A perfect V-shaped curve today with the Dow dropping 200 points by around noon, and then recovering most of the 200 during the afternoon to close down just 28 points. It dove because of angst over stimulus negotiations and then rose because of hope over the same. So yesterday’s claim that the market is now ignoring this issue is evidently premature as it appears to still be very much in play and very much influencing the ups and downs. A record 50 million Americans have now cast ballots and the consensus is that Thursday’s debate did not move the needle. Q3 moves steadily along with today 135 of the S&P companies having reported and 84% beating estimates. At 7.8 billion, volume remains below the 9.0 billion 4-week average.
FRI OCTOBER 23, 2020 4:32 PM
S&P, Nasdaq close higher as
stimulus talks in spotlight
DJ: 28,363.66 +152.84 NAS: 11,506.01 +21.31 S&P: 3,453.49 +17.93 10/22
DJ: 28,335.57 -28.09 NAS: 11,548.28 +42.28 S&P: 3,465.39
+11.90 10/23
NEW
YORK (Reuters) - The S&P 500 and Nasdaq closed modestly higher on Friday in
choppy trading, with investors keeping a close eye on negotiations on a U.S.
stimulus package that would ease the economic shock caused by the coronavirus
pandemic. The Dow ended lower on the
day, moving within tight ranges. Uncertainty
over the timeline of the relief legislation has been weighing on Wall Street’s
major indexes in recent sessions, with all three indexes posting declines for
the week. U.S. House Speaker Nancy
Pelosi said it still was possible to get another round of COVID-19 aid before
the Nov. 3 election, but that it was up to President Donald Trump to act,
including talking to reluctant Senate Republicans, if he wants it. Trump and Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin
countered that Pelosi must compromise to get an aid package, saying significant
differences remained between the Republican administration and Democrats.
Still
the market believes a stimulus deal is going to get done: The only question would be size and
timing, analysts said.
The
Dow Jones Industrial Average closed 28.09 points lower, or 0.1%, to 28,335.57,
the S&P 500 gained 11.9 points, or 0.34%, to 3,465.39 and the Nasdaq
Composite added 42.28 points, or 0.37%, to 11,548.28. The communication services sector rose
1.1%, the highest gainer among the major S&P sectors.
“This has been a stimulus-driven market for
several weeks -- today is more evidence of that,” said Lindsey Bell, chief
investment strategist at Ally Invest, in Charlotte, North Carolina. “The market believes we are getting a stimulus. But it
wants to know when it’s going to pass because it’s going to take time for the
money to flow out,” she added.
Meanwhile, a record 50 million Americans cast ballots,
eclipsing total early voting from the 2016 election. Trump and Democratic rival Joe Biden debated
on Thursday for the last time to persuade the few remaining undecided voters 11
days before their contest, but while the debate was more toned down and substantive, it hardly moved the needle. Trump still trailed former vice president
Biden in national polls after the debate, although the contest is much tighter
in some battleground states where the election will likely be decided.
A sharp 10% fall in chipmaker Intel Corp
after it reported a drop in margins earlier weighed on the market. Intel’s
results were pressured as consumers bought cheaper laptops and
pandemic-stricken businesses and governments clamped down on data center
spending. The third-quarter earnings
season, meanwhile, chugged along, with about 84% of the 135 S&P 500 companies that have
reported so far topping
quarterly profit estimates,
according to Refinitiv data. Next week’s
focus will be on results from Big Tech companies Apple Inc, Facebook Inc,
Amazon.com Inc and Google-parent Alphabet.
Gilead Sciences Inc rose 0.2% as its
antiviral drug remdesivir became the first and only drug approved for treating
patients hospitalized with COVID-19 in the United States. American Express Co fell 3.6% as it missed
estimates for third-quarter profit after its customers spent less during the
COVID-19 fueled economic slowdown and it set aside money for potential payment
defaults.
For
the week, the Dow ended down 0.9%, the S&P 500 fell 0.5% and Nasdaq
declined 1.1%.
Volume
on U.S exchanges was 7.79 billion shares, compared with the nearly 9 billion average for the full
session over the last 20 trading days.
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