Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Fed’s bond move helps stocks pull out of early skid

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

NEW YORK — It took just a few hours for fear to evaporate on Wall Street Monday, and stocks erased a sharp, early slump to notch healthy gains after the Federal Reserve unveiled its latest push to prop up the economy.

The S&P 500 climbed 0.8% after the latest day of big swings in global markets, as a weeks-long rally shows some cracks. Worries are rising that additional waves of coronaviru­s infections could derail the swift economic recovery that Wall Street had seemed so sure was on the way just a week ago.

The S&P 500 rose 25.28 points to finish at 3,066.59, which is 9.4% below its record set in February.

The Dow Jones Industrial Average gained 157.62 points, or 0.6%, to finish at 25,763.16 after earlier being down as many as 762 points. The Nasdaq composite added 137.21, or 1.4%, to 9,726.02.

When trading began in New York, coronaviru­s fears seemed set to drag the U.S. stock market to a loss after sharp declines in Asia and more modest ones in Europe. The S&P 500 quickly fell 2.5%, with stocks that most desperatel­y need the economy to reopen hit particular­ly hard.

But stocks and Treasury yields began to trim their losses as the day progressed. They popped decisively higher after the Fed said in the afternoon that it will buy individual corporate bonds. The purchases will be part of its previously announced program to keep lending markets running smoothly, which allows big employers to get access to cash.

They’re also the latest reminder that the Fed is doing everything it can to help support markets, analysts said. Central banks have repeatedly come to the economy’s rescue over the years, and it was huge, unpreceden­ted moves by the Fed earlier this year that helped put a halt to the S&P 500’s nearly 34% sell-off on worries about the recession coming out of the coronaviru­s pandemic.

“Volatility is here to stay, at least for a little while,” said Jason Pride, chief investment officer of private wealth at Glenmede. “Nobody in the financial industry has a good way to forecast this.”

The yield on the 10-year Treasury note rose to 0.71% from 0.69% late Friday. It tends to rise and fall with investors’ expectatio­ns for the economy and inflation, and it had been above 0.90% earlier this month.

Case numbers are still growing in states across the country and nations around the world. Government­s are relaxing lockdowns in hopes of nursing their devastated economies back to life. However, experts say that without a vaccine, the reopenings could bring on further waves of covid-19 deaths.

China is reporting a new outbreak in Beijing, one that appears to be the biggest since it largely stopped its spread at home more than two months ago. In New York, the governor is upset that big groups of people are packing together outside bars and restaurant­s without face masks, and he threatened to reinstate closings in areas where local government­s fail to enforce the rules.

That’s the biggest worry for markets: If infections show no sign of slowing, government­s could bring back the orders for people to stay at home and for businesses to shut down that sent the economy into its worst recession in decades. Even if that doesn’t happen, rolling waves of outbreaks could frighten businesses and consumers enough to keep them from spending and investing, which would itself hinder the economy.

It was just a week ago that investors seemed ebullient about expectatio­ns for a coming economic recovery. The hopes got a shot of adrenaline earlier this month when a report showed that U.S. employers added jobs to their payrolls in May, a big surprise when economists were expecting to see millions more jobs lost. That raised expectatio­ns that the economy could climb out of its hole nearly as quickly as it plunged into it.

That optimism sent the stock market on a second leg of its rally, which began in March after the Federal Reserve and Congress promised unpreceden­ted amounts of aid to support the economy. Besides its corporate bondbuying program, the Fed has also cut interest rates back to nearly zero and expects to keep them there through 2022. Its chairman, Jerome Powell, may offer more details about the Fed’s outlook in scheduled testimony before Congress this week, analysts said.

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