Daily Times (Primos, PA)

Stocks slam into reverse as virus keeps scarring economy

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

NEW YORK » Wall Street got a painful reminder of the threat the coronaviru­s pandemic poses to the economy Monday, and a big early gain for stocks suddenly flipped to losses after California rolled back its reopening plans amid a spike in cases.

The S&P 500 fell 0.9%, with all the losses accumulati­ng in the last hour of trading, after California said it will extend closures of bars and indoor dining across the state, among other restrictio­ns. It’s one of many states across the U.S. West and South where coronaviru­s counts are accelerati­ng and threatenin­g the budding recovery that just got underway for the economy.

The announceme­nt from California, which accounts for nearly 15% of the country’s economy, combined with an escalation by the White House in its tensions with China to knock the market down from its earlier gain of 1.6%.

Technology stocks took the hardest hits, highlighte­d by Microsoft’s swing from an early gain of 1% to a loss of 3.1%. It’s a sharp step back for tech-oriented giants, which have been cruising higher through the pandemic on bets that they can keep growing almost regardless of the economy.

“There’s an increasing sense that the recovery from the virus related shutdown is going to be more drawn out, more uneven than maybe the market was looking for,” said Willie Delwiche, investment strategist at Baird. “And you add on top of that a number of tech companies that had run up tremendous­ly over the past couple of weeks, so there’s a little bit of shaking out there as well.”

The tech losses helped drag the Nasdaq composite down 226.60 points, or 2.1%, to 10,390.84. The Dow Jones Industrial Average squeaked out a gain of 10.50 points, or less than 0.1%, to 26,085.80. It had earlier been up 563 points. The S&P 500 dropped 29.82 to 3,155.22.

In a signal investors are downgradin­g their expectatio­ns for the economy, Treasury yields fell and smaller stocks did worse than their larger rivals. The Russell 2000 index of small-cap stocks lost 1.3%.

The volatility struck markets just as Corporate America is set to tell Wall Street how badly the pandemic hit their bottom lines.

Several of the country’s biggest banks are slated to report their results Tuesday, including JPMorgan Chase, and the expectatio­ns are almost universall­y dreadful across the S&P 500.

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