The 1% Move Report

Timely commentary on market performance whenever the S&P 500 changes more than 1% in a day.

 

 

 

 

 

Wealth Management — February 5, 2026

Source: Bloomberg, Morgan Stanley Wealth Management Global Investment Office (GIO). Data as of February 5, 2026.

What Happened in the Markets?

  • The S&P 500 fell 1.2% Thursday to end the day at 6,798.40, having lost 0.7% thus far in 2026.
  • Two of 11 S&P 500 sectors were higher on the day, as Consumer Staples (+0.2%) and Utilities (+0.1%) were the strongest-performing S&P 500 sectors, while Consumer Discretionary (-2.6%) and Materials (-2.8%) underperformed.
  • By the 4:00 p.m. equity market close, the US 10-year Treasury yield decreased to 4.19%; WTI Crude decreased to $63.20 per barrel; and gold decreased to $4,800.84 per ounce.

Why Did This Move Happen?

  • US equities fell sharply on Thursday, as software remained under pressure amid an early-2026 rotation, with retail favorites, most-shorted, high-beta, and growth names facing strong headwinds. AI competition, scrutiny of AI investment, and stretched positioning weighed on the broad index, with 10 of 11 S&P 500 sectors lower.
  • Labor data surprised to the downside, with JOLTS job openings unexpectedly hitting their lowest level since 2020, layoffs rising, and Challenger reporting the highest announced layoffs for any January in 17 years. Initial jobless claims rose more than expected, signaling cooling labor demand.
  • Equity investors' skepticism continued despite positive 4Q2025 earnings results from another megacap tech company. The VIX Index rose over 11%, capturing the risk-off sentiment that drove the two- vs. 10-year US Treasury yield curve steeper, to its widest in four years.

S&P 500 vs. 50-, 100-, and 200-Day Moving Averages

Source: Bloomberg and Morgan Stanley Wealth Management GIO. Data as of February 5, 2026.

How Does the Move Relate to Our Tactical Positioning?

  • The GIC recommends preparing for a solid-but-slowing US backdrop, emphasizing US large-cap ‘quality’ across both growth and value, while erring on the side of asset class diversification. With megacap and large-cap leadership likely to persist and a policy/productivity backdrop that favors strong fundamentals, we prefer core fixed income in the "belly of the curve" over short duration. We continue to use real assets and hedge funds to help mitigate emerging risks. The GIC consistently re-assesses its outlook in light of incoming data points.
  • Please find more information on the GIC's tactical positioning on the next two pages and reach out to your Morgan Stanley Financial Advisor to discuss portfolio strategies.

The Global Investment Committee's Tactical Asset Allocation Reasoning

Note: Opportunistic Fixed Income includes Inflation-Linked Securities, High Yield Fixed Income, International Fixed Income, and Emerging Market Fixed Income. The GIC asset allocation models’ benchmarks do not include exposure to Opportunistic Fixed Income. Real Assets includes Real Estate/REITs, Commodities, and Energy Infrastructure/MLPs. Hedged Strategies include Absolute Return Assets, Equity Hedge Assets, and Equity Return Assets. Source: Morgan Stanley Wealth Management GlC as of Jan. 15, 2026.

Morgan Stanley & Co.’s Key Market Forecasts

Source: Bloomberg, Morgan Stanley Wealth Management GIO. Data as of February 5, 2026.

Market data provided by Bloomberg.

Dow Jones Industrial Average (DJIA): A price-weighted average of 30 blue-chip stocks that are generally the leaders in their industry.

NASDAQ Composite Index: A broad-based capitalization-weighted index of stocks in all three NASDAQ tiers: Global Select, Global Market and Capital Market.

S&P 500 Index: The Standard & Poor's (S&P) 500 Index tracks the performance of 500 widely held, large-capitalization US stocks.

US Trade-Weighted Dollar Index: A weighted average of the foreign exchange value of the 17US dollar against a subset of the broad index currencies that circulate widely outside the US.

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