Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Bank and energy stocks lead big turnaround — up

- STAN CHOE, DAMIAN J. TROISE AND ALEX VEIGA Informatio­n for this article was contribute­d by Yuri Kageyama of The Associated Press.

Wall Street rallied back from a sharp morning drop Thursday, led by a resurgence for some of the year’s most beaten-down stocks.

The S&P 500 climbed 1.15% in another scattersho­t day of trading, with many stocks flipping from the bottom of the leader board to the top following a few sharp reversals in momentum. The zig-zag trading followed up on earlier losses for Asian and European stocks, while Treasury yields sank in a sign of increased pessimism.

The S&P 500 rose 32.50 to 2,852.20 after rallying back from a loss of 1.9%. The Dow Jones Industrial Average rose 377.37, or 1.6%, to 23,625.34 after being down 458 points. The Nasdaq composite gained 80.56, or 0.9%, to 8,943.72 after erasing its loss of 1.8%.

It’s the latest wobble for Wall Street, which has been wavering for weeks as it digests gargantuan moves the market made earlier this year, first down more than 30% on worries about the coming recession and then up more than 30% on hopes for a relatively quick rebound.

Trading has been particular­ly erratic this week, as investors rethink bets that the reopening of economies around the world will allow for a relatively quick return of growth. Another possible flare-up in tensions between the world’s largest economies is also hitting markets, with comments from President Donald Trump about China further weighing on them Thursday.

Stocks have suddenly changed direction several times this week, oftentimes late in the trading day, with analysts often seeing few easy explanatio­ns.

“Instead of it being a stock market where everything moves in the same direction — up and down — whether it’s large, small, growth or value, it’s more of a market of stocks of individual companies,” said Tom Martin, senior portfolio manager at Globalt Investment­s.

“What you’re seeing is this churning within the market, but not a lot of broad movement in the total market,” he said.

Thursday’s turnaround was powered in large part by a rally for stocks that have been pummeled for much of this year: banks.

Financial stocks in the S&P 500 jumped 2.6% for the biggest gain among the 11 sectors that make up the index. Wells Fargo rose 6.8%, and Bank of America added 4%. Through much of this year, investors have sold bank stocks on worries that low interest rates and the severe recession will mean less profit for making loans.

Energy stocks, another corner of the market that’s been hit hard this year by recession worries, also climbed. They benefited from a rise in the price of oil after the Internatio­nal Energy Agency gave a forecast for oil demand this quarter that wasn’t quite as bad as its previous one.

By the end of trading, more than 75% of stocks in the S&P 500 were higher. In the morning, more than 90% were down.

Even before the economy spiraled downward, U.S. stocks quickly lost just over a third of their value as investors anticipate­d an avalanche of layoffs hitting the economy. Those fears have turned out to be true, and a report Thursday showed that nearly 3 million more U.S. workers filed for unemployme­nt benefits. That brings the total to roughly 36 million in the two months since the pandemic prompted widespread orders for people to stay at home and businesses to shut down.

But stocks began climbing in late March after massive amounts of aid promised by the Federal Reserve and Capitol Hill convinced markets that the worst-case scenario of a financial crisis wouldn’t be happening. Gains accelerate­d on hopes that the recession, while severe, could be relatively short and that the economy could resume its growth as shutdown orders lift.

Many profession­al investors have warned the rally was overdone, though, given how much uncertaint­y exists about how long the recession will last. On Wednesday, Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell warned this could become a prolonged downturn, while the top infectious diseases expert in the U.S. said Tuesday that reopening the economy too quickly could backfire and lead to more deaths.

Recently, worries about renewed U.S.-China tensions have also weighed on markets. A bruising trade war between the two had dragged on the global economy before the pandemic hit.

The yield on the 10-year Treasury fell to 0.62% from 0.64% late Wednesday. It tends to fall when investors are downgradin­g their expectatio­ns for the economy and inflation.

Analysts say they expect the market to remain in a wait-andsee approach for weeks as investors gauge how economic reopenings underway are going. Investors want to see if second waves of coronaviru­s infections occur if government­s lift their restrictio­ns on businesses too soon.

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