Stocks slide on Wall Street after big 3-day rally
Stocks on Wall Street fell Friday but still notched big gains for the week as investors held out hope that Washington’s $2-trillion rescue package will cushion U.S. businesses and households from the economic devastation that the coronavirus is wreaking.
The Standard & Poor’s 500 index lost 3.4% for the day but was still up 10.3% for the week, its biggest one-week gain since March 2009. That follows two weeks of relentless selling. The Dow Jones industrial average’s 12.8% weekly gain was its biggest since 1938, thanks largely to Boeing, whose stock soared 70.5% this week.
Stocks had leaped the previous three days as the relief bill moved closer to becoming law. It passed the House on Friday, and after markets closed, President Trump signed it. The bill includes direct payments to households, aid to hard-hit industries such as airlines and support for small businesses. Despite the help, analysts expect markets to remain turbulent until the outbreak begins to wane.
Even after the rally this week, the market is still down 25% from the all-time high it reached a month ago. The outbreak has forced widespread shutdowns that have ground much of the U.S. economy to a halt. This week, more than 3 million people filed for unemployment benefits, shattering previous records. It’s the first of what is sure to be many grim signs of the toll the virus is taking on the economy.
“The key at this point is getting a handle on the spread of the virus so that then we can start to think about what [economic] growth looks like for the remainder of the year,” said Willie Delwiche, investment strategist at Baird.
The push to deliver financial relief is taking on more urgency as the outbreak continues to widen. The number of known cases in the U.S. has now surpassed those in China and Italy, climbing to more than 86,000, according to Johns Hopkins University. The worldwide total has topped 550,000, and the death toll has climbed to more than 25,000, while more than 127,000 have recovered.
For most people, the new coronavirus causes mild or moderate symptoms, such as fever and cough that clear up in two to three weeks. For some, especially older adults and people with existing health problems, it can cause more severe illness, including pneumonia, or death.
Investors have yet to get a clear picture of exactly how badly the crisis has hurt corporate profits, the ultimate driver of stock prices. Very few companies have dared to issue forecasts capturing the damage, though traders are girding for discouraging results in the next few weeks as earnings reporting season begins. Many companies have withdrawn their profit forecasts altogether.
At the start of this year, analysts expected S&P 500 companies’ earnings would grow 4.4% in the January-through-March quarter. They now expect earnings will be down 4.1%, according to FactSet.
Airlines — which have been hit by lost bookings as businesses and individuals canceled travel plans to minimize their risk of contracting the virus — are expected to report catastrophically bad earnings. Delta went from an expected 2.2% decline to a 108% plunge.
Even the current forecasts may not yet reflect the size of the potential earnings declines this year. Only 15% of analysts have adjusted their estimates in the past couple of weeks, according to a report by Credit Suisse.
Friday’s sell-off left the S&P 500 down 88.60 points, or 3.4%, at 2,541.47. The Dow slumped 915.39 points, or 4.1%, to 21,636.78. The Nasdaq declined 295.16 points, or 3.8%, to 7,502.38. The Russell 2000 index of smaller-company stocks retreated 48.33 points, or 4.1%, to 1,131.99.
Cruise operators Norwegian Cruise Line and Carnival were Friday’s biggest decliners in the S&P 500. The industry has been among the hardest hit by the economic fallout from the coronavirus. The companies are down more than 70% so far this year.
The price of crude oil slid 4.8% to $21.51 a barrel. Goldman Sachs has forecast that it will fall well below $20 a barrel in the next two months because storage will be filled to the brim and wells will have to be shut in.
That’s sure to cause even more trouble for energy companies, which are lagging far behind the rest of the market. The price of oil has plunged recently, in part due to a price war that broke out this month between Saudi Arabia and Russia. The energy sector of the S&P 500 has lost half its value this year.
The yield on the 10-year Treasury fell to 0.68% from 0.81%. Lower yields reflect dimmer expectations for economic growth and greater demand for low-risk assets.
The overall downturn in the markets in recent weeks is creating good opportunities for investors to buy into sectors that will be “prevalent” for the next decade, including e-commerce and technology companies that focus on things such as gene therapies, said Solita Marcelli, deputy chief investment officer, Americas, at UBS Global Wealth Management.
The strong rallies this week have prompted some analysts to suggest the worst of the selling could be over. But most expect stocks to touch on recent lows again until there have been enough sustained gains in the market, and progress in fighting the pandemic, to ease investors’ fear of further declines.
“The initial down phase has probably run its course,” Delwiche said. “Investors can get out of the duck-and-cover mode and start to figure out what they need to do. It doesn’t mean that we’ve gotten an all-clear signal.”
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