Wall Street Plunges Sharply, Weighed Down by the Tech Sector

The three main Wall Street indices closed with significant losses on Friday, as a wave of market selling even took down the tech giants known as the “Magnificent Seven.”

Without any major economic data and with the famous Santa Claus Rally—historically known to boost stocks in the final five days of the year and the first two of the following—yet to materialize, investors chose to lock in profits.

BrokerReviewRegulatorsMin DepositWebsite
🥇Read ReviewFCA, CySEC, ASIC, MAS, FSA, EFSA, DFSA, CFTCUSD 100Visit Broker
🥈Read ReviewFSCA, FSC, ASIC, CySEC, DFSAUSD 5Visit Broker
🥉Read ReviewCySEC, MISA, FSCAUSD 25Visit Broker
4Read ReviewASIC, BaFin, CMA, CySEC, DFSA, FCA, SCBUSD 200Visit Broker
5Read ReviewASIC, FCA, CySEC, SCBUSD 100Visit Broker
6Read ReviewFCA, FSCA, FSC, CMAUSD 200Visit Broker
7Read ReviewBVI FSCUSD 1Visit Broker
8Read ReviewCBCS, CySEC, FCA, FSA, FSC, FSCA, CMAUSD 10Visit Broker
9Read ReviewASIC, CySEC, FSCA, CMAUSD 100Visit Broker
10Read ReviewIFSC, FSCA, ASIC, CySECUSD 1Visit Broker

The Dow Jones Industrial Average, which tracks 30 major companies, dropped 0.77% to 42,992.21 points. The S&P 500, composed of the market’s most valuable companies, fell 1.11% to 5,970.84 points. The Nasdaq slid 1.49% to 19,722.03 points.

SPX

Main Movers

Among the major tech companies that have propelled Wall Street throughout the year, losses were widespread. Tesla shares were the most affected, dropping 4.95%, followed by Nvidia, the AI giant, which lost 2.09%.

Today, it seems there is considerable profit-taking across the board. We’ve seen more than two years of a strong bull market, so this isn’t surprising. Despite the sharp declines, the week ended positively for both tech stocks and the indices. The Dow Jones gained a modest 0.35% for the week, while the S&P 500 rose 0.67%, and the Nasdaq Composite increased by 0.76%.

Geopolitical Outlook

In major geopolitical news, the World Health Organization urged China to share COVID-19 origin data. The World Health Organization (WHO) has told China to share data on the origin of COVID-19, five years after the global pandemic that claimed millions of lives and devastated economies and healthcare systems.

“We continue to call on China to share data and provide access so we can understand the origins of COVID-19. This is both a moral and scientific imperative,” said the WHO.

Check out our free forex signals
Follow the top economic events on FX Leaders economic calendar
Trade better, discover more Forex Trading Strategies
ABOUT THE AUTHOR See More
Ignacio Teson
Ignacio Teson
Economist and Financial Analyst
Ignacio Teson is an Economist and Financial Analyst. He has more than 7 years of experience in emerging markets. He worked as an analyst and market operator at brokerage firms in Argentina and Spain.
Related Articles
Comments
0 0 votes
Article Rating
Subscribe
Notify of
0 Comments
Oldest
Newest Most Voted
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments

Add 3442

HFM crypto add fxleaders

Add 3440