After Monday’s crash, Japanese stocks have a big rebound — but don’t quite make it back
Maybe it’s not such a “Great Unwind” after all. The Nikkei 225, which on Monday suffered its worst crash since 1987 — a 12.4% collapse — and triggered a global selloff in world markets, snapped back significantly on Tuesday. It surged 10.2%, the second-largest single day increase in three decades.
The snapback for the Nikkei — and slight early gains the US — doesn’t mean markets are in the clear. Even without the brutal math of percentage change — which means that even after today’s huge rally the Nikkei is still down 11% so far this month — Monday’s sudden collapse was a psychological event for world markets, that will, at a minimum, rattle investor confidence for a while.