Santa Fe New Mexican

Stimulus plans, Biden wins spur stock surge

- By Stan Choe and Alex Veiga

The Dow Jones Industrial Average soared more than 1,100 points, or 4.5 percent, Wednesday as government­s and central banks around the globe took more aggressive measures to fight the virus outbreak and its effects on the economy.

The gains more than recouped the market’s big losses from a day earlier as Wall Street’s wild, virus-fueled swings extend into a third week.

Stocks rose sharply, led by big gains for health care stocks after Joe Biden solidified his contender status for the Democratic presidenti­al nomination. Investors see him as a more business-friendly alternativ­e to Bernie Sanders.

The rally’s momentum accelerate­d around midday after House and Senate leadership reached a deal on a bipartisan $8.3 billion bill to battle the coronaviru­s outbreak. The measure’s funds would go toward research into a vaccine, improved tests and drugs to treat infected people.

Investors are also anticipati­ng other central banks will follow up on the Federal Reserve’s move Tuesday to slash interest rates by half a percentage point in hopes of protecting the economy from the economic fallout of a fast-spreading virus. Canada’s central bank cut rates on Wednesday, also by half a percentage point and citing the virus’ effect.

“The fact that you get an $8 billion bill, that’s money that will be spent, hopefully, on something that really will have an impact on mitigating the effects on the economy,” said Tom Martin, senior portfolio manager with Globalt Investment­s.

Some measures of fear in the market eased. Treasury yields rose but were still near record lows in a sign that the bond market remains concerned about the economic pain possible from the fast-spreading virus. Companies around the world are already saying the virus is sapping away earnings due to supply chain disruption­s and weaker sales, with General Electric becoming the latest to warn its investors.

Even though many investors say they know lower interest rates will not halt the spread of the virus, they want to see central banks and other authoritie­s do what they can to lessen the damage. The S&P 500 sank 2.8 percent Tuesday after a brief relief rally triggered by the Fed’s rate cut fizzled.

“Monetary policy can only take us so far, but at least it’s a step,” said Jack Ablin, chief investment officer at Cresset. “Investors will take comfort in coordinate­d central bank action. I take comfort in knowing this isn’t the plague, we’ll eventually get through this.”

The Bank of England has a meeting March 26 on interest rates. The European Central Bank and others around the world have already cut rates below zero, meanwhile, which limits their monetary policy firepower. But economists say they could make other moves, such as freeing up banks to lend more.

An indicator of fear in the market, which measures how much traders are paying to protect themselves from future swings for the S&P 500, sank 14.1 percent.

Health care stocks in the S&P 500 jumped 5.8 percent for the biggest gain among the 11 sectors that make up the index. UnitedHeal­th Group jumped 10.7 percent, Cigna climbed 10.7 percent. and Anthem soared 15.6 percent, the biggest gainer in the S&P 500.

A Biden nomination would be more welcome on Wall Street than a nod for Sanders, who is campaignin­g on a proposal to enact “Medicare for All.”

“It’s probably a trend toward more of the same in terms of the market and the regulatory and business environmen­t,” Ablin said. “I don’t think investors are looking for revolution.”

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