Santa Cruz Sentinel

US stocks end mostly lower after an early rally evaporates

- Cy Stan Khoe, Lamian J. Troise and Alex Veiga

Stocks closed mostly lower on Wall Street Monday after an early rally faded, extending the market’s recent pullback from record highs.

The S&P 500 fell 0.4% after having been up 0.9% in the early going. The reversal handed the benchmark index its fourth straight decline, something that hasn’t happened since September. Losses in the financial, industrial and health care sectors accounted for much of the decline, outweighin­g gains by technology stocks and companies that rely on consumer spending. Treasury yields were mostly higher, a sign of optimism in the economy.

Stocks initially headed higher as Americans began receiving the country’s first vaccinatio­ns against COVID-19, a process that’s expected to take months. Meanwhile, investors are still waiting to see whether Congress can break a logjam on delivering more aid to people, businesses and local government­s affected by the coronaviru­s pandemic. They’re also monitoring talks on reaching a trade deal between Britain and the European Union.

“To a large degree, we’re in a wait- and- see mode,” said Terry Sandven, chief equity strategist at U. S. Bank Wealth Management. “The good news is the vaccine is being distribute­d, which suggests we’re on the road to recovery.”

The S& P 500 fell 15.97 points to 3,647.49. The index declined 1% last week, its worst weekly performanc­e since Halloween.

The Dow Jones Industrial Average dropped 184.82 points, or 0.6%, to 29,861.55. The Nasdaq rose 62.17 points, or 0.5%, to 12,440.04. Smaller companies held up better than their larger rivals, an indication that investors are feeling more confident about the economy’s prospects. The Russell 2000 index gained 2.16 points, or 0.1%, to 1,913.86.

Hospital workers are unloading the first batches of a coronaviru­s vaccine developed by Pfizer and its German partner, BioNTech, following its approval for emergency use by U.S. regulators. Health care workers and nursing home residents will be first in line for vaccinatio­ns, and the hope in markets is that a wider rollout next year will help pull the economy back toward normal following its devastatio­n this year.

Such optimism ha s helped Wall Street’s rally broaden out beyond Big Tech stocks, which were pulling the market higher almost singlehand­edly earlier in the pandemic, though Monday’s pullback dragged down many of the companies that desperatel­y need the economy to get healthier and reopen. American Airlines dropped 2.1%, while Carnival slid 1.8%. Marriott Internatio­nal gave up 1.5%.

Alexion Pharmaceut­icals soared 29.2% for the biggest gain in the S& P 500. It’s the first trading day for the stock since AstraZenec­a said on Saturday that it would buy the company for $39 billion in cash and stock.

Of course, the hopes for the economy in the future are tempered by the worsening pandemic in the present. Surging coronaviru­s counts have forced a downshift to the economy’s momentum, including last week’s worse-thanexpect­ed report on joblessnes­s. The increasing death toll is pushing government­s around the world to bring back varying degrees of restrictio­ns on companies, and it’s also scaring potential customers away from businesses on its own.

 ?? PHOTOS BY NICOLE PEREIRA — NEW YORK STOCK EXCHANGE ?? Traders Ashley Lara and Phyllis Arena Woods work on the trading floor on Monday.
PHOTOS BY NICOLE PEREIRA — NEW YORK STOCK EXCHANGE Traders Ashley Lara and Phyllis Arena Woods work on the trading floor on Monday.
 ??  ?? Trader Edward McCarthy, left, works on the trading floor, Monday.
Trader Edward McCarthy, left, works on the trading floor, Monday.
 ??  ?? Trader Gregory Rowe works on the trading floor on Monday.
Trader Gregory Rowe works on the trading floor on Monday.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States