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The Dow Jones is getting hit by a sledgehammer – how worried should you be?

This is The Takeaway from today’s Morning Brief, that’s possible sign up to receive in your inbox every morning, along with:

On big negative days for the stock market or extended periods of sell-offs, it’s good to have a trusted playbook.

Think of it as a guide to maintaining your sanity amid the chaos and, hopefully, keeping your portfolio full of long-term gains.

To me, the sell-out playbook is a two-pronged exercise honed through years of covering business news.

First, have a chat with the smartest people I know in the markets and business. What do they do and say, and why? Do they sound or look anxious?

And second, think carefully about whether anything has really changed in the market, or whether investors are panicking at the splashy headlines.

Suffice it to say, I had to dust off this sellout playbook this week. The Final Assessment: Relax, folks, this isn’t the start of a bear market, even if the tape feels punishing.

Why, you ask?

Many of the smartest people in the room have valid reasons, so to speak, to remain long stocks AND the economy isn’t falling off a cliff AND we’ll probably still get rate cuts in 2025 AND we have a pro-business president of Trump who will take office in less than a month.

“The big picture, with record profits, record profit margins, strong productivity and overall improving sentiment among consumers and small businesses, it’s hard to think this bull market is over,” Carson Group market strategist Ryan Detrick told me.

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Keith Lerner, Truist’s co-chief investment officer, said: “The bull market is still intact, but we see a gut feeling in the near term.”

A gut check, indeed.

The Dow Jones Industrial Average promptly ended Wednesday’s session with a loss of more than 1,100 points. Things recovered slightly on Thursday, but selling pressure increased again on Friday.

The index of 30 well-known stocks such as Salesforce (CRM) and Disney (DIS) fell almost 4% in December as losses began to pile up amid renewed uncertainty about interest rate cuts.

The S&P 500 is down 3% this month. Market leader Nvidia (NVDA) fell 6% in December.

What has spooked markets is the Fed’s failure to commit to aggressive rate cuts by 2025.

The consensus among Fed officials is now for two rate cuts next year, down from four previously forecast in September, as the monetary policy body remains concerned about the inflation outlook. The inflation outlook is further clouded by possible steps by the new Trump administration, such as possible inflation tariffs on China.

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