Wed
MAY 13, 2020 / 4:22 pm
Wall Street ends down on Powell's sober outlook, call to
Congress for help
DJ: 23,764.78 -457.21 NAS: 9,002.55
-189.79 S&P: 2,870.12
-60.20 5/12
DJ: 23,247.97 -516.81 NAS: 8,863.17 -139.38 S&P: 2,820.00
-50.12 5/13
New York (Reuters) - Wall
Street’s three major indexes closed lower for the second day in a row after
Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell warned on Wednesday of extended economic
weakness due to the coronavirus pandemic and called for Congress to agree on
additional fiscal support. While the
indexes closed above their session lows as they pared losses in the final
minutes of the day, investors appeared to price in a deeper economic downturn
than they had previously expected, fearing Powell’s call for additional stimulus
would go unanswered.
While Powell pledged in a webcast to use the U.S. central bank’s
power as needed, he suggested that it might not be enough to avoid deep
economic damage without more fiscal support.
“He’s saying if you want to avoid a slow recovery and long-term economic damage you need a
strong fiscal response, effectively placing that responsibility back over to
governments instead of central banks,” said Shawn Cruz, manager of
trader strategy at TD Ameritrade in Jersey City, New Jersey. And divisions among Republicans and Democrats
appear to have dimmed the
prospects for additional fiscal support from Congress, according to Jeff
Kleintop, chief global investment strategist at Charles Schwab.
Market participants said they were relieved by Powell’s
indication that the Fed would not push interest rates below zero but some
seemed taken aback by his
downbeat view on the economy. Schwab’s
Kleintop said Powell’s tone was more pessimistic than in the recent past. “The
market took away that maybe there’s more bad news out there than they’d been
pricing in,” he said. Powell’s comments
followed a sharp selloff
in equities on Tuesday after a warning from leading U.S. infectious disease
expert Anthony Fauci that
the virus was not yet under control. Fauci’s comments prompted concerns
about how the economy would emerge from weeks of virus-related lockdowns.
The depth of Wednesday’s
decline was due to the combination of Fauci’s comments and Powell’s warning,
TD Ameritrade’s Cruz said: “The biggest implication is that some of the
economic activity we’ve lost may never be recovered.” Another negative factor was a decision by an
independent board overseeing billions in federal retirement dollars that it
would indefinitely delay plans to invest in some Chinese companies. “It adds to the tension ahead of an announcement Trump said could
come this week on the
Phase One (U.S.-China) trade deal,” said Schwab’s Kleintop.
The Dow Jones Industrial
Average .DJI fell 516.81 points, or 2.17%, to 23,247.97,
the S&P 500 .SPX lost 50.12 points, or 1.75%, to 2,820 and
the Nasdaq Composite .IXIC dropped 139.38 points, or 1.55%, to 8,863.17.
Investor bets on a
swift recovery had helped the three main U.S. stock indexes climb about 30% from their March
lows. But as officials around the world and in parts of the United
States began easing lockdown rules with a view to restarting local economies, fears of a second wave of
COVID-19 infections have diminished
those hopes.
Energy stocks .SPNY dropped 4.4% on Wednesday, showing the
steepest percentage loss among the 11 major S&P sectors. Interest
rate-sensitive bank shares .SPXBK also shed 4.4%, tracking a fall in U.S.
Treasury yields.
Wall Street’s fear
gauge, the Cboe volatility index , rose for the second day. It gained 2.24 points to
35.28 after touching its highest point since May 4.
Royal Caribbean Cruises Ltd (RCL.N)
shares tumbled just under 5% after it launched a $3.3 billion bond offering,
pledging 28 of its ships as collateral and forecast heavy losses for the first
quarter.
Declining issues outnumbered advancing ones on the NYSE by a
6.36-to-1 ratio; on Nasdaq, a 4.31-to-1 ratio favored decliners. The S&P 500 posted two new 52-week highs
and 11 new lows; the Nasdaq Composite recorded 34 new highs and 93 new lows.
On U.S. exchanges 12.43 billion shares changed hands compared with the 11.44
billion average for the last 20 sessions.
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