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FEBRUARY 20, 2020 / 4:34 pm
Wall St. eases, led by tech decline on mounting fears
coronavirus could spread
DJ: 29,348.03 +115.84 NAS: 9,817.18
+84.44 S&P: 3,386.15
+15.86 2/19
DJ: 29,219.98 -128.05 NAS: 9,750.96 -66.22 S&P: 3,373.23
-12.92 2/20
NEW YORK (Reuters) - U.S.
stocks fell on Thursday, led by declines in technology heavyweights, after
reports of new coronavirus cases in China and other countries intensified fears
over its spread and impact on the global economy. Investors were unnerved by a sharp
late-morning drop that took the S&P 500 briefly down more than 1% on the
day, with some traders attributing the move to a Global Times report that a
central Beijing hospital had reported 36 new cases. This raised worries about a
potential increase in infections in the Chinese capital.
Investors were already skittish after Japan reported two new deaths and South
Korea reported a rise in new infections. Research suggested the virus was spreading more quickly than
previously thought. “The
overlying question is the uncertainty over the coronavirus and whether it’s
going to spread further and impact global economic activity before things
stabilize and ultimately get better,” said Michael Sheldon, executive director
and CIO at RDM Financial Group at Hightower in Westport, Connecticut. He said it appeared investors were taking profits in some
high-flying technology names and buying shares of other groups,
including small caps. The Russell 2000 index ended up 0.2% on the day.
The S&P 500 technology index lost 1% on the day. The index has led gains in
the S&P 500 so far this year and is still up more than 10% since Dec. 31. Shares of
Microsoft Corp, Apple Inc and Amazon.com Inc fell and were among the biggest
drag on the S&P 500 on Thursday.
The Dow Jones Industrial
Average fell 128.05 points, or 0.44%, to 29,219.98, the S&P 500 lost 12.92
points, or 0.38%, to 3,373.23 and the Nasdaq Composite dropped 66.22 points, or
0.67%, to 9,750.97.
Recent policy easing by
China, a largely better-than-expected fourth-quarter earnings season and hopes
that the economic jolt from the coronavirus will be short-lived have pushed
Wall Street’s main indexes to new highs in recent weeks.
“In my opinion, what is happening is the market got well ahead of itself. The coronavirus
thing is not over by any stretch,” said Ken Polcari, senior market strategist
at SlateStone Wealth LLC in Jupiter, Florida.
E*Trade jumped 21.8% after Morgan Stanley offered to buy it in a
$13 billion stock deal, the biggest acquisition by a Wall Street bank since the
financial crisis. In other corporate
news, ViacomCBS Inc slumped 17.9% as its earnings fell short of revenue and
profit expectations in its first quarterly earnings results since closing its
merger.
The S&P 500 posted 45 new 52-week highs and 4 new lows; the
Nasdaq Composite recorded 138 new highs and 56 new lows.
Volume on U.S. exchanges
was 8.36 billion shares,
compared with the 7.63 billion average for the full session over the last 20
trading days.
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