(New York) The New York Stock Exchange closed sharply down on Tuesday, shaken by profit-taking and renewed nervousness among investors worried about the global economy.
The NASDAQ index fell 3.26%, while the Dow Jones lost 1.51% and the broader S&P 500 index lost 2.12%.
“The September blues hit Wall Street today,” Interactive Brokers’ Jose Torres commented in a note.
September is traditionally a bad month for stocks, which have finished negative over this period for the past four years.
The first victim is the microprocessor industry, which has grown in size over the past two years due to the craze for generative artificial intelligence (AI).
The star of the sector, Nvidia, tumbled by 9.53%. On Tuesday alone, the flagship of Santa Clara, California, wiped out nearly 280 billion of market capitalization, more than the total valuation of Toyota, Hermès or Pepsico.
“There’s this perception that these companies have reported good results, but not good enough for expectations,” suggested Sam Burns, chief investment strategist at Mill Street Research.
“I think it’s mostly profit-taking and portfolio rebalancing,” the analyst said. “I don’t see this session as a harbinger of a bigger correction.”
Apple (-2.72%) and Alphabet (-3.94%), which had made a nice recovery since the beginning of August, were also caught up in the selling current.
Wall Street has also been caught up in fears of a worsening economy, in light of mixed indicators in China in recent days, as well as figures from the United States.
Activity in the manufacturing sector in the United States thus remained in contraction in August, according to the ISM purchasing managers’ organization. It progressed compared to July, but less than expected.
And according to this ISM report, new orders fell to their lowest level since May 2023.
On the stock market, volatility benefited so-called defensive stocks, i.e. those theoretically less sensitive to the economic situation, such as Coca-Cola (+0.75%), health insurer UnitedHealth (+1.44%), the Dow Jones’ largest weighting (9% of the index), or cable operator Verizon (+2.75%).
Boeing made a crash landing (-7.32%), as investors worried about the expiration date of the company agreement between the manufacturer and the International Association of Machinists and Aerospace Workers union on September 12.
If no compromise is reached by then, nearly 32,000 members of the union organization could go on strike.
US Steel (-6.09%) was penalized by the statements of the Democratic presidential candidate, Kamala Harris, who affirmed on Monday that she wanted to keep the steelmaker under American control.
US President Joe Biden had already said on several occasions that he wanted to block the takeover of US Steel by Japanese firm Nippon Steel, announced last December but suspended due to lack of authorisation from regulators.
TSX drops more than 300 points
The S&P/TSX composite index closed down 303.73 points at 23,042.45, dragged down by energy and metals companies.
The Canadian dollar was trading at 73.81 cents US, down from 74.12 cents US on Friday.
On the New York Commodity Exchange, crude oil fell $3.21 to $70.34 a barrel, and natural gas gained 7 cents to $2.20 per million BTU.
The gold contract was down $4.60 at $2,523 an ounce, and the copper contract was down 12 cents at $4.09 a pound.
The Canadian Press