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FEBRUARY 26, 2020 / 6:25 pm
Wall Street falls more slowly as investors parse coronavirus
fears
DJ: 27,081.36 -879.44 NAS: 8,965.61
-255.67 S&P: 3,128.21
-97.68 2/25
DJ: 26,957.59 -123.77 NAS: 8,980.77 +15.16 S&P: 3,116.39
-11.82 2/26
New York (Reuters) - The
S&P 500 fell for a fifth straight day on Wednesday and while its decline
was slower than the last few days, the session was volatile as investors
reacted to headlines about coronavirus and sought to gauge its economic
fallout. After rising as much as 1.7% in
the morning, the S&P 500 hit a session low after health officials in Nassau
County, New York, said they were monitoring 83 people who visited China and may
have come in contact with the virus. Still, Governor Andrew Cuomo said the
state has had no confirmed cases. {nL2N2AQ192]
Adding to pressure was a warning from U.S. Food and Drug Administration
officials that the outbreak was on a path to becoming a pandemic, according to
a report.
Earlier, stocks lost ground after Germany said it was heading
for a coronavirus epidemic and could no longer trace all cases, and Norway
confirmed its first case of the virus. For the first time, the number of new infections outside
China overtook those inside the country, the source of the outbreak.
Trading volume was far more active than usual, yet some investors were relieved the slide
was slower. The S&P ended down 0.38%, compared with its 6.3% of
losses in the previous two sessions. “The
market’s default reaction function is when in danger or in doubt, run in
circles, scream and shout. That’s what we’ve seen in the past couple of days,”
said Brad McMillan, Chief Investment Officer for Commonwealth Financial
Network, an independent broker-dealer in Waltham, Mass. “The real story today was that it
stopped going down fast ... news came in and the market thought about it
and acted appropriately by selling off a little but not too much,” said
McMillan who estimates that equity investors have priced in two quarters of
global economic fallout from the virus.
The Dow Jones Industrial
Average fell 123.77 points, or 0.46%, to 26,957.59, the S&P 500 dropped 11.82
points to 3,116.39 and the Nasdaq Composite added 15.16 points, or 0.17%, to
end at 8,980.78. Of the S&P’s 11 major sectors energy was
the biggest laggard with an almost 3% drop, while technology was its
outperformer with a 0.4% gain.
Many investors were cautious about making any big bets without
more clarity on the spread of the virus.
“We need to more information before markets have a further
correction or get comfortable things won’t escalate further,” said Jason
Draho, head of Americas asset allocation at UBS Global Wealth Management, New
York. “Markets will be very jumpy until there’s increasing
confidence the virus is abating and that it won’t be a global pandemic,”
Draho said. President Donald Trump,
scheduled to hold a news conference on the coronavirus at 630 P.M. ET (2330
GMT), accused cable TV news channels of presenting the danger from the
coronavirus in as bad a light as possible and upsetting financial markets.
The Dow ended the day
8.8% below its recent record
close, reached Feb. 12 while the
S&P 500 was just under 8% off its record high reached last Wednesday. Nasdaq finished 8.5%
below its recent record.
Declining issues outnumbered advancing ones on the NYSE by a
1.94-to-1 ratio; on Nasdaq, a 1.73-to-1 ratio favored decliners. The S&P 500 posted 4 new 52-week highs
and 50 new lows; the Nasdaq Composite recorded 23 new highs and 237 new lows.
On U.S. exchanges 11.86 billion shares changed hands, below Tuesday’s 12.33
billion, but well above the 8.23 billion average for the last 20 sessions.
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