Market Recap: DJIA Adds Seven Percent in July, Marking Blue Chips' Best Month in a Year
It was a rough start for the major market indexes today, with the Dow Jones Industrial Average (DJIA) down triple digits within the first 15 minutes of the opening bell. Fueling the bearish fire were the latest gross domestic product (GDP) estimates from the Commerce Department, which indicated slower-than-anticipated economic growth for the second quarter. Adding insult to injury, the Thomson Reuters/University of Michigan consumer sentiment index tumbled to an eight-month low in July, reflecting escalating concerns about the pace of the economic recovery. Meanwhile, the lone bright spot of the day came courtesy of the Institute for Supply Management-Chicago's business barometer, which unexpectedly rose in July pointing to robust manufacturing activity in the Midwest. In fact, the upbeat data helped the bulls stage a valiant afternoon recovery, with stocks negating most if not all of their losses by the close.
"It was another wild day filled with volatility, but in the end nothing happened as we closed flat," summarized Senior Technical Strategist Ryan Detrick. "All in all, earnings have been better than expected, but the overall economic data continues to disappoint." Looking ahead, Detrick noted a packed calendar next week, including "a lot more earnings and the always-important monthly jobs data on Friday."
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