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JUNE 15, 2020 / 4:30 pm
Wall Street closes higher as Fed soothes recovery worries
DJ: 25,605.54 +477.37 NAS: 9,588.81
+96.08 S&P: 3,041.31
+39.21 6/12
DJ: 25,763.16 +157.62 NAS: 9,726.02 +137.22 S&P: 3,066.59
+25.28 6/15
NEW YORK (Reuters) - Wall
Street closed higher on Monday following an announcement by the U.S. Federal
Reserve regarding its corporate bond purchasing program that boosted investor
confidence, which had been wavering amid a spike in new COVID-19 cases. All three major U.S. stock indexes reversed losses
in afternoon trading, following the Fed’s decision to apply an indexing
approach to its secondary market corporate credit facility to create a more
diversified portfolio.
“No doubt the
market liked it: Who doesn’t like more cake and ice cream?” said Robert
Pavlik, chief investment strategist, senior portfolio manager at SlateStone
Wealth LLC in New York. “It fuels traders to buy individual
stocks and take on higher risk because the Fed has backstopped the bond
market and kept a tighter lid on interest rates,” he added.
A flood of liquidity in the form of fiscal and economic
stimulus, along with uneven but steady re-openings of state and local
economies, sparked a
remarkable rally in the stock market since its late-March trough. Gains were led by cyclical stocks, with
S&P 500 financials enjoying the day’s biggest percentage gains. The S&P 500 Banking index rose 1.6%. “The banks probably have a bunch of corporate debt on their balance
sheets and now there’s a buyer for it,” Pavlik added. “Someone’s going
to be buying those bonds because the Fed is telling them it’s OK.”
But surging
new cases of COVID-19 in China, where the pandemic originated, prompted
the reintroduction of containment measures, and record hospitalizations in
several U.S. states dampened
investor risk appetite. On the
flipside, an uptick in China’s factory output and a much better-than-expected
Empire State manufacturing report gave evidence that the pandemic-hobbled global economy was on
the road to recovery. Earlier,
the U.S. Federal Reserve announced it had opened registration for its Main Street Lending program to
help businesses weather the storm of mandated lockdowns. Last week, the central bank provided its
first pandemic era outlook, and market participants will be closely following
Fed Chair Jerome Powell’s testimony this week before Congress for details on
the central bank’s somber economic projections.
The Dow Jones Industrial
Average rose 157.62 points, or 0.62%, to 25,763.16, the S&P 500 gained
25.28 points, or 0.83%, to 3,066.59 and the Nasdaq Composite added 137.22
points, or 1.43%, to 9,726.02. All 11 major sectors of the S&P 500
closed in the black, led by financials and consumer staples.
Drugmaker Moderna Inc gained 7.4% following a report that Israel
is in advanced talks to buy its coronavirus vaccine.
Advancing issues outnumbered declining ones on the NYSE by a
1.97-to-1 ratio; on Nasdaq, a 2.69-to-1 ratio favored advancers. The S&P 500 posted no new 52-week highs
and no new lows; the Nasdaq Composite recorded 46 new highs and 10 new lows.
Volume on U.S. exchanges
was 12.31 billion shares,
compared with the 12.94 billion average over the last
20 trading days.
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