USA TODAY International Edition

STOCK MARKET STAYS STRONG

INVESTORS SHRUGGING OFF WORLD OF WORRY

- Adam Shell

If you look at how the stock market has behaved lately, it’s as if investors haven’t been watching the unsettling events unfolding on the news.

By any measure, so- called “headline risk,” largely in the form of anxiety- provoking news from around the globe, has been on the rise. There was the U. S. missile strike in Syria, the megabomb America dropped on ISIS in Afghanista­n and President Trump’s war of words with North Korea.

The list of things to worry about grew longer Tuesday with twin surprises: British Prime Minister Theresa May’s call for a “snap” general election in June and U. S. financial giant Goldman Sachs’ first quarterly earnings disappoint­ment since 2015. IBM added to the angst Wednesday with a weak earnings report.

And no list of global financial market fears would be complete without mentioning the uncertaint­y surroundin­g the outcome of the first round of French elections Sunday. That event could propel controvers­ial candidates to the top of the polls and ratchet up the Wall Street worry meter even more.

But despite these fears, the stock market has held up relatively well, shrugging off most of the shocks thrown its way. After a modest loss of 0.17% Wednesday, the broad Standard & Poor’s 500 is just 2.4% shy of its March 1 record close.

And while there’s no denying recent news has caused the stock rally to stall, the market’s stability during this turbulent time — at least so far — is sending a positive message.

“When a market is able to shrug off ostensibly bad news, it’s a sign of strength,” said Doug Ramsey, chief investment officer at The Leuthhold Group.

Stock investors, Ramsey said, are focusing on less gloomy things, like first- quarter earnings for U. S. companies, which are shaping up to be the best forprofit growth since 2011, according to Thomson Reuters I/ B/E/ S data. Investors, he added, are also focusing on what they see as the first broad, global economic upturn in many years. For now, it appears, the bet on better business conditions is winning out over fears about potential conflicts abroad and what might go wrong.

Not everyone on Wall Street, however, is as dismissive of the geopolitic­al storm clouds over markets. Peter Cardillo, chief market strategist at First Standard Financial, blames the market’s recent weakness and inability to make new highs on the global strife. “The worsening political situation is mostly behind the decline,” he argued in a report, adding that he thinks the stock pullback could pull prices down 6% to 8%.

Politics at home also have investors on edge, as Wall Street awaits the Trump economic agenda, which has been delayed due to political discor.

Signs of stress are evident. A closely watched Wall Street fear gauge, dubbed the VIX, has soared 40% in the past nine trading sessions to its highest level since Election Day.

 ?? GETTY IMAGES/ ISTOCKPHOT­O ??
GETTY IMAGES/ ISTOCKPHOT­O
 ?? POOL PHOTO ?? British Prime Minister Theresa May surprised the world by calling for a “snap” general election that could strengthen her hand in Brexit talks.
POOL PHOTO British Prime Minister Theresa May surprised the world by calling for a “snap” general election that could strengthen her hand in Brexit talks.
 ?? KRT VIA AP ?? Missiles are paraded through a square in Pyongyang, North Korea, on Saturday during a weekend of heightened tension with the United States.
KRT VIA AP Missiles are paraded through a square in Pyongyang, North Korea, on Saturday during a weekend of heightened tension with the United States.
 ?? 2003 PHOTO BY AFP/ GETTY IMAGES ?? Last Thursday, the U. S. dropped a megabomb on ISIS similar to this one detonated at a test site in Florida.
2003 PHOTO BY AFP/ GETTY IMAGES Last Thursday, the U. S. dropped a megabomb on ISIS similar to this one detonated at a test site in Florida.

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