Get breaking news alerts and special reports. The news and stories that matter, delivered weekday mornings.

Wall Street had a wild ride Tuesday as the Dow Jones industrial average swung back into the green, ending the day up 550 points after a dramatic opening saw the blue-chip index sink by almost the same amount.

The benchmark Dow even briefly dipped into a correction phase within minutes of the markets opening — a 10 percent decline from its 52-week high — following a worldwide sell-off that saw $4 trillion wiped off the global market.

The roller-coaster ride began Friday after a robust jobs report fed investor fear that a healthy economy would lead the Federal Reserve to raise rates multiple times this year and tighten conditions for borrowing money.

Let our news meet your inbox. The news and stories that matters, delivered weekday mornings. This site is protected by recaptcha

Investors began to scramble for safe havens like bonds and Treasury notes, putting yet more downward pressure on stocks.

On Monday, the Dow suffered its worst ever one-day point decline, closing down 1,175 points. It was a bruising reminder for investors — and for President Donald Trump, who has frequently touted the stock market gains as proof of the success of his presidency — that an overbought market will eventually stumble.

Exacerbating volatility on Wall Street is a changing of the guard at the Fed: Jerome "Jay" Powell, a former Fed governor, was sworn in as chairman on Monday, and three spots on the board remain open, making monetary policy movements hard to predict.

"We don’t know where the Fed is going from here," Lindsey Piegza, chief economist and managing director at Stifel Fixed Income, told NBC News. "That certainly adds some increased volatility for market participants.”

But the underlying economic fundamentals remain strong, cautioned investment strategists. Unemployment is at an 18-year low, wages are up, and healthy corporate earnings continue to pour in.

Keep the sell-off in perspective, warned Kristina Hooper, chief global market strategist at Invesco.

“Don’t be scared, and don’t be impulsive," she said. 'Be disciplined no matter what the market environment, and keep saving and investing according to your long-term plan."