The Nasdaq losing 3% isn’t good, but…
This is not a broad sell-off.
The structure of the current market — where a handful of megacap tech companies and plays related to the massive AI buildout currently sweeping the US economy and global corporate power brokers — has led to almost 40% of the S&P 500’s valued being tied up in 10 companies.
That narrow breadth is not inherently bad. Nothing in markets is. That is just the market today.
And though the trade has frustrated many investors over the last two years, there’s been a widely-held view across the investment profession that the so-called S&P 493 would be due to take its turn leading the market.
And while one day is just one day, this not a market that looks to be under the duress that a 3% sell-off in the Nasdaq might otherwise suggest.
After all, the Dow is green. Apple (AAPL) is up more than 3%. The entire drug manufacturer complex is higher. Consumer staples are outperforming. Even software names are working.
So, no, a 3% drop in the Nasdaq — and a nearly 20% decline in what was, before today, the world’s largest company — is not to be ignored. These are very serious cracks in what we believed to be the market’s foundation heading into the weekend.
But this is not a broken market. At least based not on Monday’s trading.