PULLBACKS ARE COMMON BUT PAINFUL
Adam Turnquist, CMT, Chief Technical Strategist, LPL Financial
George Smith, CFA, Portfolio Strategist, LPL Financial
Pullbacks are the stubbed toe of the stock market. I was reminded of this over the last week as I contemplated the recent surge in volatility while picking up toys after our two-year-old finally fell asleep. As I carried a Tonka truck back to its usual parking spot next to the toy farm, I slammed my toe into the foot of the couch. The pain was acute, but not worthy of a full-blown panic. After a few deep breaths, the sting began to wear off and I assessed the damage to find a little redness, but nothing broken. Somewhere in this painful process, the parallels between my toe’s unfortunate encounter with the couch and the recent equity market sell-off became clear. For the market over the last week, the foot of the couch was embodied by overbought conditions — especially in big tech, waning confidence for a soft landing due to weak employment data and a contractionary Institute of Supply Management (ISM) manufacturing reading, and the rapid unwinding of the crowded yen carry trade.