Weekly Market Commentary

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.