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Stocks claw back some lost ground Thursday; GameStop swings wildly

Investors continue to closely watch the wild swings in GameStop, AMC and other stocks which online investors are pushing higher as a way to take on big hedge funds.

NEW YORK — Major stock indexes clawed back some of the ground they lost a day earlier in their biggest loss since October. 

Much of the market’s attention Thursday remained glued to the wild swings in GameStop, AMC and handful of other stocks which online investors have been buying feverishly in an effort to take on big hedge funds betting they will fall. 

GameStop and several other stocks fell sharply after Robinhood and other trading platforms restricted trading in them, causing an outcry among customers. 

In Washington and elsewhere, calls were growing for regulators to step in to curb the speculative frenzy. 

Mike Zigmont, director of trading and research at Harvest Volatility Management, said the cascade on Wednesday likely started when larger institutions started taking steps to reduce their exposure to risk at the same time, partly because of the sharp and questionable gains in several stocks. That prompted others in the market to follow suit, accelerating the decline. Similar sentiment may be driving shares higher Thursday.

“You listen to your models and suddenly everybody is de-risking together and everything cascades.” he said. “Then you sleep on it and things don't look so bad.”

Gamestop was was down 29% after more than doubling in price the day before. The stock, trading at $264 a share, overnight was worth as much as $500 a share. Meanwhile AMC Networks was down 48.5%, after rising nearly 600% this month alone.

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Investors are also focusing on company earnings. More than 100 companies in the S&P 500 are scheduled to tell investors this week how they fared during the last three months of 2020.

Apple fell 0.8% after the iPhone maker posted a record quarterly profit, helped by big sales of iPhones and Apple Watches during the holiday season. Investors focused on the fact that Apple was conservative in its full-year outlook for 2021, which the company cited economic uncertainty and the pandemic as part of the reason for the forecast.

Credit: AP
In this photo provided by the New York Stock Exchange, a specialist works at his post on the trading floor, Thursday, Jan 28, 2021.

Meanwhile, hopes are high for President Joe Biden’s proposed a $1.9 trillion COVID-relief package, but worries are growing the plan might also be scaled back. Adding to caution, the Federal Reserve said Wednesday it would keep its low interest rate policies in place, but it also released a sobering assessment of the gradual recovery ahead.

“Investors will likely focus on the pace of vaccinations around the globe while also keeping an eye on the progress of President Biden’s fiscal rescue plan that may be facing some roadblocks in the U.S. Senate,” Prakash Sakpal and Nicholas Mapa, senior economists at ING, said in a report.

Markets had been meandering near record highs since last week as investors weighed solid corporate earnings results against renewed worries that troubles with COVID-19 vaccine rollouts and the spread of new variants of coronavirus might delay a recovery from the pandemic.

Credit: AP
In this photo provided by the New York Stock Exchange, trader Robert Charmak, left, works on the floor, Thursday, Jan 28, 2021

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