The technology heavy Nasdaq Composite continues to crash, and burn breaking all the wrong records. The Nasdaq crashed to its worst first half yearly performance for January-June 2022 in its existence. The ongoing market volatility and headwinds couple with record low consumer sentiment have destroyed any structure of positivity. Trillions of dollars in market value have been wiped off. The Nasdaq Composite closed -1.3% on June 30, meaning down 22.4% for the quarter and -29.5% for the year, the worse first six months ever.

Sentiment is cruelled with inflation soaring as commodity prices hit 40-year highs, the yield on the benchmark 10-year Treasury over 3.0% to end June and the average for a 30-year fixed-rate mortgage at 5.81%. This is the highest level since November 2008 and well above the 3.11% recorded near the start of the year. These higher yields have hurt tech and growth stocks, making shares of firms whose profits may lie further out in time less attractive.

H1 2022 was brutal for many tech heavies, Tesla dropped 37%, Nvidia fell 49%, AMD declined 47%, Meta slid 53% and Netflix was skinned for 71%.

Major US Indices H1 2022
- Dow Jones Industrial Average: -15.3% YTD
- S&P 500: -20.6% YTDS&P 400: -20.2% YTD
- Russell 2000: -23.9% YTD
- Nasdaq Composite: -29.5% YTD
They realization of risk and overvalued stocks took a while as the market has lived in denial but the Federal Reserve raising interest rates, soaring inflation and the slovenly economy has brought stocks sharply lower from the record levels they started the year. The latest gross domestic product data showed that the economy recently contracted for the first time since early in the pandemic. The most recent earnings season has been dotted with some high-profile casualties, delivering head-spinning one-day crashes following the reports.

When Risk Explodes:
Nasdaq 100 Second Worse Performing Future in H1 2022, Heating Oil the Best

The Tech Wreck Has Been Travelling Down Fast

The FAANG stocks, consisting of the popular quintet of Facebook parent Meta Platforms, Apple, Amazon.com, Netflix and Google parent Alphabet, have lost $trillions combined in market value this year.
From The Traders Community Research Desk