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It Is Only Fair to Destroy Russian Terrorists Where They Are – Address by the President
12 August 2024 - 19:49
12 August 2024 - 19:49
The sequence proved that, once again, stock market investing is fraught with risk and that talk of a market collapse isn't hyperbole.
"We're seeing the market's emotional side right now," says Aaron Sherman, president of Odyssey Group Wealth Advisors in Lancaster, Pennsylvania. "As much as the market may seem to be driven by pure numbers, dollars and cents, rational explanations of market activity rarely tell the whole story."
Sherman says investors are seeing market psychology shift abruptly from "it's all good" to "the sky is falling" without much justification this week. "Yes, there are signs the economy is slowing, but it's not falling off a cliff," he says.
That's the good news, as the U.S. economy and the stock market aren't out of the woods yet. Keep an eye on these seven "market crash" factors that can send stocks tumbling again at a moment's notice:

The Falcon 9 rocket lifted off at 6:38 a.m. EDT and SpaceX confirmed the satellite payload was deployed about an hour later.
"Rise and shine with Falcon 9," SpaceX wrote on social media.
The launch from the Kennedy Space Center just after dawn was the 17th flight for the first stage booster, which landed safely on the drone ship A Shortfall of Gravitas in the Atlantic Ocean.
The rocket took a northeastern trajectory before the first-stage booster detached and returned to Earth about eight minutes after liftoff.
SpaceX did not explain the mission's scrub on Sunday. It was 46 seconds away from launching before the pause.
"Vehicle and payload are in good health and teams are resetting for a launch attempt on Monday, Aug. 12," SpaceX said.
SpaceX did manage to launch a Falcon 9 rocket with a pair of communication satellites for Norway's Arctic Satellite Broadband Mission from California on Sunday. That rocket carried two ASBE satellites into space from the Vandenberg Space Force Center.
The satellites, built by Northrop Grumman, are expected to expand broadband coverage to the Arctic region for U.S. Space Force and Space Norway AS.