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Gone Fishing? The stock market hit another small bump today, but not before the S&P 500 and Nasdaq Composite touched their highest intraday levels on record. |
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The S&P 500 closed down 0.3%, while the Nasdaq was off 0.1%. Both lost steam in Thursday morning trading after they hit record closing highs yesterday. The Dow Jones Industrial Average fell 243 points, or 0.5%. |
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Stocks got off to a strong start after PepsiCo and Delta Air Lines reported quarterly results (more on that below), but the earnings trickle wasn’t enough to boost the rest of the market. |
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There’s plenty of chatter on Wall Street regarding froth, be it in the context of meme stocks, record highs, or the continued rally in shares of firms that could benefit from future artificial intelligence spending. |
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Meanwhile, the labor market is bending but not breaking and interest rates are likely heading lower. And so, the bears are on the retreat. |
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“With respect to stock market sentiment, I have to throw out the red flag today after seeing the Investors Intelligence survey with Bulls rising to 57.7 from 53.7 while Bears fell to just 15.4 from 16.7,” writes Peter Boockvar, chief investment officer of One Point BFG Wealth Partners. “That’s the least amount of Bears since the summer of 2024 and the spread of 42.3 exceeds my extreme threshold of 40.” |
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In this week’s American Association of Individual Investors survey, 45.9% of respondents were bullish about the stock market in the next six months, while only 35.6% were bearish. |
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“Bottom line, the sentiment is now ebullient and from a contrarian standpoint we should take note,” Boockvar writes. |
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Such sentiment shifts are viewed by some as a contrarian indicator. As Berkshire Hathaway CEO Warren Buffett would say: be fearful when others are greedy. |
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“It always seems like a sucker’s bet to put any money into the market when it’s trading at all-time highs,” writes Bespoke Investment Group co-founder Paul Hickey. “As the seemingly intelligent pundits will say, the easy money has been made (even though they were never out there a year ago saying the easy money is about to be made).” |
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And yet, historically, it hasn’t really been a foolish move to buy at records, Hickey notes. Since 1953, the S&P 500’s historical returns following a close at a record high is only “slightly less positive” than its average return for all periods since 1953. |
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“The best strategy for passive investors, especially, is not to overthink things,” Hickey writes. |
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- | Last | Chg% |
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↓ Dow Jones Industrial Average | +46,358.42 | -0.52% | ↓ S&P 500 Index | +6,735.11 | -0.28% | ↓ NASDAQ Composite Index | +23,024.63 | -0.08% |
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10/9/2025, 8:00:31 PM ET |
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The Hot Stock: Albemarle +5.3% The Biggest Loser: Dell Technologies -5.2% |
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Best Sector: Consumer Staples +0.3% Worst Sector: Industrials -1.5% |
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