Dow falls 400+ points amid September slump

Shawn Snyder, Citi U.S. Wealth Management Head of Investment Strategy join the Yahoo Finance Live panel with the latest market action.

Video Transcript

ZACK GUZMAN: I want to turn to what this all means, though, for the market as we are watching September end in typical September fashion here, as the Dow, as we brought to you, seeing a loss of more than 300 points, extending those losses. Now off by 1.3%. Extends near the 4.50 mark. The NASDAQ also seeing a decline of about 1/3. This morning, we got unemployment claims, the initial jobless claims once again rising for the third week in a row beyond expectations. We've talked a lot about potential stumbles here in this recovery.

And for more on what it means for the market, I want to bring in Shawn Snyder, Citi US Wealth Management and Head of Investment Strategy here. Sean, when we talk about it, you know, we knew data was slowing down in terms of it showing a hot bounceback. You know, Delta, obviously, a lot to blame here, as we heard from Jerome Powell speaking this week.

But when you look at maybe what lies ahead, we knew September was also going to be rough. Just markets, that's what it is historically. When you look ahead to Q4, though, not the same picture, averaging about 5% gain when you look back historically. So what's the advice to investors who have weathered this September storm?

SHAWN SNYDER: Sure, I think you have to anticipate volatility in the market. It's not unusual. It just seems unusual because we had such a long stretch here with such a significant rally as we reemerge in the economy and reopen. But then the pace of gains are probably going to slow from here. And the economy is going to go through a process of normalization.

And that's essentially what Fed Chair Powell is alluding to as well when he talks about inflation. There are supply side issues that are holding back the economy. And I think the labor market is an excellent example of how it's being held back because you have record high job openings, 10.6 million jobs open, and yet you still have a weak jobs gain in August, 230 some thousand, I believe, it was.

So this is going to take a period of time to normalize. And, you know, I think the pace of gains are just going to be slower. You know, I think that's not that surprising, given that in the second quarter, we were thinking that COVID was very close to an end. And then delta put a dent in that. So that's really kind of throwing us off a little bit. Also, just a large confluence of events happening in September. We have now Fed tapering. We have the ongoing DC drama and all those things that are just kind of leading to some weakness in equity markets.