Small caps close in the red

Small-cap stocks tried in vain to dodge some serious data land-mines Thursday as investors anxiously await the big data bomb released with Friday morning’s employment report. Amid choppy seas, the Russell 2000 (NYSE:IWM) eventually finished down 4.34, or 0.60%, at 714.52, unable to shrug off dreadful unemployment claims, soft GDP numbers and a cautious tone from former Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan.
Day traders looking for a definitive direction in small caps today may have gotten a little seasick as the market see-sawed up and down, carried on the whims of economic data crunchers. The opening salvo (and the most dynamic move of the day) was a bearish tilt as weekly unemployment claims went through the roof. Although the survey period for Friday’s monthly jobs report was over before this week’s claims survey, it’s not exactly reassuring to see unemployment numbers spike way beyond expectations.
Just how bad was the claims report? The number came in at 448,000, swamping the forecast for a dip to 395,000 following last week’s already uncomfortably big 404,000 figure. To give it a little better perspective: it was the largest one-week claims figure for any week, of any month, in more than five years. If nothing else, the weekly claims report certainly shot more holes in Wednesday’s ADP employment report, which forecast job growth, nevermind recent reports of layoffs in financial and . . .
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