National Post (National Edition)

Another sharp drop officially puts Dow in market correction.

INDEX CLOSES DOWN 10.4% FROM RECORD HIGH IN JANUARY AFTER DAYS OF FEAR-LADEN TRADING TAKE THEIR TOLL

- SaraH PonCzek and Jeremy Herron

The dread that gripped equity markets earlier in the week re-emerged Thursday as U.S. stocks plunged into a correction on concern that rising interest rates will drag down economic growth.

Selling accelerate­d in the final hour of trading as major indexes breached roundnumbe­r milestones they blew past just weeks ago. The S&P 500 tumbled through 2,600 and the Dow failed to hold 24,000. Both are headed toward their average price for the past 200 days, a level that technical analysts say may act as a magnet and a floor.

In the end, the S&P 500 sank 3.8 per cent, taking its rout since a Jan. 26 record past 10 per cent to meet the accepted definition of a correction. The negative superlativ­es are piling up quickly: the index erased its gain for the year to close at a twomonth low and is on track for its worst week since the height of the financial crisis. The Dow plunged more than 1,000 points for the second time in four days.

In Toronto, the S&P/TSX composite index was down 264.97 points, or 1.73 per cent, to 15,065.61, in a broad-based decline. The TSX is down 8.2 per cent from its all-time high of 16,412.94, set Jan. 4.

Gold was the only positive sector on the commodityh­eavy index on Thursday, as more investors shifted toward the safe-haven asset. The April gold bullion contract was up US$4.40 to US$1,319.00 an ounce.

On Wall Street, pressure again came from the Treasury market, where another weak auction put gave bond bears ammunition, sending the 10-year yield to the highest in four years. Equity investors took bond signal to mean interest rates will push higher, denting earnings and consumer-spending power.

For a market that hadn’t fallen 3 per cent from any high in more than a year, the week’s action was enough to rattle even the biggest equity bulls. Accustomed to buying the dip, that wisdom is now in question when more selling by speculator­s may be imminent.

“There’s some big-money players that have really leveraged to the low rates forever, and they have to unwind those trades,” said Doug Cote, chief market strategist at Voya Investment Management. “They could be in full panic mode right now.”

Stocks began to fall last Friday after U.S. jobs data showed wages growing more than anticipate­d, raising worries that creeping signs of higher inflation might push the U.S. Federal Reserve to increase interest rates more quickly. Many market watchers had also been predicting a pullback after the market’s relentless march higher over the past year.

“The strong headlines job numbers and strong wage growth that we saw last Friday have really seen investors worried about the threat of higher inflation and the prospect of higher interest rates in the U.S.,” said Candice Bangsund, a vice-president and portfolio manager at Fiera Capital in Montreal.

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