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“You will become way less concerned with what other people think of you when you realize how seldom they do.” – David Foster Wallace

Morning stock market summary

Below is a snippet of commentary from today’s Morning Lineup. Start a two-week trial to Bespoke Premium to view the full report.  

If you’re looking at futures on the Dow, it’s not looking like a positive start to the last trading day of the week. Futures on that index are down nearly half of a percent on news that the index’s second most heavily weighted component –  UnitedHealth Group (UNH) – is down over 10% following a WSJ report that the Department of Justice has launched an investigation into the company for its billing practices related to its Medicare Advantage plans. Outside of the Dow, though, S&P 500 futures are flat, and the Nasdaq is on pace to open 0.35% higher.

Overnight, Asian markets traded higher to close the week with broad-based gains as Japanese CPI rose 0.5% m/m versus an increase of 0.6% in December. In Europe, stocks have also bounced back from yesterday’s decline with the STOXX 600 trading up over 0.5% putting it back into the black for the week. The gains come despite some mixed PMI readings where the Manufacturing index came in higher than expected (but still in contraction territory). At the same time, the Services PMI, which was above 50, missed expectations.

The S&P 500 and Nasdaq were down less than 0.5% yesterday, but there were some big moves in individual stocks as some of the market’s highest flyers in recent weeks/months were taken out to the woodshed.  Among the largest US banks and brokers, the percentage declines may not have been as large as some of the other market areas, but relative to their normal price moves, the declines were large. Of the six large US banks shown below, all of them were down at least 1%, with four down over 3%; JPMorgan Chase (JPM) and Morgan Stanley (MS) both fell more than 4%.

The moves may have been painful, but putting them in perspective, most of these stocks have seen large gains in recent months. On a six-month chart, they don’t look especially significant. Besides Bank of America (BAC), they were all either at or right near 52-week highs heading into yesterday’s decline.