michael
Farr of Farr Miller & Washington. "Investors have been complacent
for too long," he says. "This will be a year to
endure."
•Even worse damage below the surface. Nearly 1,000 of the stocks in
the broad S&P 1500, which contains shares of small, midsize and large
companies, are in a bear market, since they're down 20% or more from their
highs the past 52 weeks, according to a USA TODAY analysis of data from
Bridge Information. That's extending a trend that gained steam last year.
In 2007, 453 of the S&P 1500 stocks ended with a loss of 20% or more
for the year. That's nearly triple the number that fell 20% or more in 2006
and more than double the number that did so in 2005, according to a USA
TODAY analysis of data from S&P's Capital IQ. "It's all been about
navigating the land mines," says David Sowerby of Loomis Sayles.
The deluge of stocks suffering bear-market-size losses tells Robert
Maltbie of Millennium Asset Management that the wait for a bear market is
over. It's here, he says; ask investors who've owned the wrong stocks. Bear
markets don't announce their arrival, he says. "They start taking
(stocks) out one by one."