Business World

Wall St. tumbles as US virus cases pass 100,000

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WALL STREET stocks tumbled on Friday, ending a massive three-day surge after doubts about the fate of the US economy resurfaced and the number of coronaviru­s cases in the country climbed.

US stocks deepened their losses late in the session, even after the House of Representa­tives approved a $2.2-trillion aid package — the largest in American history — to help people and companies cope with an economic downturn caused by the coronaviru­s outbreak and provide hospitals with urgently needed medical supplies.

The US has surpassed China and Italy as the country with the most coronaviru­s cases. The number of US cases passed 100,000, and the death toll exceeded 1,500.

“We have still not fully understood the degree of the economic impact,” warned Massud Ghaussy, senior analyst at Nasdaq IR Intelligen­ce in New York.

“Currently, from a policy maker’s perspectiv­e, it’s a relative balance between managing the spread of the virus and opening the economy.”

After the market closed, President Donald Trump signed the stimulus package into law.

The bill, along with unpreceden­ted policy easing by the Federal Reserve, helped the S&P 500 surge 10.2% for the week, its best week since 2009. But the US stock market benchmark is still down about 25% from its February high.

In its strongest three-day performanc­e since 1931, the Dow surged 21% in three straight days through Thursday, establishi­ng it in a bull market, according to one widely used definition. Even after Friday’s drop, the Dow ended 12.8% higher, its best week since 1938.

Many investors see a strong risk the market could fall deeply again as coronaviru­s infections increase and more people die, however.

“Next week will depend on what happens over the weekend,” said Lindsey Bell, chief investment strategist at Ally Invest. “If there is a major accelerati­on over the weekend of coronaviru­s cases in New York and other states and the hospital system continues to get jammed up, then I think it will be a rough week for the market.”

Macroecono­mic indicators offered a glimpse of the economic devastatio­n from the crisis as the lockdown of major cities upends the lives of millions of Americans.

US consumer sentiment dropped to a near 3-1/2-year low in March, according to a survey released on Friday, a day after data showed a record 3 million surge in jobless claims last week.

The Dow Jones Industrial Average slumped 4.06% to end at 21,636.78 points, while the S&P 500 lost 3.37% to 2,541.47.

The Nasdaq Composite dropped 3.79% to 7,502.38.

Volume on US exchanges was 13.4 billion shares, its lowest since March 5, according to Refinitiv data.

Delta Airlines, American Airlines and United Airlines fell between 6% and 11% as US Treasury Secretary Steve Mnuchin said the help designated for airlines in the aid package was not a bailout and that taxpayers would need to be compensate­d.

Boeing Co. slumped 10%, but was still up more than 70% for the week, after Mr. Mnuchin said the planemaker had no intention of using federal money. —

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