Bearish sentiment took over the markets Thursday, with the major indexes down around 1.6% to 2% as of 3 p.m. The Dow Jones industrial average was below 23,000, the S&P 500 under 2,500 and the Nasdaq less than 6,550.
Some analysts pointed to the Federal Reserve's move to raise rates on Wednesday, but other say a looming government shutdown and international factors are at play.
DoubleLine Capital CEO Jeffrey Gundlach said on Twitter that Fed Chair Jay Powell made two mistakes during his press conference: autopilot quantitative tightening and "too much talk about economic 'modeling.'"
"The stock bear growls on," Gundlach tweeted late Wednesday.
According to Commonwealth Financial Chief Investment Officer Brad McMillan, the Fed's message to the markets was "drop dead."
"Of course, here I am riffing on the famous headline published after President Ford refused to bail out New York City [in October 1975]. Yesterday, there is no doubt that markets were expecting a bailout from the Fed — and threw a tantrum when they didn't get it," McMillan said in a commentary piece early Thursday.
But the Federal Reserve also indicated on Wednesday that it would likely hike rates twice next year — and keep raising them.
"By pretty much ignoring the recent financial market turmoil and focusing on continued economic strength, [Fed Chairman Jerome] Powell put the markets on notice that the Fed will be much less willing to shape monetary policy in order to support asset prices," McMillan wrote. "With the Fed stepping back, markets will be on their own in a way they have not been for decades."
The Fed's recent tightening may be its "worst … decision ever," in the words of Thomas Kee, chief economist of Stock Traders Daily.
"The pace of monetary policy may look tame on the surface as far as rates are concerned, but the pace of the reduction of the Federal Open Market Committee balance sheet makes monetary policy very aggressive, and there are direct correlations between market action and the almost-doubling of the liquidity drain on October 1," Kee said in a note to investors on Thursday.