After a summer of slumps and declines, the stock market roared back to life in October, posting a three-week rally that saw the Dow Jones Industrial Average closing at 17,646.70 on Oct. 23 – up 157.54 points. This rally helped wipe out the losses the S&P 500 incurred in the months prior. Good news indeed for individual investors and market analysts alike who had begun to wonder if the market was on a downward trajectory.
Summer gave investors a lesson in hanging tough. After six months of choppy performance, the S&P dropped 12 percent from mid-July to its low point in late August. Worries about a possible decline in corporate profits in the United States, plus growing pessimism about the weakening Chinese economy helped to keep the stock market in the doldrums. Disappointing economic news from Europe and Japan also served to cast a shadow over Wall Street during the summer when investment experts wondered if this downturn, the first in four years, would lead us into a disappointing earnings season.
The bull market proved, as we entered the fourth quarter of 2015, that news of its demise had been greatly exaggerated. The S&P 500 closed the third week of October at 2,075.15 to bring the index back to the numbers it posted in January 2015. What’s behind the rebound? It’s often difficult to find logical cause and effect in the world’s markets, but experts point to some factors that are shaping this rally.
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