The Pak Banker

Wall Street ends lower as virus surge prompts renewed restrictio­ns

- NEW YORK -AFP

Wall Street's major indexes tumbled more than 2% as several U. S. states imposed business restrictio­ns in response to a surge in coronaviru­s cases.

Some U. S. states that were spared the brunt of the initial coronaviru­s outbreak or moved early to lift restrictio­ns are seeing a resurgence in new infections. Texas and Florida ordered bars to close down again.

"You're seeing a pretty dramatic increase in cases," said Kevin Grogan, managing director of investment strategy at Buckingham Strategic Wealth in St. Louis. "If people start feeling again like it's not safe to eat out or go shopping, that could have a really negative impact on the stock market."

A Wall Street Journal report that the Phase 1 U. S.- China trade deal could be at risk placed additional pressure on U. S. stocks. According to that report, Chinese officials warned that "meddling" in Hong Kong and Taiwan could lead Beijing to back away from its commitment to purchase U. S. farm goods.

"It added another log into the risk aversion fire," said Edward Moya, senior market analyst at OANDA in New York, of the report on China.

Among sectors, financial, communicat­ion services and energy shares outpaced the broader S& P 500 in declines. S& P 500 bank shares plummeted 6.1% after the Federal Reserve limited dividend payments and barred share repurchase­s until at least the fourth quarter following its annual stress test.

Renewed concerns over the novel coronaviru­s pandemic have threatened to derail a strong rally for Wall Street that has erased much of the S&P 500's steep losses from March. The benchmark index ended below its 200-day moving average, an indicator of long-term momentum.

The uptick in coronaviru­s cases likely triggered a test of that technical level, said Jim Paulsen, chief investment strategist at The Leuthold Group in Minneapoli­s.

The Dow Jones Industrial Average fell 730.05 points, or 2.84%, to 25,015.55, the S& P 500 lost 74.71 points, or 2.42%, to 3,009.05 and the Nasdaq Composite dropped 259.78 points, or 2.59%, to 9,757.22.

For the week, the S& P 500 fell 2.87%, the Dow lost 3.31%, and the Nasdaq shed 1.87%.

Facebook Inc shares shed 8.3%, weighing the most on the S& P 500, after Unilever PLC and Verizon Communicat­ions Inc joined an advertisin­g boycott that called out the social media giant for not doing enough to stop hate speech on platforms.

Nike Inc shares dropped 7.6% as the footwear maker, hurt by store closures due to the pandemic, posted a surprise quarterly loss.

Gap Inc shares surged 18.8% after the retail chain entered a 10year deal with rapper and fashion designer Kanye West to create a line of clothing under his Yeezy brand.

Friday also marked the reconstitu­tion of the FTSE Russell indexes, including the large- cap Russell 1000 and small- cap Russell 2000. Daily trading volume is often among its highest levels of the year during the reconstitu­tion, though volume this year has spiked on several occasions amid steep market sell- offs.

Volume on US exchanges was 16.43b shares, compared to the 13.44b average for the full session over the last 20 trading days. Declining issues outnumbere­d advancing ones on the NYSE by a 3.99-to-1 ratio; on Nasdaq, a 3.57to-1 ratio favored decliners.

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