The Dow Jones Industrial Average (^DJI) was down 821.91 (-1.66%) points today, as the index retreated to 48,804.06. While Dow Futures (YM=F) was up 126.00 (+0.26%), the spot market struggled under the weight of significant losses in the technology and financial sectors. The dominant narrative was a sharp correction in enterprise tech sentiment following a major decline in IBM (IBM), coupled with renewed fears regarding consumer credit health that battered payment processors and major banks.
The primary catalyst for the decline was IBM (IBM), which was down 12.33% to $223.35, marking one of its worst sessions in recent history following a disappointing outlook on enterprise spending. This weakness cascaded into the financial sector, where American Express (AXP) was down 7.06% and Visa (V) was down 4.27%. Banking giant JPMorgan Chase (JPM) also faced pressure, as it was down 4.15%. Other significant decliners included Salesforce (CRM), down 3.73%, and Nike (NKE), which was down 3.41%.
Conversely, a flight to safety supported defensive stocks. Procter & Gamble (PG) was up 2.63% to $165.17, while Walmart (WMT) was up 2.55%. Fast-food giant McDonald's (MCD) was up 1.52%, and healthcare leader Johnson & Johnson (JNJ) was up 1.36%. Despite the broader tech rout, Nvidia (NVDA) showed resilience, as it was up 1.11%, alongside Apple (AAPL), which was up 1.10%, as investors sought quality in mega-cap growth names.
Ed Liston is a senior contributing editor at TheStockMarketWatch.com. An active market watcher and investor, Ed guides an independent team of experienced analysts and writes for multiple stock trader publications.