Sun Sentinel Palm Beach Edition

Dow, S&P rebound 4.9% amid hope for virus aid

- By Stan Choe and Alex Veiga

NEW YORK — Stocks on Tuesday recouped most of their historic losses from the prior day as hopes rose, faded and then bloomed again on Wall Street that the U.S. government will try to cushion the economic pain from the coronaviru­s.

The S&P 500 surged as much as 3.7% in the morning, only to see those gains evaporate by midday. The index then bounced up and down before turning decisively higher after President Donald Trump pitched his ideas for a break on payroll taxes and other economic relief to Senate Republican­s.

By the end of trading, the S&P 500 was up 4.9% and had erased three-fifths of Monday’s loss.

The S&P 500 rose 135.67 points, or 4.9%, to 2,882.23. The Dow Jones Industrial Average rose 1,167.14 points, or 4.9%, to 25,018.16, and the Nasdaq composite jumped 393.58, or 5%, to 8,344.25.

The moves reflected the mood of a market just as preoccupie­d with the virus as the rest of the world. Since U.S. stocks set their record high just a few weeks ago, traders have crossed over from dismissing the economic pain created by COVID-19, thinking it’s similar to the flu and could stay mostly contained in China, to being in thrall to it, worrying that it may cause a worldwide recession.

Severe price swings are likely to continue as long as the number of infections accelerate­s, market watchers say. In the meantime, investors want to see a big, coordinate­d response from government­s and central banks to shore up the economy.

Monday’s 7.6% plunge for U.S. stocks was the sharpest since 2008, when global authoritie­s banded together to rescue the economy from the financial crisis.

Investors saw glimmers of such a coordinate­d response, which led to Tuesday’s optimism.

At a White House press briefing Monday night, Trump said his administra­tion would be asking Congress to pass payroll tax relief and other measures aimed at easing the effect of the coronaviru­s on workers.

In Japan, a task force set up by the prime minister approved a $4.1 billion package Tuesday with support for small to medium-sized businesses.

But as markets waited Tuesday for details about Trump’s plan, prices oscillated sharply.

After a meeting with major health insurers, Trump said the government is working with the cruise line industry, one of the hardest hit by the virus. That helped lift the market, which had earlier flipped to losses amid doubts the government would announce anything soon.

Perhaps the most notable move in markets Tuesday was that Treasury yields pushed higher. The bond market rang warning bells about the virus long before the stock market, and a rise in yields is a sign that fear has receded a bit.

The 10-year Treasury yield rose to 0.79% from 0.49% late Monday. A week ago, it had never been below 1%.

The recovery is pulling the stock market a bit further from the edge of a bear market, signified by a drop of 20% from a record. The S&P 500 is down 14.9% from its high.

Brent crude, the internatio­nal standard, rose $2.86, or 8.3%, to settle at $37.22 a barrel, while benchmark U.S. crude rose $3.23, or 10.4%, to $34.36 a barrel. Oil prices plunged 25% on Monday amid a price war between producers, who are pulling more oil out of the ground even though demand is falling due to the virus.

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