Tue
MARCH 3, 2020 / 4:25 pm
Another foul day on Wall Street after surprise Fed rate cut
DJ: 26,703.32 +1,293.96 NAS: 8,952.17
+384.80 S&P: 3,090.23
+136.01 3/2
DJ: 25,917.41 -785.91 NAS: 8,684.09 -268.08 S&P: 3,003.37
-86.86 3/3
(Reuters) - Wall Street
tumbled in a volatile session on Tuesday after the U.S. Federal Reserve
surprised investors with a half percentage-point cut in interest rates,
amplifying fears about the magnitude of the coronavirus’ impact on the economy. All three major U.S. stock market indexes
closed nearly 3% lower after the Fed’s first emergency rate cut since the 2008
financial crisis. The rate reduction
underscored the U.S. central bank’s concern about the new coronavirus, which
has spread around the world after emerging late last year in China. It came two
weeks ahead of a scheduled policy meeting, where traders had fully priced in a
50-basis-point cut.
Stocks had initially
jumped more than 1%, but then dropped as traders worried whether pumping more
money into financial markets would address the central problem - a drop in business activity as
workers and consumers stay home. “The rate cut underscores the
magnitude of the problem that the global economy is facing,” said Peter
Kenny, founder of Kenny’s Commentary LLC and Strategic Board Solutions LLC in
New York. “Normally, markets would welcome a rate cut,
and they were hoping for it. Now that we’ve got it, the question is, what’s
next?”
The 10-year Treasury yield fell below 1% for the first time ever
as nervous investors moved money out of the stock market. The S&P financials index tumbled 3.7%,
reflecting banks’ difficulty in making profits in low-interest rate
environments. Wall Street on Friday had
its biggest weekly decline in more than a decade as growing cases of the
flu-like virus outside China fanned fears of a global recession.
Earlier on Tuesday, Group of Seven finance ministers and central
bank governors pledged appropriate actions to support their economies. “There
is a real fear that things
are going to get worse and there is no point in waiting for these fears
to be realized,” Jim Bianco, president of Bianco Research in Chicago, said of
the Fed’s rate cut. “You can always undo the rate cut if it fails to
materialize.”
The Dow Jones Industrial
Average dropped 2.94% to end at 25,917.41 points, while the S&P 500 lost
2.81% to finish at 3,003.37. The Nasdaq
Composite descended 2.99% to 8,684.09.
Like other recent sessions, volume was heavy on U.S. exchanges, with 14.7 billion
shares changing hands compared with a 9.8 billion-share average for the last 20
days.
All of the 11 major S&P sectors fell, with the information
technology index slumping 3.8%. Apple and Microsoft fell 3.2% and 4.8%,
respectively. Tuesday’s sell-off left
the S&P 500 down about
11% from its record high close on Feb 19.
Healthcare equipment maker Thermo Fisher Scientific, rose 1.8%
after it launched an $11.6 billion bid for German genetic testing company
Qiagen. Protective mask maker Alpha Pro
Tech jumped nearly 20%.
Declining issues outnumbered advancing ones on the NYSE by a
1.67-to-1 ratio; on Nasdaq, a 2.45-to-1 ratio favored decliners. The S&P 500 posted two new 52-week highs
and 32 new lows; the Nasdaq Composite recorded 19 new highs and 185 new
lows.
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