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MARCH 24, 2020 / 7:00 pm
Dow soars over 11% in strongest one-day performance since 1933
DJ: 18,591.93 -582.05 NAS: 6,860.67
-18.84 S&P: 2,237.40
-67.52 3/23
DJ: 20,704.91 +2.112.98 NAS: 7,417.86
+557.18 S&P: 2,447.33 +209.93 3/24
(Reuters) - The Dow
soared on Tuesday to its biggest one-day percentage gain since 1933, after U.S.
lawmakers said they were close to a deal for an economic rescue package in
response to the coronavirus outbreak, injecting optimism following the biggest
selloff since the financial crisis. All
three main U.S. stock indexes rebounded strongly from Monday’s brutal selloff
as the coronavirus outbreak forced entire nations to shut down.
Senior Democrats and Republicans said they were close to a deal on a $2 trillion
stimulus bill, aimed at providing financial aid to Americans out of work
and help for distressed industries. The
expected legislation adds to aggressive action announced by the Federal Reserve
in recent days, including purchase of corporate bonds and announcing that the
U.S. central bank will make direct loans to companies.
King Lip, chief investment strategist at Baker Avenue Asset
Management in San Francisco, said expectations on the stimulus bill were
driving optimism on Wall Street, but said his firm was still waiting to buy
back into the market. “With all of this stimulus, we just need a catalyst to spark the
fire,” Lip said. “That
spark will be a peaking of the cases, and when it starts to come down, I think
that’s when everything gets lit up.”
Investors were also pleased after President Donald Trump said on
Monday he was considering how to restart parts of business life when a 15-day
shutdown ends next week, even as the highly contagious virus spreads rapidly
and poorly equipped hospitals struggle with a wave of deadly cases. A separate proposal in the U.S. House of
Representatives to grant airlines and contractors a $40 billion bailout lifted
the S&P 1500 airlines index .SPCOMAIR by 15%. The severity of the spread of COVID-19 and
expectations of aggressive stimulus measures have whipsawed financial markets
and ended Wall Street’s 11-year bull run.
Boeing Co (BA.N)
powered the Dow’s gains, jumping nearly 21% after Chief Executive Dave Calhoun
said the planemaker expected the 737 MAX jet to return to service by mid-year.
Its shares have lost nearly two-thirds of their value so far in 2020. Data on Monday showed U.S. business activity hit a record low in March,
bolstering expert views that the economy was already in a recession. Traders were still weighing the uncertainty
of the path of the coronavirus outbreak.
“We don’t know how
long it’s going to take to peak. We don’t know how to treat it. We don’t
have a vaccine. So all of those uncertainties are causing a myriad of
aftershocks,” said Nancy Perez, senior portfolio manager at Boston Private
Wealth in Miami.
The
Dow Jones Industrial Average .DJI soared 11.37% to end at 20,704.91 points,
while the S&P 500 .SPX jumped 9.38% to 2,447.33. The Nasdaq
Composite .IXIC rallied 8.12% to 7,417.86. The
S&P energy index .SPNY jumped 16.3%. The big banks index .SPXBK jumped
about 13%, tracking an increase in U.S. government bond yields. [US/] Just 11 S&P 500 stocks ended lower.
Advancing issues outnumbered declining ones on the NYSE by a
8.53-to-1 ratio; on Nasdaq, a 6.22-to-1 ratio favored advancers. The S&P 500 posted no new 52-week highs
and four new lows; the Nasdaq Composite recorded four new highs and 85 new
lows.
Volume on U.S. exchanges
was 15.3 billion shares,
compared to the 15.9 billion-share average for the full session over the last
20 trading days.
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