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Just looking back at what happened in the markets that Friday and there's actually a pretty clear picture of why stocks fell across the board. The S&P dropped 0.43%, Nasdaq was down 0.30%, and the Dow took a bigger hit at 1.05%. Honestly, it wasn't just one thing - there were several reasons stocks were selling off.
First off, bank stocks got absolutely hammered. The collapse of that UK lender Market Financial Solutions spooked everyone about potential defaults piling up. You had American Express down over 7%, Goldman Sachs and Morgan Stanley both getting crushed. That sector rotation out of financials was brutal. Then tech stocks weren't helping either - chip stocks like Nvidia dropped 4%, software names retreated, and cybersecurity got obliterated with Zscaler down 12%. So basically, the two sectors that had been carrying the market just rolled over.
But here's the thing about why are stocks falling that day - the macro backdrop was also working against everything. That US PPI report came in hotter than expected, up 0.5% month-over-month versus 0.3% expected. That basically killed any near-term rate cut hopes, which spooked growth investors. And then you've got geopolitical stuff adding to the pressure. Iran nuclear talks going nowhere, Trump threatening military action, oil spiking to 7-month highs. Airlines got destroyed because of the crude move - United down 8%, Delta and American both off 6%+.
There was some recovery energy late in the session though. The Chicago PMI surprised to the upside at 57.7, construction spending beat, and Dell absolutely ripped 21% higher on strong AI server guidance. The 10-year yield fell to 3.96% which helped stabilize things a bit. But overall, that Friday showed why are stocks falling can have multiple layers - sector weakness, inflation concerns, and geopolitical risk all hitting at once. It's the combination that matters.