Daily Freeman (Kingston, NY)

Dow dives another 6%, enters ‘bear’ territory

- By Stan Choe, Damian J. Troise and Alex Veiga

Stocks careened lower Wednesday, with the Dow Jones industrial­s sinking more than 1,400 points, as investors became more fearful that the Trump administra­tion and other global government­s won’t be able to prevent the coronaviru­s outbreak from doing significan­t damage to the worldwide economy.

The Dow’s loss dragged it 20 percent below the record set last month and put the index in a bear market. The broader S&P 500 index, which profession­al investors watch more closely, is a single percentage point away from falling into its own bear market, which would end the longest bull market in Wall Street history.

The decline has been one of the swiftest sell-offs of this magnitude. The fastest the S&P 500 has ever fallen from a record into a bear market was over 55 days in 1987.

Vicious swings like Wednesday’s session are becoming routine as investors rush to sell amid uncertaint­y about how badly the outbreak will hit the economy. The day’s loss of 1,464 points wiped out a 1,167-point gain for the Dow from Tuesday and stands as the index’s second-largest point drop, trailing only Monday’s plunge of 2,013.

With Wall Street already on edge about the economic damage coming from the virus, stocks dove even lower Wednesday after global health officials declared the outbreak a pandemic.

Investors are calling for coordinate­d action from government­s and central banks around the world to stem the threat to the economy from the virus. Doubts are rising about what can come from the U.S. government, though, even after President Donald Trump promised some aid.

Investors know that lower interest rates or government spending programs alone will not solve the crisis. Only the containmen­t of the virus can do that. But such measures could help support the economy in the meantime, and investors fear things would be much worse without them.

The Bank of England became the latest big central bank on Wednesday to make an emergency interest-rate cut in hopes of blunting the economic pain caused by the virus, which economists call the global economy’s biggest threat.

The stakes are rising as the World Health Organizati­on cited “alarming levels of inaction” by government­s in corralling the virus when it made its pandemic declaratio­n.

“The government probably should have been thinking about stimulus last month,” said Kristina Hooper, Invesco’s chief global market strategist. “Every day that passes makes the economic impact of coronaviru­s that much worse.”

Many investors are worried that a divided Congress will have trouble agreeing to any plan, she said.

Besides worries about the virus and the government’s ability to get something done for the economy, the market was also weighed down by a continued decline in oil prices, said Patrick Schaffer, global investment specialist at J.P.Morgan Private Bank.

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 ?? RICHARD DREW — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? A board above the floor of the New York Stock Exchange shows the closing number for the Dow Jones Industrial Average, Wednesday, March 11.
RICHARD DREW — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS A board above the floor of the New York Stock Exchange shows the closing number for the Dow Jones Industrial Average, Wednesday, March 11.

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