For the third day the markets were on a straight trajectory down but this time did not recover and the Dow closed 200 points down. This was all triggered by further consideration of the mutant COVID strain coming from the UK and how this might impact both the pandemic progress and the recovery. Or, as today’s expert put it, “Today the market is catching its breath,” or put another way another day of profit-taking. The pandemic continues to violently surge with over 200K new infections each day, making for extreme market volatility. 2020 will indeed be unique as our expert also put it, “This will be the first year in history when stocks were off 30% for the year at one point and finished in the green.” Volume was again very close to the 4-week average at 11.0 billion.
TUE DECEMBER 22, 2020 5:07 PM
S&P 500 ends lower as new COVID
storm clouds overshadow stimulus passage
DJ: 30,216.45 +37.40 NAS: 12,742.52 -13.12 S&P: 3,694.92 -14.49 12/21
DJ: 30,015.51 -200.94 NAS: 12,807.92 +65.40 S&P: 3,687.26
-7.66 12/22
NEW
YORK (Reuters) -The S&P 500 lost ground on Tuesday as concerns over a new
variant of the coronavirus and disappointing economic data stole the thunder
from Washington’s passage of a long-awaited pandemic relief bill. The Dow also closed lower, while Apple Inc
helped push the tech-heavy Nasdaq’s to an all-time closing high. Small caps advanced, with the Russell 2000
also closing at a record level.
“Today
the market is catching its breath,” said Ryan Detrick, senior market strategist at LPL Financial
in Charlotte, North Carolina. “It’s digesting the two big pieces of news we’ve
gotten in the last 24 hours, the stimulus and the new COVID strain.” Apple was an outlier amid a broad sell-off,
gaining 2.8% and providing the biggest lift to the S&P 500 and the Nasdaq
on news of the company’s plans to roll out an electric passenger vehicle by
2024.
Overnight,
Congress passed a pandemic relief package worth $892 billion after months of a partisan tug-of-war, aimed
at propping up an economic recovery faltering under the weight of restrictions
aimed at containing a coronavirus resurgence.
That resurgence
continues to swell, infecting 214,000 Americans every day, prompting
mandatory shutdowns and pushing hospitals to capacity. A fast-spreading new variant of the virus
discovered in Britain has brought movement in and out of the UK to a halt and
sent vaccine makers Pfizer Inc and Moderna Inc scrambling to ensure their drugs
were effective against it.
Fears
of the coronavirus and optimism about an eventual economic recovery made for
extreme volatility on Wall Street in 2020, with the S&P 500 logging daily gains or losses of 2% or
more over 40 times in the year so far, the most in over a decade. “This will be the first year in history when stocks were off 30% for the
year at one point and finished in the green,” Detrick said. “It’s truly
an amazing round-trip and we’ve never seen anything like it.” On the economic front, consumer confidence unexpectedly
dropped while sales of pre-owned U.S. homes posted their first decline
in six months.
The
Dow Jones Industrial Average fell 200.94 points, or 0.67%, to 30,015.51, the
S&P 500 lost 7.66 points, or 0.21%, to 3,687.26 and the Nasdaq Composite
added 65.40 points, or 0.51%, to 12,807.92. Of the 11 major sectors
in the S&P 500, only tech and real estate ended the session in positive
territory.
Tesla Inc fell 1.5%, extending its slide
on its second day as a S&P 500 constituent.
Peloton Interactive Inc jumped 11.6% as brokers hiked their price
targets on the stock on the heels of the company’s announcement that it would
buy peer Precor in a deal worth $420 million.
Amgen Inc slid 2.8% after disappointing results from a late-stage study
of an asthma drug developed in a partnership with British drugmaker AstraZeneca
Plc.
Declining issues outnumbered advancing
ones on the NYSE by a 1.31-to-1 ratio; on Nasdaq, a 1.21-to-1 ratio favored
advancers. The S&P 500 posted 23 new
52-week highs and one new low; the Nasdaq Composite recorded 323 new highs and
11 new lows.
Volume
on U.S. exchanges was 11.02 billion shares, compared with the 11.62 billion average over the last
20 trading days.
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